The accounts of the
Jesuit Relations frequently refer to the Mascouten as the "Fire Nation" or "Nation of Fire". One Jesuit wrote, "The Fire Nation is erroneously so called, its correct name being
Maskoutench, which means 'a treeless country,' like that inhabited by these people; but as, by changing a few letters, this Word is made to signify 'fire,' therefore the people have come to be called the Fire Nation." Their name apparently comes either from a
Fox word meaning "Little Prairie People" or from the Sauk term
Mashkotêwi ("
Prairie") or
Mashkotêwineniwa ("
Plains Indians") and
shkotêwi ("fire") which would fit the Jesuits statement. The Mascouten may have also been the Mush-co-desh, or Little Prairie People, referred to by Odawa historian,
Andrew Blackbird. In the 17th century, Blackbird wrote, the Mush-co-desh occupied northern lower Michigan, but were massacred by the Odawa. The Huron knew them also as
Atsistaeronnon ("people of the fire"). ==History==