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Natchez
people
Native North American tribe of the Muskogean
language family and of the Southeast
culture area. The
tribe once lived along the lower Mississippi River, near
present-day Natchez, Mississippi.
The
Natchez were the largest and most unified tribe of the
region, with some 5000 people in the mid-1600s.
The
Natchez were well established in their villages between
the Yazoo and Pearl rivers when the French set up a
trading post in 1713. French-Natchez relations soon
deteriorated, and war ensued.
In
1729 the French, together with the Choctaw,
drove the Natchez from the region. Some took refuge
among the Creek, Cherokee,
and Chickasaw; others were
captured by the French and sold into slavery.
The
Natchez were sun worshipers; they kept a perpetual fire
burning in their temples. In their religion, their customs,
and their dependence on the cultivation of maize for
food, they were like the Creek, Choctaw, and other Gulf
tribes.
The
Natchez, however, had rigid class distinctions, including
a noble class of three ranks: Great Suns, Suns, and
Honored Men. Unlike other chiefs, the Natchez Great
Sun had autocratic powers over his subjects.
"Natchez
(people)," Microsoft® Encarta® Online Encyclopedia 2000
http://encarta.msn.com
© 1997-2000 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
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