Regions with significant populations | |
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United States ( New Jersey) | |
Languages | |
English, formerly Unami | |
Religion | |
traditional tribal religion | |
Related ethnic groups | |
Other Lenape |
The Unalachtigo were a division of the Lenape (Delaware Indians), a Native American tribe whose homeland Lenapehoking[a] was in what is today the Northeastern United States. They were part of the Forks Indians.[3]
The name was a Munsee language term for the Unami-speakers of west-central New Jersey. Moravian missionaries called the Lenape people of the Forks region near Easton, Pennsylvania "Unami," and the Northern Unami language-speakers in New Jersey "Unalachtigo." It is debated whether Unalachtigo constituted a distinct dialect of Unami.[4] Unalachtigo words were recorded in 17th-century vocabulary drawn from the Sankhikan band of Lenape in New Jersey.[5]
The Sankhikan band were enemies of the Manhattan people, who spoke Munsee[5]
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