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Taensa
Louisiana,
Early Inhabitants
Louisiana had a sizable prehistoric
population. Many ceremonial mounds still stand throughout
the state as reminders of the Hopewell culture (about
AD 1-800) and the Mississippian culture (about AD
800-1500), both popularly called Mound
Builders, whose people lived in highly organized
farming communities. Archaeologists believe that some
mounds located at a site called Watson Brake near
Monroe in northeast Louisiana were built more than
5,000 years ago and may be the oldest known remnants
of human construction in North America
In
the age of European exploration, beginning in the 16th
century, the region was inhabited
by peoples of three Native American language groups: the
Caddoan, Muskogean, and Tunican. Caddoan peoples included
the Caddo, Natchitoches, Yatasi, and Adai. They lived
in the northwestern part of the present state. The Muskogean
peoples, who included the Houma,
Choctaw, Acolapissa,
and Taensa, lived in east central Louisiana on
or near the Mississippi River. Most of the Tunicans, including
the Chitimacha, Atakapa,
and several smaller groups, lived along the Gulf Coast;
the small Koroa group inhabited northeastern Louisiana.
Eventually
many of these peoples moved away, as did the Caddo
in the 1830s, or were greatly reduced by war, disease,
or intermarriage. As some groups disappeared, others
migrated into Louisiana in waves occurring in the
mid-1760s and mid-1790s. The Chitimacha, Houma, Tunica-Biloxi,
Coushatta, and Choctaw still have communities in Louisiana.
from:
"Louisiana," Microsoft® Encarta® Online Encyclopedia
2001 http://encarta.msn.com
© 1997-2001 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
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