Anthropology
Related: About this forumCenturies-old tools reveal how the Chikasha people fought off conquistadors
Hernando de Soto's expedition ultimately failed, but they left an almost literal trail of breadcrumbs in their wake.
BY PHILIP KIEFER | PUBLISHED JUL 12, 2021 12:00 PM
In the mid-16th century, the residents of a regional capital called Chikasha, situated in the prairies and flatwoods of eastern Mississippi, became some of the first inhabitants of the now-United States to encounter European colonists.
In the winter of 1540, a Spanish soldier named Hernando de Soto led a colonial expedition into the region, and a local leader, Chikasha Minka, gave them permission to overwinter in the town. Like most Spanish expeditions, de Sotos travels left a trail of violence. Although the party was already weakened by a battle in Florida, it soon came into conflict with its hosts, executing two people and maiming another.
According to accounts published by survivors of the expedition, de Soto demanded that the city provide him with hundreds of captives to transport materiel. Instead, in the middle of the night, Chikasha warriors burned the Spanish encampment, killed members of the expedition, slaughtered livestock, and destroyed equipment.
Though most of the Spaniards survived the attack, they retreated west, the expedition in tatters. We know much less about what happened to the Chikasha who fended off the incursion.
More:
https://www.popsci.com/science/chikasha-metal-tools/
wnylib
(24,454 posts)I am guessing that they were related to the southeastern tribe known as the Chickasaw nation. They were among the 5 tribes forced to relocate westward on the Trail of Tears by Andrew Jackson's violation of a Supreme Court decision. Their language was part of the Muskogean linguistic family and their culture was part of the greater Mississippian Culture.
Judi Lynn
(162,406 posts)wnylib
(24,454 posts)I can't resist adding tidbits - or sometimes long bits - about Native American cultures and history when I can. But this is really just a guess that the name is related to the Chickasaw nation since I don't know for certain that they are the same. Just seems logical based on the location and name similarity.