Below are some of the most common terms used in this project and ones that you will encounter in the historical documents. The glossary will be a helpful educational tool for students as they read primary and secondary documents. This is a work in progress. (Note: See also the “Controlled Vocabularies” on the Project Documentation page.)
Antiquated Terms
instant – meaning “of the same,” usually with reference to time, and especially days of the month; “the sixth instant” means “the sixth of this month”
lusty – strong or healthy
Clothing
breeches – a pair of trousers that come to just below the knee
calico – a type of fabric made from cotton
cheridary (cherridery) – a cotton fabric from India
drugget – a coarse fabric made from wool
homespun – plain cloth woven at home
kersey – a type of cloth made from wool
ozenbridge (osnabrug) – a light, coarse fabric whose name comes from the German city of Osnabrück
petticoat – an underskirt worn beneath a skirt or dress
shalloon – lightweight fabric, often from wool, used as a liner
stockings – long socks that often covered the knees
worsted – a high quality wool yarn
Indigenous Terminology
cacique – derived from the Taino word for leader; the Spanish used cacique to refer to the leaders of many Indigenous groups in the Americas
Dawnland – not usually used in colonial records, but is a decolonized way to speak of what is now referred to as New England
papoose – Algonquian word for “baby,” although often used in imprecise and insensitive ways
sachem – designation of the chief or head of a tribe or nation
sonksq – female sachem
squa – Algonquian word for “woman,” although often used derisively and in stereotyped ways
Turtle Island – not usually used in colonial records, but is often used by Native peoples to refer to North America, based on the Haudenosaunee (Iroquois Confederacy) emergence story
Locational-Racial
Colonial records often obscure tribal origins of Native people who were stolen. Instead, they used imprecise locational-racial designations to indicate the rough area of origination, using colonial location names. What follows is representative, not comprehensive.
Carolina Indian – colonizer term for Indigenous people in or from the southeastern region of Turtle Island, or North America
Dutch Indian – colonizer term for Indigenous people in or from regions nominally claimed by the Dutch
French Indian – colonizer term for Indigenous people in or from regions nominally claimed by the French
Miskito Indians – the term used to refer to the Indigenous groups on the Mosquito Coast in Central America, who in the colonial era were both enslaved by and allied with the British
North American Indian – term used to refer to a Native person from any North American region
Spanish Indian – colonizer term for Indigenous people in or from regions nominally claimed by the Spanish
South American Indian – referring to a Native person from any South American region
Surinam (Surrinam) Indian – colonizer term for Indigenous people in or from the northern rim of South America
Occupation
chandler – a maker or seller of candles; can also refer to a retailer of general goods
cooper – a maker of wooden vessels such as barrels
cordwainer – a person who makes shoes
lighterman – a person who works on a lighter, a boat used for loading and unloading ships that can’t reach a wharf
maltster – a person who makes malt, used for brewing beer or whiskey
sadler – a person who makes saddles
Racial
Note: Although in the database project, we have chosen to generally not use these terms, we list them here as a point of information, recognizing that they are colonizer terms that have caused harm to Black and Indigenous peoples.
Black – English translation of “negro,” referring to dark-skinned people, most commonly from Africa or African-descended, but also applied to other people of color, including Natives
Christian – for the first few centuries of colonization, Europeans were often distinguished from other global populations by religious differences, such as Christian (vs. non-Christian). In many records, Christians were presumed to be white Europeans
East Indian – a colonizer term for enslaved people trafficked from the Indian Ocean or Asia
grif – a colonizer term in French colonial Louisiana that referred to children who had one Native American parent and one African parent
Indian – the most common word used in archival documents for Native peoples of the Americas
mestizo/mestiza – a colonizer term used in Spanish regions to denote a multi-racial Indigenous person
mulatto – a colonizer term to refer to a multi-racial person (usually either Black and white or Black and Indigenous); often used to erase Indigenous identity
mustee – a colonizer term to refer to a multi-racial Indigenous person (usually Native and white)
Negro – general racial term applied by colonizers to dark-skinned people, most commonly from Africa or African-descended, but also applied to other people of color, including Natives. Also synonymous with “slave” in the records at times
quadroon – a racialized term derived from Spanish and French terms that indicate one-quarter African ancestry; could also be applied to Native people
white – less common in some records, this term often referred to Europeans and European-descended people
Regions and Geographies
East Indies – Indian and Pacific Ocean region, often with reference to European colonies there
Mosquito (Miskito) Coast – a region on the eastern shore of present day Nicaragua and Honduras, home to the Miskito Nation
Piscataqua – a region around the river of the same name, which divides present-day Maine and New Hampshire
West Indies – could refer to the Caribbean or even the entirety of the Americas; used by colonizers to distinguish from the East Indies
Tribal
Note: Archival records generally did not consistently record tribal names. We are working on a full listing of tribal designations used in the records of this project.
Slavery, Stealing, and Loss
abduction/stealing – any instance of an Indigenous person being taken against their will, whether during times of peace or war
apprentice – someone bound (often by a contract) to learn a particular trade; such positions could also contain elements of unfreedom and coercion in the cases of Native children and teens
captive – someone held against their will, whether as the result of an abduction or capture during warfare; the outcome of such captivity is sometimes not clear, although often captivity led to enslavement or servitude
criada/criado – Spanish term for servant
debt slavery – an assigned time of service due to debts owed to a creditor; can also be related to “peonage” (see below)
freedman – Black individuals who had been enslaved by the so-called “Five Civilized Tribes” in Oklahoma who, after the Civil War, were required by the U.S. government to be taken into those tribes as citizens
indenture – usually a term-limited contractual form of servitude that could be imposed on Native individuals or entered into quasi-voluntarily by parents, relatives, or individuals themselves
judicial enslavement – a term used by scholars to denote slavery imposed by courts or legal authorities, often as a punishment for a crime or indebtedness
nabori – Spanish designation for an Indigenous servant or slave
peonage – an arrangement that is similar to debt servitude, in which a person is held and required to labor, sometimes for a small wage, but often in a way that financially obligates them to continue working off their debts (or be kept in bondage due to other family or legal situations)
servitude (ambiguous) – many of the records of Native enslavement refer to “servitude,” which could and often was often used for lifelong slavery.
slavery – in its most extreme (and usual) form, slavery for Africans and Natives alike was life-long and heritable (meaning children were also enslaved); also referred to as chattel slavery
unfree – a term often used by academics to refer generally to all conditions of not being free in some way, whether servitude, slavery, indenture, etc.