Corbitant

Corbitant
Coubatant, Caunbitant
Wampanoag leader
Personal details
Children Daughter, Weetamoo
Known for Opposition to the English, and to Squanto; ally of Massasoit

Corbitant was a Wampanoag Indian sachem or sagamore under Massasoit. Corbitant was sachem of the Pocasset tribe in present-day North Tiverton, Rhode Island, c. 1618–1630.[1] He lived in Mattapuyst or Mattapoiset, located in the southern part of today's Swansea, MA.[2]

In the summer of 1621, he was involved in a minor altercation with the Plymouth colony involving the Patuxet refugee Squanto at present-day Middleborough, Massachusetts. Corbitant had menaced both Squanto and his companion Hobomok for their close ties with the white strangers. Fearing for their lives, Hobomok was able to get away and escaped back to Plymouth, where he rallied the pilgrims under Miles Standish. Standish led ten men of Plymouth in arms to rescue Squanto from Corbitant.[3] They attacked the Wampanoag village at Nemasket, but by that time Corbitant had released Squanto and withdrawn from the area.[4] Corbitant was nominally obedient to the Great Sachem Massasoit of the Pokanoket. Although described as a "determined foe of the English," nonetheless, "with other hostile chiefs he signed a treaty of peace with the English in 1621."[5]

Tribes of the Wampanoag federation possessed hunting grounds at Cape Cod, Plymouth, Taunton, Attleboro, Middleboro, Hanson, Duxbury, Freetown, Somerset, Swansea, Mattapoisett, Wareham, and Fall River, in Massachusetts, as well as Tiverton, Aquidneck Island (Newport), Canonicut Island (Jamestown), Little Compton, Bristol, Warren and the lands west to the Providence River. About the year 1622 the Narragansett Federation under Canonicut seized the island of present-day Jamestown from Massasoit.

References

  1. "The Pocasset". Native American Nations, Your Source for Indian Research. Retrieved 2013-02-06.
  2. "Native People of Massachusetts". www.mayflowerfamilies.com. Archived from the original on 2006-11-04. Retrieved 2013-02-06.
  3. Lucia Z. Knoles. "Historical Contextual Resources for Lydia Maria Child's Hobomok". American Literature, History, and Culture at the Lyceum. Retrieved 2013-02-06.
  4. "Corbitant, a Pocasset Indian Chief feared by the English at Plymouth Colony". CelebrateBoston.com. Retrieved 2013-02-06.
  5. "Massachuset Indian Chiefs and Leaders". Access Genealogy. Retrieved 2013-02-06.


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