Powhatan or
Virginia Algonquian is an
extinct language belonging to the
Eastern Algonquian subgroup of the
Algonquian languages. It was spoken by the
Powhatan people of
tidewater Virginia. It became extinct around the 1790s after speakers switched to English. The sole documentary evidence for this language is two short wordlists recorded around the time of first European contact.
William Strachey recorded about 500 words and
Captain John Smith recorded only about 50 words. Smith also reported the existence of a
pidgin form of Powhatan, but virtually nothing is known of it. Like many Algonquian languages, Powhatan did not have a writing system, so all that is left are the recordings from the 17th century and the piecing together that can be done using related Algonquian languages.