Capitals Tsenacommacah originally had two capitals. The main capital was the village of
Werowocomoco, located in present-day Gloucester County. The second capital, the village of Powhatan was believed to be in the present-day Powhatan Hill section of the eastern part of
Richmond, Virginia, or perhaps nearby in a location that became part of Tree Hill Farm. The English colonists described Werowocomoco as only as the crow flies from Jamestown, but they also described as downstream from present-day
West Point, measurements which conflict with each other. In 2003, archaeologists initiated excavations at a site in Gloucester County that revealed an extensive Indigenous settlement from about 1200 CE (the late
Woodland period) through the early contact period. Work since then has added to their belief that this is the location of Werowocomoco. The site is on a farm bordering on Purtan Bay of the York River, about from Jamestown. The more than residential settlement extends up to back from the river. In 2004, researchers excavated two curving ditches of at the far edge, which were constructed about 1400 CE. In addition to extensive artifacts from hundreds of years of
Indigenous settlement, researchers have found a variety of trade goods related to the brief interaction of Native Americans and English in the early years of Jamestown. Around 1609, Wahunsenacawh shifted his capital from Werowocomoco to
Orapax, located in a swamp at the head of the
Chickahominy River, near the modern-day interchange of
Interstate 64 and
Interstate 295. Sometime between 1611 and 1614, he moved further north to
Matchut, in present-day
King William County on the north bank of the
Pamunkey River.
Leadership Each tribe had its own name and chief (
werowance/
weroance if male or
weroansqua if female), and Tsenacommacah as a whole was ruled by a paramount chief (
mamanatowick) named Wahunsenacawh, or more popularly
Chief Powhatan. The Mamanatowick let their district and subordinate weroances make the final decision on how to handle hostile situations. This was made apparent with the events that took place in 1607 and the hostility with the newcomers (English colonists). Weroances and Priest were the only ones allowed to enter into religious temples. A weroance did not go to meet any visitor, visitors were escorted to see a weroance. The weroance, their wives, and councilors often dressed in the finest jewels, and tanned deer skin. Several of the weroances' personal names were known and some recorded by
William Strachey and other sources. The names of their respective chieftaincies were also commonly used as titles, exactly analogous to European peerages, so that the Weroance of Arrohattec (whose given name was Ashaquid) was often referred to simply as "Arrohattec", much as the Earl of Essex would be referred to just as "Essex" instead of a personal name. When the first English colonists arrived in Virginia, some of the weroances subject to the paramount chief Powhatan, or
mamanatowick (Wahunsenacawh) were his own nearest male relatives: • Parahunt, Weroance of the Powhatan (proper), also called
Tanx ("little") Powhatan, said by Strachey to be a son of the paramount chief Powhatan, and often confused with same. • Pochins, Weroance of the
Kecoughtan, was also a son of the paramount chief, whom he had appointed there after slaying their previous ruler in ca. 1598. •
Opechancanough, Chief Powhatan's younger brother, was a weroance of the
Pamunkey, but increased in power, and came to be the effective ruler of the entire Powhatan Confederacy after
Wahunsenacawh's death in 1618. In Tsenacommacah, women could inherit power, because the inheritance of power was
matrilineal. In
A Map of Virginia John Smith of Jamestown explains:His
[Chief Powhatan's] kingdome descendeth not to his sonnes nor children: but first to his brethren, whereof he hath 3 namely
Opitchapan,
Opechancanough, and
Catataugh; and after their decease to his sisters. First to the eldest sister, then to the rest: and after them to the heires male and female of the eldest sister; but never to the heires of the males. ==References==