The video owner has disabled playback on external websites.
This video is no longer available on YouTube.
This video cannot be played right now.
Watch on YouTube
Unlock AI-Powered Learning Tools
Sign up to access powerful tools that help you learn faster from every video.
The Natives and the English - Crash Course US History #3
Learning Stats
CEFR Level
Difficulty
Subtitles (125 segments)
Hi I'm John Green, this is Crash Course US History and today we're going to talk about one of the worst relationships in American history.
No Thought Bubble, not my college girlfriend and me.
Mr. Green, Mr. Green! Your relationship with your high school girlfriend?
Oh Me From The Past, you and I both know that I didn't have a high school girlfriend.
No, I'm talking about the relationship between Native Americans and English Settlers.
[Theme Music]
So as you'll no doubt remember from last week, the first English settlers came to the Chesapeake area – now Virginia – in 1607.
The land the English found was, of course, already inhabited by Indian tribes unified under the leadership of Chief Wahunsenacawh, and I will remind you that mispronouncing things is my thing!
The English called this Chief Powhatan because, of course, mispronouncing things was also their thing.
Powhatan was actually his title and the name of his tribe, but to say that the English lacked cultural sensitivity would be an understatement.
So Powhatan didn't get to be leader of over 30 tribes by being a dummy and he quickly realized that:
1. The English were pretty clueless, when it came to not dying of starvation, and
2. They were useful – because they had guns.
So he decided to help them and the English were indeed grateful.
In fact, colony leader John Smith went so far as to order the colonists to stop stealing food from the Indians.
Aaauugh, in the book business this is known as foreshadowing.
So as previously noted, relationships, whether between individuals or collectives, tend to go well when they are mutually beneficial, and for a while, both the English and the Indians were better off for these interactions.
I mean, you know, post-smallpox.
The Virginia Company existed to make money, and since the Chesapeake lacked gold or silver, making money required trade.
OK, let's go to the Thought Bubble:
We tend to think of trade between Europeans and Natives as being a one-way exchange, like savvy, exploitative Europeans tricking primitive, pure, indigenous people into unfair deals.
But that isn't quite accurate.
Both sides traded goods that they had in surplus for those they did not.
The English were happy to give up iron utensils, tools, guns, woven cloth in exchange for furs and, especially in the early days, food, which the Indians could easily part with because they had plenty.
Soon, though, there were problems.
Full subtitles available in the video player
Practice with Exercises
Generate vocabulary, grammar, and comprehension exercises from this video
Comments (0)
Login to CommentSign up to unlock full features
Track progress, save vocabulary, and practice exercises
Interactive Mode
Quiz
Correct answer:
Related Videos
Mission: Impossible - Ghost Protocol - Behind The Scenes at Burj Khalifa
Greg Davies' bad day at the office - The Graham Norton Show: Series 19 Episode 9 - BBC
House of the Dragon S1E7 | Aemond rides Vhagar at dawn | Enhanced Lighting | #HOTD Dragon ride Scene
Jennifer Coolidge Wins Best Supporting Actress in a Limited Series | 2023 Golden Globe Awards on NBC
Luke Schwartz Goes Loco! | Poker Legends | Premier League Poker | partypoker #ClassicHands
CrashCourse
Quiz
Correct answer:
Quizzes appear as you watch the video
Memory Tip
From this video
Start learning languages for free