Michigan: Pour aller plus loin

Général

  • Anderson, Dean L., Michael S. Nassaney, and Krysta Ryzewski. 2024. The Historical Archaeology of Michigan. University Press of Florida, Gainesville (under review).
  • Kern, John. 1977. A Short History of Michigan. Michigan History Division, Michigan Department of State, Lansing.

Peuples autochtones

  • Branstner, Susan M. 1992. Tionontate Huron Occupation at the Marquette Mission. In Calumet and Fleur-de-Lys: Archaeology of Indian and French Contact in the Midcontinent, edited by John A. Walthall and Thomas E. Emerson, pp. 177-201. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, DC.
  • Cleland, Charles E. 1992. Rites of Conquest: The History and Culture of Michigan’s Native Americans. University of Michigan Press, Ann Arbor.
  • Cleland, Charles E. 1999 .Cultural Transformation: The Archaeology of Historic Indian Sites in Michigan, 1670-1940. In Retrieving Michigan’s Buried Past: The Archaeology of the Great Lakes State, edited by John R. Halsey, pp. 279-290. Cranbrook Institute of Science, Bulletin 64. Bloomfield Hills, Michigan.
  • Clifton, James A. 1984. The Pokagons, 1683-1983: Catholic Potawatomi Indians of the St. Joseph River Valley. University Press of America, Lanham, Maryland.
  • Cremin, William M. 1992. Between History and Prehistory Researching the “Void” in Southwest Michigan. In The U of the Lakes Conferences, edited by Robert J. Jeske. The Michigan Archaeologist 38(1-2):19-37.
  • Cremin, William M. 1996. The Berrien Phase of Southwest Michigan: Proto-Potawatomi. In Investigating the Archaeological Record of the Great Lakes State: Essays in Honor of Elizabeth Baldwin Garland, edited by Margaret Holman, Janet Brashler, and Kathryn Parker, pp. 383-413. New Issues Press, Kalamazoo, MI.
  • Holman, Margaret B., and Janet G. Brashler. 1999.  Economics, Material Culture, and trade in the Late Woodland Lower Peninsula of Michigan. In Retrieving Michigan’s Buried Past: The Archaeology of the Great Lakes State,  edited by John R. Halsey, pp. 212-220. Cranbrook Institute of Science, Bulletin 64. Bloomfield Hills, Michigan.
  • Nassaney, Michael S., William M. Cremin, and LisaMarie Malischke. 2012. Native American-French Interactions in Eighteenth-Century Southwest Michigan: The View from Fort St. Joseph. In Contested Territories: Native Americans and Non-Natives in the Lower Great Lakes, 1700-1850, edited by Charles Beatty-Medina and Melissa Rinehart, pp. 55-79. Michigan State University Press, East Lansing.
  • Tanner, Helen Hornbeck, editor. 1987. Atlas of Great Lakes Indian History. University of Oklahoma Press, Norman.
  • Teasdale, Guillaume. 2012. Old Friends and New Foes: French Settlers and Indians in the Detroit River Border Region. Michigan Historical Review 38, no. 2: 35-62
  • Temple, Wayne C. 1977. Indian Villages of the Illinois Country: Historic Tribes. Illinois State Museum Scientific Papers, Vol. 2, Part 2. Illinois State Museum, Springfield.
  • White, Richard. 2011. The Middle Ground: Indians, Empires, and Republics in the Great Lakes Region, 1650-1815. Twentieth Anniversary Edition. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.

Explorateurs français

  • Armour, David A. 2000.  Colonial Michilimackinac. Mackinac State Historic Parks, Mackinac Island, Michigan.
  • Brandão, José António, editor and translator. 2019. Mémoires of Michilimackinac and the Pays d’en Haut: Indians and French in the Upper Great lakes at the Turn of the Eighteenth Century. Michigan State University Press, East Lansing, and Mackinac Island State Park Commission, Makinac Island, Michigan.
  • Brandão, José António, and Michael S. Nassaney. 2019. The Historical and Cultural Context of Fort St. Joseph. In Fort St. Joseph Revealed: The Historical Archaeology of a Fur Trading Post, edited by Michael S. Nassaney, pp. 15-39. University Press of Florida, Gainesville.
  • Brandão, José António, and Michael S. Nassaney. 2021. The Jesuits at Fort St. Joseph in Southwest Michigan. In The Archaeology of Jesuit Sites in the Americas, edited by Stephan T. Lenik and Laura E. Masur. Journal of Jesuit Studies 8(3):355-384.
  • Peyser, Joseph L., editor and translator. 1978. Fort St. Joseph Manuscripts: Chronological Inventory of French-Language Manuscripts and Their Translations and Abstracts. Compiled for the Four Flags Historical Study Committee. On file in the Niles District Library, Niles, Michigan.

Commerce des fourrures et postes

  • Brandão, José António. 2008. Introduction: New France, the Fur Trade, and Michilimackinac. In Edge of Empire: Documents of Michilimackinac, 1671-1716, edited by Joseph L. Peyser and José António Brandão, xxiii-xliii. Michigan State University Press, East Lansing, and Mackinac State Historic Parks, Mackinac Island, Michigan.
  • Giordano, Brock, and Michael S. Nassaney. 2019. Crafting Culture at Fort St. Joseph: An Analysis of Tinkling Cone Production. In Fort St. Joseph Revealed: The Historical Archaeology of a Fur Trading Post, edited by Michael S. Nassaney, pp. 134-152. University Press of Florida, Gainesville.
  • Hartley, Erika, and Michael S. Nassaney. 2019. Architectural Remains at Fort St. Joseph. In Fort St. Joseph Revealed: The Historical Archaeology of a Fur Trading Post, edited by Michael S. Nassaney, pp. 79-100. University Press of Florida, Gainesville.
  • Heldman, Donald P. 1999. Euro-American Archaeology in Michigan: The French Period. In Retrieving Michigan’s Buried Past: The Archaeology of the Great Lakes State, edited by John R. Halsey, pp. 292-311. Cranbrook Institute of Science, Bloomfield Hills, Michigan.
  • Idle, Dunning. 2003. The Post of the St. Joseph River during the French Regime 1679-1761, Ph.D. dissertation, Department of History, University of Illinois, Urbana. Fort St. Joseph Museum, Niles, MI.  Originally completed in 1946.
  • Jones, Kevin. 2019. An Examination of Flintlock Musket Components at Fort St. Joseph (20BE23), Niles, Michigan. M.A. thesis, Western Michigan University, Kalamazoo.
  • Martin, Terrance, Rory Becker, and Joseph Hearns. 2019. The Use of Animals for Fur, Food, and Raw Material at Fort St. Joseph. In Fort St. Joseph Revealed: The Historical Archaeology of a Fur Trading Post, edited by Michael S. Nassaney,pp. 40-78. University Press of Florida, Gainesville.
  • Nassaney, Michael S. 2013.  La Salle’s Michigan Dream Realized: Seventeenth-Century Developments in the St. Joseph River Valley. Invited paper presented at the 30th annual conference of the Center for French Colonial Studies, Bob Bullock Texas History Museum, Austin.
  • Nassaney, Michael S., editor. 1999.  An Archaeological Reconnaissance Survey to Locate the Remains of Fort St. Joseph (20BE23) in Niles, Michigan. Archaeological Report No. 22, Department of Anthropology, Western Michigan University, Kalamazoo.
  • Nassaney, Michael S., and Terrance J. Martin. 2017. Food and Furs at French Fort St. Joseph. InArchaeological Perspectives on the French in the New World, edited by Elizabeth M. Scott, pp. 83-111. University Press of Florida, Gainesville.
  • Peyser, Joseph L., editor and translator. 1992. Letters from New France: The Upper Country, 1686-1783. University of Illinois Press, Urbana.
  • Poremba, David Lee. 2001. Detroit: A Motor City History.  Arcadia Publishing, Chicago.
  • Juen, Rachel B. and Michael S. Nassaney. 2012. Fort St. Joseph Archaeological Project: The Fur Trade
  • Loveland, Erika K. and Michael S. Nassaney. 2017. Fort St. Joseph Archaeological Project: Sheltering New France
  • Hartley, Erika K. and Michael S. Nassaney. 2022.  Fort St. Joseph Archaeological Project: People of the Post
  • Sleeper-Smith, Susan. 2001.   Indian Women and French Men: Rethinking Cultural Encounter in the Western Great Lakes. University of Massachusetts Press, Amherst.

Communautés françaises

  • Au, Dennis. 2003. The Muskrat French: The Survival of French Canadian Folklife on the American Side of Le Détroit. In Le Passage du Détroit: 300 ans de présence francophone, edited by Marcel Beneteau. University of Windsor Press, Windsor, ON.
  • Killion, Thomas W., Kathryn Slocum, and Terri Renaud. 2020. Springwells, Historic Fort Wayne, and the War of 1812 in Southeast Michigan: Exploring Detroit’s Past in War and Peace. The Michigan Archaeologist Vol. 60(2014): 73-99.
  • Lewis, Kenneth E. 2002. West to Far Michigan: Settling the Lower Peninsula, 1815-1860. Michigan State University Press, East Lansing.
  • Marrero, Karen L. 2020. Detroit’s Hidden Channels: The Power of French-Indigenous Families in the Eighteenth Century. Michigan State University Press, Lansing.

Pages du Michigan