Piscataway language
Piscataway is an extinct Algonquian language formerly spoken by the Piscataway, a dominant chiefdom in southern Maryland on the Western Shore of the Chesapeake Bay at time of contact with English settlers. Piscataway, also known as Conoy, is considered a dialect of Nanticoke.
This designation is based on the scant evidence available for the Piscataway language. The Doeg tribe, then located in present-day Northern Virginia, are also thought to have spoken a form of the same language. These dialects were intermediate between the Native American language Lenape spoken to the north of this area and the Powhatan language, formerly spoken to the south, in what is now Tidewater Virginia.
Classification
Piscataway is classified as an Eastern Algonquian language:- Algic
- * Algonquian
- ** Eastern Algonquian
- *** Nanticoke-Conoy
- **** Nanticoke
- **** Piscataway
History
The Jesuit evangelist Father Andrew White translated the Catholic catechism into the Piscataway language in the 1630s, and other English teachers gathered Piscataway language materials. The original copy is a five-page Roman Catholic instruction written in Piscataway; it is the main surviving record of the language. White also wrote a grammar dictionary, though it is now considered lost. A prominent speaker of Piscataway was Mary Kittamaquund, called the "Pocahontas of Maryland" due to her state as the daughter of a chieftain, marriage to an English settler and diplomatic ability.
The National Museum of the American Indian Mitsitam Native Foods Café is named after the Piscataway and Delaware term for 'let's eat'. Similarly the University of Maryland, College Park named a dining hall Yahentamitsi, which translates to 'a place to go to eat'.
Phonology
This section gives the phoneme inventory as reconstructed by Mackie.| Front | Central | Back | |
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| Mid | |||
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- A mid sound may have also been present.