Title: PRESENTATION OF INDIANS BY:KALEB AND JACOB
1PRESENTATION OF INDIANS
BYKALEB AND JACOB
2Aztec Indians
- The Aztecs came into Anahuac,the valley of
Mexico,in A.D. 1168.The date 1168 does not tell
us that the Aztecs actually started their
settlement there.Dr.Vaillant believed,that at
this time the Aztecs,who were then cultural
nonentities,had began to use a calender which had
been in use for thousands of years.At least in so
thickly settled an area as the valley of Anahuac
they were so insignificant that there arrival at
the lakes passed completely unnoticed.There is no
record of their arrival in the forest of
Chapultepecin the generation about A.D.1250.
3Mississippi Mound Builders
- Although the first people entered what is now the
Mississippi about 12,000 years ago, the earliest
major phase of earthen mound construction in this
area did not begin until some 2100 years ago.
Mounds continued to be built sporadically for
another 1800 years, or until around 1700 A.D.
Archeologists, the scientist who study the
evidence of past human lifeways, classify
moundbuilding Indians of the Southeast into three
major chronological/cultural divisions the
Archaic, the Woodland, and the Mississippian
traditions.
4CHICKASAW INDIANS
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It is suspected that in earlier history the
Chickasaw and Choctaw may have been a single
tribe. The Chickasaw were a semi-nomadic tribe
that closely patrolled their claimed territory
and raided territory to the north. While doing
so, they absorbed the remnants of the tribes that
they conquered. By doing this, they became a
mixed-blood tribe. They became known as "breeds".
5Shawnee Indians
The Shawnee Indians were living in the Ohio
Valley as early as the late 1600s. The Iroquois
Indians were unwilling to share these rich
hunting grounds and drove the Shawnees away.
Some went to Illinois, others went to
Pennsylvania, Maryland or Georgia. As the power
of the Iroquois weakened, the Shawnee Indians
moved back into Ohio from the south and the
east. They settled in the lower Scioto River
valley
6Olmec Indians
- The Olmec were the first one of the first
civilizations in the Americas and were the mother
culture of many Central American Native cultures.
The Olmec called themselves Xi (pronounced shee).
The Olmec thrived in the forests, rivers and
savannas of the Gulf of Mexico from 1200 to 400
BC. Their territory began at the Valley of Mexico
and reached to Guatemala. No one is certain where
the Olmec came from or how they go to South
America, but they most likely descended from the
hunter gathers that first entered the Americas
7CREEK INDIAN
- The Creek Indians (or Muskogee) belong to the
Muskhogean linguistic stock. The historical
Creek, a union known as the Creek Confederacy was
made out of the remains of the several separate
tribes that occupied Georgia and Alabama in the
American Colonial Period. It is believed that the
Creek culture began as a way to guard against
other larger conquering Indian tribes of the
region. The Confederacy was in constant flux, its
numbers and land possessions ever-changing as
small bands joined and withdrew from the alliance
8Mayans Indians
The Mayans are regarded as the inventors of many
aspects of Meso-American cultures including the
first calendar and hieroglyphic writing in the
Western hemisphere. Archeologists have not
settled the relationship between the Olmecs and
the Mayans, and it is a mystery whether the
Mayans were their descendants, trading partners,
or had another relationship. It is agreed that
the Mayans developed a complex calendar and the
most elaborate form of hieroglyphics in America,
both based on the Olmec's versions.
9Cherokee Indians
- At the time of European contact, the Cherokees
numbered about twenty-two thousand and controlled
more than forty thousand square miles of land.
Their homeland consisted of parts of eight
present states the Carolinas, the Virginias,
Kentucky, Tennessee, Georgia, and Alabama. The
original holdings were gradually eliminated by
more than three dozen land cessions with the
British and the United States between 1721 and
1835. By 1819, Cherokee territory included only
the adjacent mountainous areas of North Carolina,
Tennessee, Georgia, and Alabama. In December
1835, the Treaty of New Echota ceded the last
remaining territory east of the Mississippi. In
exchange the Cherokees received equivalent
holdings in what is now northeastern Oklahoma.