Canarsee
The Canarsee were a band of Munsee-speaking Lenape who inhabited the westernmost end of Long Island and Staten Island at the time the Dutch colonized New Amsterdam in the 1620s and 1630s.
They are credited with selling the island of Manhattan to the Dutch, even though they only occupied its lower reaches, with the balance the seasonal hunting grounds of the Wecquaesgeek of the Wappinger people to the north.
Name
As was common practice early in the days of white European colonisation of North America, a people came to be associated with a place, with its name displacing theirs among the colonies and those associated with them, such as explorers, mapmakers, trading company superiors who sponsored many of the early settlements, and officials in the colonizers' mother country in Europe. This was the case of the "Canarsee" people, also known as Canarsie and Canarse, as well as Canarise, Canarisse, and Canarsii, whose name, to the extent they identified with one, is lost in history. They were also called the Canarse and Canarsie.The Canarsee were among the peoples who were conflated with other Long Island bands into a group called the Metoac, an aggregation which failed to recognize their linguistic differences and varying tribal affinities.
The name lives on in Canarsie, a neighborhood of Brooklyna part of the City of New York which is on Long Island. Nyack at Fort Hamilton in Brooklyn was likely a Canarsee village.