Archer’s account reflected many of the assumptions about pliant Indians that were common during the Elizabethan era. However, his narrative arrived in London with stories of mismanagement, starvation, and war. In response to these developments, the colony’s governing council in London installed new leadership and commanded the colonists to take a new approach to coastal diplomacy. Now, the colonists would bring war against Powhatan, while seeking to form alliances with tribes at the outskirts of his control. This shift in policy required a new set of legal justifications, as well as new models of diplomacy that could secure treaties at the edges of Tsenacomoco while the colonists waged war against Powhatan and his allies. Among the most prominent colonists to respond to these new imperatives was Captain John Smith, a former president of the colony. In two books published together, A Map of Virginia and The Proceedings of the English Colonie in Virginia (1612), Smith attacks the diplomatic approach to Indian treaties publicized by Archer and puts forward his own model of treaty making. While Archer depicts the Powhatans peacefully consenting to the English presence with welcoming gestures and gifts, Smith’s books argue that the Indians’ outward shows of welcome have only given cover to acts of pillage and ambush. Adopting a skeptical attitude toward diplomacy, Smith argues that the Powhatans’ ceremonial gestures offer little access to their true intentions. Assembling his book from reports by soldiers, Smith argues for a political order based on violent threats and forced subjection rather than mutual recognition. Paradoxically, Smith portrays threats as a way of achieving the forms of voluntary agreement that straightforward diplomacy cannot.
Anglo-Powhatan alliances were not just a subject of controversy in English colonial government. A number of England’s rivals spied on Jamestown and its negotiations with surrounding groups. Among the most vocal was Pedro de Zúñiga, Spanish ambassador to James I during the early years of the Jamestown settlement. In his letters, Zúñiga attacks the legality of English settlement by exposing what he believes is the fraudulent nature of Powhatan treaty ceremonies. In secret correspondence with the Spanish crown, he points to intercepted reports of Powhatan resistance as evidence that Jamestown is an illegal settlement and should be destroyed.
Parties with many different agendas told stories about Powhatan diplomacy. Standing behind all of them, however, were the words and gestures of the Powhatans themselves. While Europeans framed Native ceremonies for their own ends, Powhatan likewise told stories about his interactions with the English, which were occasionally recorded by English observers. In the concluding section of the chapter, I will consider what colonial records can tell us about Powhatan’s intentions.
Alliance and Discovery: Archer’s “Relatyon”
“[Pawatah] (very well understanding by the wordes and signes we made; the significatyon of our meaning) moved of his owne accord a leauge of fryndship with us.”11 Gabriel Archer’s “Relatyon” culminates with “the greate kyng Powatah” (Archer’s spelling of Powhatan) spontaneously offering a treaty alliance to Jamestown leaders.12 The moment dramatizes the great king’s consent to the English presence. But Archer also seems worried that his version of events might not be believed on the other side of the Atlantic. Archer’s narrative is interspersed with parenthetical asides that translate the Indian’s words into English and assure the reader that he means what he says. The scene concludes with a final act of tribute that provides added proof of his sincerity: “for concluding therof, [Pawatah] gave [Newport] his gowne, put it on his back himselfe, and laying his hand on his breast saying Wingapoh Chemuze (the most kynde wordes of salutatyon that may be) he satt downe.”13 If doubts about the “understanding” between Newport and the king remain, the gift of the gown, complete with dramatic embrace, surely removes them. Hand on his heart, the king makes plain his love for the English in his own language, helpfully translated by Archer. Who could be skeptical, even thousands of miles away?
The moment is a surprising conclusion for a document identified, in a neat secretary hand at the top of its first page, as the story of a “discovery.” Narratives of discovery were a common product of state-sponsored explorations of uncharted territory in the New World, Africa, and the Far East. Spanish and Portuguese settlers published discoveries to make claims to land unexplored by other Europeans. English travelers in the Elizabethan and Stuart eras imitated this literary tradition, circulating their own accounts of the discovery of the North Atlantic coast.14 But Archer departs from the conventions of the genre in a significant way. While the James River is not controlled by any Christian prince, it is far from empty. Indeed, Virginia is under the jurisdiction of a figure identified, familiarly enough, as a king. And while Archer describes river peoples as “Salvages,” he finds their king sitting in state and conducting diplomacy in much the same manner as the Christian princes of Europe.15 Archer’s “Relatyon” reveals a land that is both awaiting discovery and lively with the politics of its inhabitants.
Dispatched to London on a supply ship returning from Jamestown in 1607, Archer’s “Relatyon” was the first account of the Virginia Colony’s diplomatic interactions with the Powhatan peoples. The handwritten narrative tells the story of the settlers’ exploration of the James River and Christopher Newport’s early diplomatic triumphs among the chiefs of Tsenacomoco. Like many colonial dispatches, the “Relatyon” was composed with an international audience in mind. In many ways, it resembles prior Spanish narratives of the possession of Hispaniola and Florida. Archer tells how Newport discovers new lands and claims them by planting a cross in the name of James I, a ritual borrowed from accounts of earlier explorers. Yet in staking a claim to Virginia, the “Relatyon” does more than merely imitate earlier accounts. Most of the text is devoted to chronicling the diplomatic interactions between the English and the indigenous kings that rule the rivers. Far from denying the jurisdiction of these figures, Archer depicts them as legitimate leaders, holding territory and exercising sovereignty over loyal subjects. Their most important acts, however, involve their acceptance of the foreigners. The riverbank kings extend a formal welcome to the English, granting them recognition as a political power in the bay.
Virginia colonists sailed to the New World with a great deal of anxiety about their legal status. While James I had asserted the right of the crown to annex New World territory, and had given the Virginia Company a grant to the Chesapeake Bay, both the crown and its colonial proprietors were fearfully conscious of Spain’s continuing claims to land north of Florida.16 They could look to the massacre at Fort Caroline, a French Huguenot outpost destroyed by Spanish raiders, for evidence of the fate that might await Jamestown colonists if Philip III decided to assert Spanish claims.17 The English had many ways of defending colonies from the Spanish, such as building forts or hiding settlements from view. Yet writing was also an important mode of defense. The crown viewed written reports as a central part of the public defense of New World rights. It was up to colonists to complete the crown’s claims by taking possession of land and sending home “relations” or reports of their activities. English colonists used many kinds of writing to document their possession of New World territory. They described the construction of fortifications, the tilling of fields, and the extension of fences, hedgerows, and other ways of marking English property.18 However, much of the territory in the Chesapeake claim was