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Chickasaw
(redirected from Chicacha)

   Also found in: Wikipedia, Hutchinson 0.04 sec.
Chickasaw (chĭk`əsô), Native North Americans whose language belongs to the Muskogean branch of the Hokan-Siouan linguistic stock (see Native American languages Native American languages, languages of the native peoples of the Western Hemisphere and their descendants. A number of the Native American languages that were spoken at the time of the European arrival in the New World in the late 15th cent.
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). They occupied N Mississippi and were closely related in language and culture to the Choctaw. The Chickasaw warred constantly with the Choctaw, the Creek, the Cherokee, and the Shawnee. The decline of the Chickasaw can be traced to the conflict for control of interior North America between France and Great Britain. Probably because British traders were established in their country before the settlement of Louisiana, the Chickasaw fought on the side of Great Britain, and French attempts to make peace with them were unsuccessful. After 1834 they moved, according to treaty arrangements, to Oklahoma, where they constituted one of the Five Civilized Tribes Five Civilized Tribes, inclusive term used since mid-19th cent. for the Cherokee , Chickasaw , Choctaw , Creek , and Seminole tribes of E Oklahoma. By 1850 some 60,000 members of these tribes were settled in the Indian Territory under the Removal Act of 1830, which
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. In 1990 there were 21,500 Chickasaw in the United States.

Bibliography

See A. M. Gibson, The Chickasaws (1971).


Chickasaw

North American Indian people living mainly in Oklahoma, U.S. Their language, Chickasaw, is a Muskogean language closely related to that of the Choctaw. Before colonization, the Chickasaw inhabited what are now Kentucky, Tennessee, northern Mississippi, and Alabama. At that time, they were a seminomadic people whose dwellings were distributed along rivers rather than clustered in villages. They traced descent through the maternal line and frequently intermarried with other tribes. The supreme deity was associated with the sky, sun, and fire. In the 1830s they were forcibly removed to Indian Territory (Oklahoma). Chickasaw descendants numbered more than 38,000 in the early 21st century.



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11) For the Spanish treaty see "Tratado de alianza entre Espana y los Indios Chactas y Chicasas o Chicachas, 14 de Julio de 1784," in Manuel Serrano y Sanz, Espana y los Indios Cherokis y Chactas en la Segunda Mitad del Siglo XVIII (Seville, Spain, 1916), 82-85.
 
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