User:MyronDavidPaine

"The Lenape ( /ˈlɛnəpiː/ or /ləˈnɑːpi/) are Native American people in Canada and the United States. They are also called Delaware Indians after their historic territory along the Delaware River.[4]"

SHOULD BE:

The Lenape ( /ˈlɛnəpiː/ or /ləˈnɑːpi/) are American Indians in Canada and the United States. They descended from the Viking/Lenape culture of Greenland and North America as far west as the Dakotas in 1070 AD. Because the Norse Christians in Greenland had already called themselves "Lenape" the Norse who came to America after 1,000 called themselves "Lenape."

The Lenape of the 11th century were Christians. "Lenape" means to "Abide with the pure."

The Lenape and Old Norse languages are sibling languages.

At the start of the Little Ice Age, nearly four thousand Greenland Lenape migrated across the ice of Davis Strait to the safety of James Bay. From James Bay they started a 3,000 mile migration that lasted 150 years. They made a hasty migration to their relatives in western Minnesota then they migrated at a slower pace. They went south to the Missouri River, then east to the Atlantic coast.

The Lenape provided a place for the English to stay in Roanoke NC, 1585, and in Jamestown, VA, 1607. The Lenape thought the English would be transients. They negotiated for security from the Mohawk with the Dutch in New York. They agreed to share land with William Penn.

The Lenape have a 235 year history called the Maalan Aarum (a.k.a. Walam Olum), which means "Engraved Years." The history stopped in 1585, when the English Captain, Ralph Lane, shot the Lenape Historian in the head.

During the English war of extermination at Jamestown, 1610-1614, the 300 heavily armored English men took Lenape wives for slaves. Their off-spring were called "de la Warrs" because the mercenary men were paid by the de la Warr family.

A generation later, there were still Norse speaking people in England, who began to question why people, who "abide with the pure," were being persecuted by English men in America. Then the English in America began to call all Lenape,"Delaware" because the English in England thought that Lord de la Warr had already subdued all the Delaware.

Thus, the Delaware tribe began as the off-spring of Lenape women who were enslaved by men, who waged the war of extermination. Then the Delaware name was used to cover up the Christian demeanor of all Lenape.[4] Persecution of the Delaware was easier to explain than persecution of people, who abided with the pure.