Respuesta :
There were many incidents which caused tension to build, but the main thing was when Plymouth County officials hanged three Wampanoags for the murder of a Christianized Indian
Answer:
The King Philip's War was a violent conflict that took place between 1675 and 1678 between the settlers arrived in North America and Indians who lived in New England.
The Wampanoag Indians welcomed and helped the Pilgrims, the first settlers, to survive a winter for which they were not prepared. Their coexistence was peaceful at first, but the continued arrival of European settlers and their expansion into the interior of the continent, led them to invade more and more Indian lands. This began to cause continuous confrontations, until in 1675 the conflict that would be definitive was unleashed: King Philip's War. Philip was the Christian name of the head of the Wampanoag, Metacomet. The settlers referred to the Indian chiefs as king. Philip was captured by the English. He became ill and died while he was captive, and his death provoked the wrath of the natives.
The consequences of the war were dramatic for both sides, but especially for the indigenous populations: the Narragansett, the Wampanoag, the Podunk, the Nipmuck, the Mohicans and other villages were practically exterminated.