Susquehannock language

Almost all known words and phrases come from the Vocabula Mahakuassica, a vocabulary written by the Swedish missionary Johannes Campanius in New Sweden during the 1640s and published by his grandson Thomas Campanius Holm in two separate works in 1696[1] and 1702.[2] Peter Stephen Du Ponceau translated the 1702 work from Swedish to English in 1834.[4] Linguist Marianne Mithun believes this limited data is sufficient to classify Susquehannock as a Northern Iroquoian language, closely related to the languages of the Haudenosaunee Confederacy.[5] Examples of Susquehannock-language place names include Conestoga, Juniata, and Swatara.Indian Villages and Place Names in Pennsylvania with Numerous Historical Notes and References (1928), a book by Dr. George P. Donehoo identifies place names derived from the Conestoga language.
United StatesNortheastern United StatesSusquehannockLanguage familyIroquoianISO 639-3Linguist ListGlottologIroquoian languageNative AmericanJohannes CampaniusNew SwedenPeter Stephen Du PonceauMarianne MithunHaudenosaunee ConfederacyConestogaJuniataSwataraMithun, MarianneIroquoian languagesCayugaMohawkNeutral HuronNottowayOneidaOnondagaSenecaTuscaroraWyandotCherokeeLaurentianProto-languageProto-IroquoianLanguages of PennsylvaniaDelawareMunseeEnglishAfrican AmericanAppalachianCentral PennsylvaniaInland Northern AmericanNortheast PennsylvaniaPennsylvania Dutch EnglishPhiladelphiaPittsburghPennsylvania DutchSpanishItalianAmerican Sign LanguageLanguages of MarylandSiouanTuteloSaponiNanticokePiscatawayPowhatanBaltimore dialectTidewater dialectFrenchGermanRussianPersianPortugueseChineseKoreanTagalogVietnameseArabicAmharicHebrewYorubaHistoric and present tribesAccokeekAssateagueChapticoChoptankLumbeeMattawomanNacotchtankPatuxentPiscataway Indian NationPocomokePotapocoShawneeTockwoghYaocomicoHistorical languagesNanticoke languagePiscataway languagePowhatan languageUnami languagePresent territoriesTayac TerritoryTurkey TayacIndian WillAccokeek Creek SiteCaiuctucucNottinghamShawnee Old Fields Village SiteMonongahelaAisquith Farm E Archeological SiteArundel Cove Archaeological SiteBarton Village SiteBeck Northeast SiteBiggs Ford SiteBrinsfield I SiteBuckingham Archeological SiteBumpstead Archeological SiteElkridge SiteGrear Prehistoric Village SiteHeath Farm Camp Archeological SiteHeath Farm Jasper Quarry Archeological SiteHoye SiteIron Hill Cut Jasper Quarry Archeological SiteKatcef Archeological SiteMartins Pond SiteMcCandless Archeological SiteMeyer SiteMonocacy SiteNolands Ferry I Archeological SiteSandy Point SiteShoemaker III Village SiteWalker Prehistoric Village Archeological SiteWillin Village Archeological SiteBroad Creek Soapstone QuarriesMagothy Quartzite Quarry Archeological SiteNational Archives Archeological SiteOld Colony Cove SiteBaltimore American Indian CenterNative American place names in MarylandWe-SortsIndigenous languages of the Americas