Metacomet (1638 – August 12, 1676), also known as Pometacom,[1]: 205 Metacom, and by his adopted English name King Philip,[2] was
sachem (elected
chief) to the
Wampanoag people and the second son of the sachem
Massasoit. His older brother
Wamsutta (or King Alexander) briefly became sachem after their father's death in 1661. However, Wamsutta also died shortly thereafter and Metacom became sachem in 1662.
His brother's widow
Weetamoo, female sachem of the
Pocasset, became Metacom's ally and friend for the rest of his life. Metacom married Weetamoo's younger sister Wootonekanuske.[citation needed] It is unclear how many children they had or what happened to them. Wootonekanuske and one of their sons were sold to slavery in the
West Indies following the defeat of the Native Americans in what became known as
King Philip's War.[3]
Initially, Metacom sought to live in harmony with the colonists. As a sachem, he took the lead in much of his tribes' trade with the colonies. He adopted the European name of Philip,[4] and bought his clothes in
Boston, Massachusetts.[citation needed]
The colonies continued to expand. To the west, the
Iroquois Confederation also was fighting against neighboring tribes in the
Beaver Wars, pushing them from the west and encroaching on Metacom's territory. Finally, in 1671, the colonial leaders of the
Plymouth Colony forced major concessions from him. Metacom surrendered much of his tribe's armament and ammunition, and agreed that they were subject to English law. The encroachment continued until hostilities broke out in 1675. Metacom led the opponents of the English, with the goal of stopping Puritan expansion.[citation needed]
Name change
In the spring of 1660 Metacom's brother
Wamsutta appeared before the court of
Plymouth to request that he and his brother be given English names in accordance with Wampanoag custom, in which new names marked significant moments in time (such as, in this case, Wamsutta's father's death). The court agreed and Wamsutta had his name changed to Alexander, and Metacom's was changed to Philip. Author
Nathaniel Philbrick has suggested that the Wampanoag may have taken action at the urging of Wamsutta's interpreter, the Christian neophyte
John Sassamon.[5] Metacom was later called "King Philip" by the English.
King Philip used tribal alliances to coordinate efforts to push European colonists out of New England. Many of the native tribes in the region wanted to push out the colonists following conflicts over land use, diminished game as a consequence of expanding European settlement, and other tensions.
As the colonists brought their growing numbers to bear, King Philip and some of his followers took refuge in the great
Assowampset Swamp in southern
Massachusetts. He held out for a time, with his family and remaining followers.
Hunted by a group of rangers led by
Captain Benjamin Church, King Philip was fatally shot by a
praying Indian named
John Alderman, on August 12, 1676, in the Miery Swamp near
Mount Hope in
Bristol, Rhode Island. He was shot by Alderman for killing his brother. After his death, his wife and nine-year-old son were captured and sold as slaves in
Bermuda. Philip's head was mounted on a pike at the entrance to
Plymouth, Massachusetts, where it remained for more than two decades. His body was cut into quarters and hung in trees.[6] Alderman was given Philip's right hand as a trophy.
In his short story "
The Devil and Daniel Webster" (1937),
Stephen Vincent Benét portrays Metacom as a villain to the colonists, and as being killed by a blow to the head (he was shot in the heart). Webster is portrayed as respecting Metacom as one of those who "formed American history." Metacomet, together with other famous historical villains, is a juror in the "trial of the damned". When convinced that his damnation resulted in his loss of admiration for the natural world, he ultimately takes Webster's side against the Devil. In the
film he is replaced by Asa, the Black Monk.
Metacom is featured in the 1995 film The Scarlet Letter as the Wampanoags' new chief after his father's death.
David Kerr Chivers' Metacomet's War (2008) is an historical novel about King Philip's War.
Narragansett journalist
John Christian Hopkins's novel, Carlomagno, is a historical novel that imagines Metacom's son becoming a pirate after having been sold into slavery in the West Indies.
The novel My Father's Kingdom (2017, by James W. George) focuses on the events leading to King Philip's War.
King Philip Stockade, a large park named after the chief, where the Pocumtuc Indians planned and began the Sack of
Springfield, is now a part of
Forest Park in Springfield
^Silverman, David (2019). This Land Is Their Land. New York: Bloomsbury Publishing.
^Lepore, Jill. The Name of War: King Philip's War and the Origins of American Identity, New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1998. Note: King Philip "was also known as Metacom, or Metacomet. King Philip may well have been a name that he adopted, as it was common for Natives to take other names. King Philip had on several occasions signed as such and has been referred to by other natives by that name."
^Lepore, J. (2019). "Chapter 2: Rulers and the Ruled". In These truths: A History of the United States. New York: W.W. Norton & Company.