Queen Betty, the Glossary
Betty, also known as Mrs Betty and Queen Betty, is believed to have been the name of the niece of Cockacoeske who succeeded her as Weroansqua or chief of the Pamunkey tribe, a Native American tribe of Virginia, in the late 1600s to early 1700s.[1]
Table of Contents
5 relations: Cockacoeske, Native American tribes in Virginia, Pamunkey, Queen Ann (Pamunkey chief), Weroance.
- 17th-century American women
- 17th-century Native American women
- 18th-century Native American women
- 18th-century women monarchs
- Pamunkey people
- People of the Powhatan Confederacy
Cockacoeske
Cockacoeske (pronounced Coke a cow ski) (also spelled Cockacoeskie) was a 17th-century leader of the Pamunkey tribe in what is now the U.S. state of Virginia. Queen Betty and Cockacoeske are 17th-century American women, 17th-century Native American leaders, 17th-century Native American women, Pamunkey people, people of the Powhatan Confederacy, tribal chiefs and Women Native American leaders.
See Queen Betty and Cockacoeske
Native American tribes in Virginia
The Native American tribes in Virginia are the Indigenous peoples whose tribal nations historically or currently are based in the Commonwealth of Virginia in the United States of America.
See Queen Betty and Native American tribes in Virginia
Pamunkey
The Pamunkey Indian Tribe is one of 11 Virginia Indian tribal governments recognized by the Commonwealth of Virginia, and the state's first federally recognized tribe, receiving its status in January 2016.
Queen Ann (Pamunkey chief)
Queen Ann (–1723) appears in Virginia records between 1706 and 1718 as ruler of the Pamunkey tribe of Virginia. Queen Betty and Queen Ann (Pamunkey chief) are 17th-century American women, 17th-century Native American leaders, 17th-century Native American women, 18th-century American women, 18th-century Native American women, 18th-century women monarchs, Pamunkey people, people of the Powhatan Confederacy, tribal chiefs and Women Native American leaders.
See Queen Betty and Queen Ann (Pamunkey chief)
Weroance
Weroance is an Algonquian word meaning leader or commander among the Powhatan confederacy of the Virginia coast and Chesapeake Bay region. Queen Betty and Weroance are tribal chiefs.
See also
17th-century American women
- Abigail Barker
- Angela (enslaved woman)
- Ann Foster
- Anne Hutchinson
- Awashonks
- Cockacoeske
- Dorcas ye blackmore
- Dorothy Creole
- Eleanor Butler
- Elizabeth Garlick
- Elizabeth Key Grinstead
- Judith Catchpole
- Kateri Tekakwitha
- Katherine Marbury Scott
- Lydia Lee Mather
- Mary Black (Salem witch trials)
- Mary Bliss Parsons
- Mary Brewster
- Mary Kittamaquund
- Opossunoquonuske
- Ots-Toch
- Pocahontas
- Quaiapen
- Queen Ann (Pamunkey chief)
- Queen Betty
- Rachel of Kittery, Maine
- Rebecca Rawson
- Sarah Morey
- Squaw Sachem of Mistick
- Susanna Cole
- Susanna Freeborn
- Susanna White (Mayflower passenger)
- Tobacco brides
- Women in 17th-century New England
- Women of Colonial Virginia
17th-century Native American women
- Askamaboo
- Awashonks
- Cockacoeske
- Kateri Tekakwitha
- Mary Kittamaquund
- Native American women in Colonial America
- Oholasc
- Opossunoquonuske
- Ots-Toch
- Pocahontas
- Quaiapen
- Queen Ann (Pamunkey chief)
- Queen Betty
- Squaw Sachem of Mistick
- Tituba
- Wawaloam
- Weetamoo
18th-century Native American women
- Anne des Cadeaux
- Catherine Montour
- Coocoochee
- Cuhtahlatah
- Dinah John
- Domitilde
- Dorcas Honorable
- Edith Turner
- Elizabeth Bertrand
- Ghigau
- Glory of the Morning
- Hannah Freeman
- Hannah Ocuish
- Madam La Compt
- Madame Montour
- Marguerite Scypion
- Maria Rosa Villalpando
- Marie-Angélique Memmie Le Blanc
- Mary Musgrove
- Molly Brant
- Molly Ockett
- Monette (slave)
- Myeerah
- Nancy Ward
- Native American women in Colonial America
- Netnokwa
- Nonhelema
- Polly Cooper
- Queen Alliquippa
- Queen Ann (Pamunkey chief)
- Queen Betty
- Rachel Findlay
- Sehoy
- Sehoy II
- Sehoy III
- Senauki
- Sophia Durant
- Tacumwah
- Tattooed Arm
- Toypurina
- Tyonajanegen
- Wanagapeth
18th-century women monarchs
- Akech (queen)
- Ana Afonso de Leão
- Anna of Russia
- Bety of Betsimisaraka
- Catherine I of Russia
- Catherine the Great
- Dadi Jawari
- Elizabeth of Russia
- Empress Go-Sakuramachi
- Fatuma binti Yusuf al-Alawi
- Glory of the Morning
- Ippolita Ludovisi
- Johannetta, Countess of Sayn-Altenkirchen
- Kamana, Queen of Jinga
- Maria Beatrice d'Este, Duchess of Massa
- Maria Eleonora I Boncompagni
- Maria Theresa
- Marie de Nemours
- Queen Alliquippa
- Queen Ann (Pamunkey chief)
- Queen Betty
- Sada Kaur
Pamunkey people
- Caroline Bradby Cook
- Cockacoeske
- Necotowance
- Opechancanough
- Phoebe Farris
- Pocahontas
- Powhatan (Native American leader)
- Queen Ann (Pamunkey chief)
- Queen Betty
- Totopotomoi
People of the Powhatan Confederacy
- Chanco
- Cockacoeske
- Debedeavon
- G. Anne Richardson
- Mollie Holmes Adams
- Necotowance
- Nemattanew
- Oholasc
- Opechancanough
- Opossunoquonuske
- Peracuta
- Pocahontas
- Powhatan (Native American leader)
- Queen Ann (Pamunkey chief)
- Queen Betty
- Tackonekintaco
- Tomocomo
- Totopotomoi
References
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Queen_Betty
Also known as Queen Betty (Pamunkey Chief).