Weroance


Weroance is an Algonquian word meaning leader or commander which was used throughout the Chesapeake Bay region including in the Powhatan confederacy and the Piscataway confederacy. Werowances within these confederacies were under paramount weroances called Powhatan and Tayac respectively. Like their predecessors, each member/weroancy of the Powhatan Confederacy was led by their own weroance often chosen by the paramount leader from relatives or partners. Most foreign writers who have come across a weroance only did so on a special occasion. This is the case because a foreigner's presence was special. John Smith noted that there are few differences between weroances and their subjects. Present day leaders of Chesapeake nations, such as Chief Anne, no longer use the title Weroance, using the english word chief instead.
In older texts, especially from the time of the early Jamestown settlers, spelling was not standardized, so the following spellings are used in different texts:
  • weeroance
  • weroance
  • werowance
  • werowans
  • wyroance
  • wyrounce
  • wyrounnces
A weroansqua is a female ruler. Spellings of this word also vary.

Powers of a weroance

Powhatans led their own weroancy and subordinate weroances typically had final say on how to handle a hostile situation in their respective weroancies. This was made apparent with the founding of Virginia colony in 1607 and the warfare with the English colonists. Weroances and religious leaders were the only ones allowed to enter into sacred spaces. 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.

Individual weroances

Several of the weroances' personal names were known and some recorded by William Strachey and other sources. The names of their respective weroancies were also commonly used as titles, exactly analogous to European peerages, so that the Weroance of Arrohattec was often referred to simply as "Arrohattec", much as the Earl of Essex would be referred to just as "Essex" in lieu of a personal name.

Matrilineal inheritance

In Powhatan society, women could inherit power, because the inheritance of power was matrilineal. In A Map of Virginia John Smith of Jamestown explains:
His 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.