Native American culture in the United States (800 - 1600)
The Mississippian culture were collections of Native American societies that flourished in what is now the Midwestern, Eastern, and Southeastern United States from approximately 800 to 1600, varying regionally. It was known for building large, earthen platform mounds, and often other shaped mounds as well. It was composed of a series of urban settlements and satellite villages linked together by loose trading networks. The largest city was Cahokia, believed to be a major religious center, located in what is present-day southern Illinois.
Caddoan Mississippianculture was a prehistoric Native American culture considered by archaeologists as a variant of the Mississippianculture. The Caddoan
The Upper Mississippiancultures were located in the Upper Mississippi basin and Great Lakes region of the American Midwest. They were in existence from
Mississippi or its culture. 2021, Percival Everett, The Trees, Influx Press (2022), page 139: She had come to Mississippi with her Mississippian husband, who
900 to around 1650 or 1700, considered a major component of Upper Mississippianculture, and characterized by globular, shell-tempered pottery that is often
nominee Barry Goldwater. […] He said he is confident that the majority of Mississippians "Have no desire to get under Lyndon Johnson's big tent and to share
European settlement, the area was a regional center of Native American Mississippianculture. St. Louis was founded on February 14, 1764 by French fur traders
down open rebellion,” some Southerners might have concurred with the Mississippian who argued that using strychnine and arsenic was justified against a
I'm a businessman. I'm also a Mississippian, and an American! And I'm getting SICK and TIRED of the way us Mississippians are getting our views distorted
. I'm so incredibly proud to say I'm say I'm from Mississippi, and Mississippians continue to make me proud to say that's where I'm from. Robin Roberts
line. I am in accord with the most vehement & vociferous Alabaman or Mississippian on that point ... Other racial questions are wholly different in nature—involving