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Taensa Indians
The Northern Taensa
Indians
On account of the
recent discovery of their consonantic
language, which proves to be disconnected
from any other aboriginal tongue spoken in
North America, a peculiar interest attaches
itself to the tribe of the Taensa Indians,
whose cabins stood in Tensas county,
Louisiana, bordering east on Mississippi
river. The Tensas River, in French Bayou
Tensa, which joins the Washita River at
Trinity City, after forming a prodigious
number of bends, and flowing past a
multitude of artificial mounds, still keeps
up the memory of this extinct tribe.
In March 1700, the
French commander L. d’Iberville calculated the distance
from the landing of the Natchez to that of
the Taensas, following the river, at about
15½ leagues, and in the air-line, 11¼
leagues. That Taensa landing, at the foot of
a bluff nine hundred feet high (150 toises),
was about 325 Lat., while d’Iberville,
trusting his inaccurate methods of
measuring, located it at 32° 47’ Lat. (Margry
IV, 413).
The tribe occupied
seven villages at the time of d’Iberville’s
visit, which were distant four leagues from
the Mississippi river, and grouped around a
semi-circular lake, probably Lake St.
Joseph. One hundred and twenty of these
cabins were extending for two leagues on the
lakeshore, and a "temple" was among them.
The missionary Montigny, who visited the
locality about the same epoch, estimated the
population of that part of the Taensa
settlement which he saw at 400 persons.
"They were scattered over an area of eight
leagues, and their cabins lay along a
river."
The seven villages
visited by d Iberville constitute one town
only, as he was told. This means to say that
they formed a confederacy. A Taensa Indian,
who accompanied him, gave their names in the
Chicasa trade language, or, as the French
called it, the Mobilian jargon (Margry IV,
179).
- Taënsas; from
Cha’hta tandshi maize.
- Ohytoucoulas;
perhaps from úti chestnut; cf. utápa
chestnut eater. For -ougoula, cf. p. 36.
- Nyhougoulas;
- Couthaougoulas; from
Cha’hta uk’hátaχ lake.
- Conchayon; cf.
Cha’hta kónshak reed, species of cane.
- Talaspa; probably
from tá’lapi five, or ta’lepa hundred.
- Chaoucoula; from
Cha’hta issi, deer, or hátche river,
water-course.
In the Taensa Grammar
and Vocabulary of Haumonté, Parisot and Adam
(Paris, 1882), the name by which the people
called itself is Hâstriryini "warriors, men,
tribe." cf. p. 91: hâstri to fight, make
war; hâstrir warrior, man; hâstriryi
people,
tribe; but Tensagini also occurs in the
texts, which would point to an extensive
maize culture.
The Taensa were sun
worshipers, and had a temple with idols and
a perpetual fire. When d Iberville sojourned
among them, lightning struck their temple
and destroyed it, upon which the mothers
sacrificed their infants, to appease the
wrath of the incensed deity, by throwing
them into the burning edifice (Margry IV,
414, etc.; V, 398). The people then rubbed
their faces and bodies with earth. Nothing
definite is known about their gentes,
phratries and totems. Several French authors
represent them as speaking the Naktche
language (which is untrue) and as being of
the same nation.1 D Iberville states that
their language differed from that of the Huma tribe.
The remnants of a tribe
called Mosopellea, probably of Illinois-Algonkin
origin and previously residing west of the
"Isle of Tamaroa," on western shore of
Mississippi River, joined the Taensa, and
were met there in 1682 by Tonti. They had
been almost annihilated by the Iroquois.2
The Taensa had, at one
time, formed an alliance with the Koroa,
then on Yazoo River, and another with the
Arkansas Indians.
The Taensa grammar
speaks of a northern and of a southern, more
polished dialect, but does not locate them
topographically. The only word of Taensa
which I have found to agree with any other
language, is ista eye; it also occurs in
Southern Dakotan dialects.
The Southern Taensa
Indians
In early colonial times
a portion of the Northern Taensa, driven
from their homes on the Taensa River by the
rage of the Chicasa, fled to the Mobilians.
The French settled them on the western side
of Mobile bay, below Fort St. Louis, and
thirty miles above Fort Condé, which stood
on the site of the present city of Mobile.3
The French called them "les petits Taënsas"
in contradistinction to the " great (or
northern) Taënsas," on Mississippi and
Taensa Rivers. About the middle of the
eighteenth century one hundred of their
cabins stood north of the French fort St.
Louis, and also north of the Tohome Indian
settlement. The Taensa were then speaking
their native language and, besides this, a
corrupt Chicasa dialect, called the Mobilian
language by the French.4 Subsequently they
must have removed from there to the eastern
channel, for Bartram, Travels, pp. 401. 403,
describes Taensa there as a "pretty high
bluff, on the eastern channel of the great
Mobile river, about thirty miles above Fort
Condé, or city of Mobile, at the head of the
bay with many artificial mounds of earth and
other ruins." During the wars of 1813-15 the
adjacent country is called the "Tensaw
country."
It is not unlikely that
these Taensa were identical with the "petits
Taensas" seen by Lemoyne d Iberville at the
Huma town in March 1700, and described by
him as migratory, but living most of the
time at three days distance west of Huma,
and then warring against the Bayogoulas.
They gained their sustenance by hunting,
though buffaloes were scarce in their
country, and were men of a fine physique (Margry
IV, 408). In 1702 they defeated the
Bayogoulas and burnt their village on
Mississippi River; the Bayogoulas fled to the French fort
on that river, then commanded by Mr. St.
Denis. If identical with the Taensa on
Mobile River, these rights of theirs must
have occurred during their passage from the
North to the bay of Mobile.
The Tangipahoa
Indians
A third tribe, which
may have stood in some connection with the
two tribes above, are the Tangipahoa Indians
settled in various places east of New
Orleans, especially on Tangipahoa River, in
southeastern Louisiana. A French author
states that they formed one of the seven
villages of the Acolapissa. The name is
written in different ways, and is
interpreted by Gov. Allen Wright as "those
who gather maize stalks," from tandshe
maize; ápi stalk, cob; áyua they gather.
Pénicaut defines the name differently, for
he states (Margry V, 387) "we found
(northwest of Lake Pontchartrain) a river,
Tandgepao, which in the Indian signifies
bled blanch The Taensapaoa tribe, on the
river of the same name, is referred to in
Bartram, Travels, p. 422; cf. p. 423. We
have no notice concerning the language
spoken by this tribe, which was, perhaps,
incorporated into the Cha’hta living now
around New Orleans; thus we are unable to
decide whether they spoke Cha’hta, like the
other Acolapissa, or another tongue. The
Tangibao tribe was "destroyed by the Oumas,"
as stated in a passage of Margry (IV, 168);
by which is meant, that they were scattered
and their tribal connection disrupted.
Footnotes:
- Grammaire et Voc. Taensa, Introd., pp. xii. xiv. Compare also
Margry, Déc. et Etabl., I, 556-557,566-568,
600-602, 609-610, 616; IV, 414. Their
temple, described by le Sieur de Tonty
(traveling with la Salle in 1682) in French,
Hist. Coll. of La., I, pp. 61. 64.
- Margry I, 610.
Mosopolea, ibid. II, 237; Monsopela, on the
map in D. Coxe, Carolana.
- At that time they
were warring unsuccessfully against the Huma
(1713); Pénicaut (in Margry V, 508. 509) saw
them at Manchac.
- T. Jefferys, Hist, of
French Dominions in America; London, 1761;
I, p. 162, sq.
Back to:
Southern Families of Indians
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.
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