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'학술논문' 에서 검색결과 69,563건 | 목록 1~20
Academic Journal
2021 Law Rev. Kyiv U.L. 315 (2021) / Law Review of Kyiv University of Law, Vol. 2021, Issue 1 (2021), pp. 315-321
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اکولوژی انسانی, Vol 3, Iss 9, Pp 725-732 (2025)
Academic Journal
2020 Crim. Just. Issues 37 (2020) / Criminal Justice Issues -Journal of Criminal Justice, Criminology and Security Studies, Vol. 2020, Issue 1-2 (2020), pp. 37-52
Academic Journal
2018 CRIMEN 197 (2018) / CRIMEN: Casopis za Krivicne Nauke, Vol. 2018, Issue 2 (2018), pp. 197-224
Academic Journal
54 Int'l Legal Materials 532 (2015) / International Legal Materials, Vol. 54, Issue 3 (2015), pp. 532-560
Academic Journal
2014 Drepturile Omului 20 (2014) / Drepturile Omului / Human Rights, Vol. 2014, Issue 1 (2014), pp. 20-25
Academic Journal
Наукові праці Національної бібліотеки України імені В.І. Вернадського, Iss 72, Pp 451-463 (2024)
Academic Journal
37 DttP 15 (2009) / DttP: Documents to the People, Vol. 37, Issue 3 (Fall 2009), pp. 15-19
CHAPTER VIII CONGRESS regulate the ceded territory; officers appointed; governor proceeds to Tennessee; causes the oaths of office to be administered; a treaty proposed to the Cherokees; circumstances of the territory; occupants south of French Broad and Holston; Tennessee company; Spanish jealousies; their attempts to defeat the western settlements; during the negotiations with them, the western settlers restrained from offensive operations against the Indians, their allies; Sevier made brigadier general; Cox and his party arrested; Indians had driven them off; purchasers from Cox; population of the territory; reports circulated to deter the Cherokee chiefs from meeting the governor; treaty with them; persons killed or wounded and depredations of the Indians, 1791; Bowles; prevents the execution of the Creek treaty; printing press at Rogersville; Indians to be induced to join the United States; treaty to be holden at Nashville; report upon the displeasure of the Indians; five lower towns of the Cherokees hostile; scalp dance; eagle tail dance; Creek prisoners; troops raised; Spanish instigation; mutual hatred of the whites and Cherokees; thefts; Indians billed; Bowles taken into custody by the Spaniards; devastations of the Indians in Kentucky; the governor visited Cayette; received by the Indians with great respect; persons killed by the Indians In 1782; counties of Knox and Jefferson; Creeks kill white men in the Cherokee nation; Spaniards incite the Indians; their violences; rout Henly's company and take him prisoner; governor Blount's speech to the Indians; militia raised under Sevier, 1792; people averse from the service against the insurgents; indifference of the general government to the sufferings of the western people; fort erected at West Point by general Sevier; why chosen; Indian depredations; Cherokees obtained a junction with the whites again at the northwards; causes of Indian hostilities explained; Henderson purchased the Cherokee claim; Chickasaw claim; Donalson and Martin; their treaty with the Indians. 1783; claim and cession of the six nations; Virginia boundary; correspondence between the governor of Virginia and governor Blount; documents concerning the boundary; general Sevier's instructions to colonel Christian; Watts wished for peace; Sevier with his army ordered to Knoxville; troops discharged; property stolen; persons killed and wounded, 1793; Spaniards Incite the Indians to war; the people embody to take satisfaction of the Indians; dispersed by the governor's proclamation; Creeks bent on war; perplexing occurrences; troops ordered; instructions to the officers how to act; Creek army; Douglass killed; exhortations to peace; scouting parties; Spaniards; Panton; Morris, the Chickasaw, killed; general government censured by the people; killed and wounded, 1793; Indiana killed at Hanging Maws by Beard's party; militia ordered to be in readiness; ordered to march to Knoxville; invasion of the Creeks and Cherokees apprehended; horses stolen by the Indians; action between a party of Indians and whites; Indians on their way home with scalps and horses; Indians at Doherty's mill; pursued and some killed; nine white men wounded; fifteen more Indians killed; Indian depredations; persons killed or wounded; Indians killed; houses burnt by the Indians; the whites embody without orders; others embody at another place and march against the Indians the forbidden to do so; Sevier directed to raise men and reconnoitre the country; Indians killed; Indians killed in their towns; and others made prisoners; persons killed or wounded by the Indians on the frontiers; general Sevier called on by the people; Indians embodied; assault Henry's station; persons. killed by them; general Sevier's letter to the Indians; militia ordered to be in readiness; measures to repress the Incursions of the Indians; persons killed by the Indians; a thousand Indians invade the district of Hamilton; assaulted Cavet's station; took it, and killed his whole family, thirteen in number; pursued by general Sevier; marched to the Indian towns; a battle at the forks of Coosa and Hightower; Indians routed; their towns burnt; women and children suffered to escape; the Spaniards supplied the Indians with powder and ball for this expedition; remarks on the conduct of the Baron de Carondalet; persons killed by the Indians; grand jury of Hamilton complain of the federal government; called for protection; requested to have a legislature of their own; Indians killed; whites killed; remarks on the conduct of the Spaniards; numbers in the territory entitled them to a legislature; election of members authorised; assembly called by proclamation; meet at Knoxville, their proceedings; their address to congress; Indians pursued and routed by captain Evans; persons killed or wounded by them in 1794; Indians pursued and killed by captain Ore; Spanish incitations began to decline; report of a committee in congress on the memorial of the legislature; recommend calling out the militia; persons killed or wounded in 1794; Cherokees took a boat descending the river; killed the whites who were in it; took the negroes and plundered the boat; persons killed or wounded; Creeks pursued and one taken; court of oyer and terminer called to try him; tried; condemned and executed; Creek parties out for war; pursued by the Cherokees; overtaken and routed and some kilted; death song;, scalp dance; Bull Run block house attacked; another party overtaken by captain Evans; routed and some killed; lieutenant Mc'Clellan attacked and routed by the Creeks; persons killed and taken; governor Blount's endeavors to procure peace; his arguments to the Creeks; shews they had no claim to the lands on Cumberland; Creeks inform Parker of their unwillingness to join the Spaniards against the expedition expected from Kentucky; persons killed; goods of the United States intended for the Indians destroyed; Cherokee council refuses to give up the property taken by the Cherokees; large body of Creeks march through the Cherokee nation towards the frontiers; the occurrence of events favorable to peace; northern Indians defeated by general Wayne; Cherokees send to governor Blount soliciting peace; report of an expedition against the Cherokees intended by governor Logan; governor Blount writes to him by express; conferences at Tellico white beads presented to the governor; smoked the pipe of peace; Cherokee chiefs pressed by the governor to bring forward their prisoners; exchange of prisoners, the governor's remarks to the Cherokees in favor of peace; governor Blount wished to break up the Creek nation as the only means of safety to the people of the south western territory; Mc'Gillevray's death; legislature again meet the counsel chosen, the proceedings of the legislature; Sevier county and Kooxville established, transmit a list of those who were killed since their last meeting to congress with an address; the people directed to vote for or against a convention; to erect the territory into a State; general Knox's report on the means of preserving peace with the Indians.
Book
THE CIVIL AND POLITICAL HISTORY OF THE STATE OF TENNESSEE: FROM ITS EARLIEST SETTLEMENT UP TO THE YEAR 1796; INCLUDING THE BOUNDARIES OF THE STATE, : Publishing House of the Methodist Episcopal Church South, 1891.
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