The Quinnipiac name translates as "Long-water people."[4] It was also spelled Quienepiage, Quenepiake, Qunnipiéuk, Qunnipiuck, Qunnipiug, Quinnpiipuck, Quunnipieuck, and Qvinipiak.[5]
Historian Edward Manning Ruttenber suggested that the Quinnipiac were part of the Wappinger confederacy,[4] but the colonist Daniel Gookin wrote that they were part of the Pequot.[3] Their leader was called a sachem, and historians invented the term sachemdom to describe political units led by a sachem. The Totoket people were part of the Quinnipiac sachemdom.[7] The Hammonasset were likely also part of the Quinnipiac sachemdom.[8]
History
17th century
The Puritans established the first Indian Reservation in 1638. Located near New Haven, Connecticut, the reserve was for the Quinnipiac, but only included 1,200 acres, a small portion of their original territory.[9] The reservation's residents, described as "free" Indians, were placed under the authority of an English agent.[9] They were not allowed to sell or abandon that land, and Native peoples from other tribes were not allowed to visit.[9]