John Steckley
|nationality=Canadian |occupation=Scholar |education=University of Toronto (PhD) }} John L. Steckley (born March 13, 1949) is a Canadian scholar specializing in Native American studies and the Indigenous languages of the Americas. Steckley has a PhD in Education from the University of Toronto. He taught at Humber College in Toronto, Ontario, from 1983 until his retirement in June 2015.Steckley is one of the last known speakers of the Wyandot language, which he has studied for over thirty years. Today he works closely with the Wyandotte Nation of Oklahoma to aid in language revitalization alongside other linguists of Wyandot such as Richard Zane Smith from the unrecognized Wyandot Nation of Kansas and Dr. Craig Kopris. He is also interested in place names as derived from indigenous languages, and aims to correct common misconceptions regarding their original derivations.
Steckley has become a deeply respected figure amongst the Wyandot. On his adoption into the Wyandot tribe in 1999, he was named ''Tehaondechoren'' ("he who splits the country in two"). He was also given the name "Hechon" by descendants of the Huron in Loretteville, Quebec City, while teaching them their own historical language. This was a name that had previously been given to Jean de Brébeuf (1593–1649), one of the North American Martyrs, by his Huron and Wyandot followers.
His 2007, ''Huron-English Dictionary'' was the first book of its type for over 250 years to be published.
In 2007, Laval University received a federal grant of $1 million for development of its Huron-language teaching materials in collaboration with Steckley.
Steckley has written widely on a variety of sociological and anthropological topics, including a recent book on gibbons. Provided by Wikipedia
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Forty narratives in the Wyandot language / by Steckley, John, 1949-
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The eighteenth-century Wyandot : a clan-based study / by Steckley, John, 1949-
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Forty narratives in the Wyandot language by Steckley, John 1949-
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De religione telling the seventeenth-century Jesuit story in Huron to the Iroquois by Steckley, John 1949-
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Indian agents rulers of the reserves by Steckley, John 1949-
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The eighteenth century Wyandot a clan-based study by Steckley, John 1949-
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The French Jesuits, the Wendat, and Christian music a tranlsation of cantiques in the Wendat language by Steckley, John 1949-
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The Wyandot language structure and dictionary by Steckley, John 1949-
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The eighteenth-century Wyandot a clan-based study by Steckley, John 1949-
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Full circle Canada's first nations by Steckley, John 1949-, Cummins, Bryan David 1953-
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De religione telling the seventeenth-century Jesuit story in Huron to the Iroquois by Pierson, Philippe
Published 2004Other Authors: “…Steckley, John 1949-…”
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Anchored in ink Pierre-Philippe Potier's Elementa grammaticae Huronicae (1745), a Jesuit grammar of Wendat
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