|
Indian Tribes On The Yazoo River
Along the Yazoo river
existed a series of towns which seem to have
been independent at the time of their
discovery, but at a late period, about 1836,
were incorporated into the Chicasa people.
Some were inhabited by powerful and
influential tribes, but it is uncertain
whether any of them were of Maskoki lineage
and language or not.1 During the third Naktche-French war, the Yazoo tribes
suffered considerably from attacks directed
upon them by the
Arkansas Indians. The
countries along Yazoo river are low and
swampy grounds, subject to inundations,
especially the narrow strip of land
extending between that river and the
Mississippi.
The Taensa guide who
accompanied Lemoyne d Iberville, up the
Yazoo River in March 1699, enumerated the
villages seen on its low banks in their
succession from southwest to northeast, as
follows (Margry IV, 180):
1. Tonica, four days
travel from the
Naktche and two days travel
from the uppermost town, Thysia. Cf.
Tonica,
p. 39 sqq.
2. Ouispe; the Oussipés
of Pénicaut.
3. Opocoulas. They are
the Affagoulas, Offogoula, Ouféogoulas or
"Dog-People" of the later authors, and in
1784 some of them are mentioned as residing
eight miles above Pointe Coupee, on W. bank
of Mississippi River.
4. Taposa; the
Tapouchas of Baudry de Loziére.
5. Chaquesauma. This
important tribe, written also Chokeechuma,
Chactchioumas, Saques’húma, etc., are the
Saquechuma visited by a detachment of de
Soto's army in their walled town (1540). The
name signifies "red crabs." Cf. Adair,
History, p. 352: "Tahre hache
(Tallahatchi),2 which lower down is called Chokchooma River, as that nation made their
first settlements there, after they came on
the other side of Mississippi. . . . The
Chicasaw, Choktah and also the Chokchooma,
who in process of time were forced by war to
settle between the two former nations, came
together from the west as one family," etc.
Cf. B. Romans, p. 315. Crab, crawfish is sóktchu in Creek, sáktchi in Hitchiti.
6. Outapa; called
Epitoupa, Ibitoupas in other documents.
7. Thysia; at six days
canoe travel (forty-two leagues) from the
Naktche. They are the Tihiou of Dan. Coxe
(1741).
Pénicaut, who
accompanied d’Iberville in this expedition,
gives an account of the Yazoo villages,
which differs in some respects from the
above: Going up the river of the Yazoux for
four leagues, there are found on the right
the villages inhabited by six savage
nations, called "les Yasoux, les Offogoulas,
les Tonicas, les Coroas, les Ouitoupas et
les Oussipés." A French priest had already
fixed himself in one of the villages for
their conversion.3
D’Iberville was also
informed that the Chicasa and the Napissas
formed a union, and that the villages of
both were standing close to each other. The
term Napissa, in Cha’hta naⁿpissa,
means spy, sentinel, watcher, and
corresponds in signification to Akolapissa,
name of a tribe between Mobile Bay and New
Orleans, q. v. Compare also the Napochies,
who, at the time of Tristan de Luna's visit,
warred with the Coca (or Kusa, on Coosa
river?): "Coças tenian guerra con los
Napochies"; Barcia, Ensayo, p. 37.
D. Coxe, Carolana, p.
10, gives the Yazoo towns in the following
order: The lowest is Yassaues or Yassa
(Yazoo), then Tounica, Kouroua, Samboukia,
Tihiou, Epitoupa. Their enumeration by
Baudry de Loziére, 1802, is as follows: "Yazoos,
Offogoulas, Coroas are united, and live on
Yazoo river in one village; strength, 120
men. Chacchioumas, Ibitoupas, Tapouchas in
one settlement on Upper Yazoo River, forty
leagues from the above."
Another Yazoo tribe,
mentioned at a later period as confederated
with the Chicasa are the Tchúla, Chola or
"Foxes."
Yazoo is not a Cha’hta
word, although the Cha’hta had a "clan" of
that name: Yā’sho ókla, Yáshukla, as I am informed by Gov. Allen Wright.4 T. Jefferys
(I, 144) reports the Yazoos to be the allies
of the "Cherokees, who are under the
protection of Great Britain." He also states
that the French post was three leagues from
the mouth of Yazoo river, close to a village
inhabited by a medley of Yazoo, Couroas and
Ofogoula Indians, and mentions the tribes in
the following order (I, 163): "Yazoo
Indians, about 100 huts; further up, Coroas,
about 40 huts; Chactioumas or "red
lobsters", about 50 huts, on same
river; Oufé-ouglas, about 60 huts; Tapoussas,
not over 25 huts."
Footnotes:
- I have treated of
some of these tribes (Tonica, Koroa) in
separate articles. Moncachtape said to du
Pratz, that the Yazoo Indians regarded the Chicasa as their elders, "since from them
came the language of the country."
- A large northern
affluent of Yazoo river, in northern parts
of Mississippi State.
- Cf. Margry V, 401 and
Note.
- Cf. article on
Yuchi,
p. 24.
Back to:
Maskoki Family
Notes About Book:
Source: Gatschet, Albert S., A Migration Legend of the Creek Indians.
Pub.
D.G. Brinton, Philadelphia, 1884.
Notes about Online Publication: This manuscript has been ocr'd and heavily
edited. Many of the Native American words have been reproduced as clearly as
online publication will allow us, but not all are exactly the way they were in
the original work. The structure of this manuscript has been changed to allow
better online presentation.
|
|