Chickasaw$13041$ - traduzione in spagnolo
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Chickasaw$13041$ - traduzione in spagnolo

INDIGENOUS PEOPLE OF SOUTHEASTERN WOODLANDS OF THE US
Chickasaw mythology; Chickasaws; Chicacha; Chickasaw (tribe); Chickasaw tribe; Chicksaw; Chickasaw people; The Chickasaw domain; Chickasaw Indian
  • A sketch of a Chickasaw by Bernard Romans, 1775
  • Sculpture of a stylized 18th-century Chickasaw warrior by [[Enoch Kelly Haney]], at the [[Chickasaw Cultural Center]] in Oklahoma
  • The second leg of the de Soto Expedition, from [[Apalachee]] to the Chicaza
  • Fred Tecumseh Waite]], a cowboy and Chickasaw Nation statesman
  • In the 1850s [[Holmes Colbert]] (Chickasaw) helped write the constitution of the nation in [[Indian Territory]].
  • enslavement]] and the 1715–7 [[Yamasee War]]. The Chickasaw are labeled as "Chickisa".
  • Historic Marker in [[Marion, Arkansas]] for the Trail of Tears

Chickasaw      
n. de la tribu de Chicaso (tribu indígena)

Definizione

Chickasaws
·noun ·pl A tribe of North American Indians (Southern Appalachian) allied to the Choctaws. They formerly occupied the northern part of Alabama and Mississippi, but now live in the Indian Territory.

Wikipedia

Chickasaw

The Chickasaw ( CHIK-ə-saw) are an indigenous people of the Southeastern Woodlands. Their traditional territory was in the Southeastern United States of Mississippi, Alabama, and Tennessee as well in southwestern Kentucky. Their language is classified as a member of the Muskogean language family. In the present day, they are organized as the federally recognized Chickasaw Nation.

Chickasaw people have a migration story in which they moved from a land west of the Mississippi River to reach present-day northeast Mississippi, northwest Alabama, and into Lawrence County, Tennessee. They had interaction with French, English, and Spanish colonists during the colonial period. The United States considered the Chickasaw one of the Five Civilized Tribes of the Southeast, as they adopted numerous practices of European Americans. Resisting European-American settlers encroaching on their territory, they were forced by the U.S. government to sell their traditional lands in the 1832 Treaty of Pontotoc Creek and move to Indian Territory (Oklahoma) during the era of Indian removal in the 1830s.

Most of their descendants remain as residents of what is now Oklahoma. The Chickasaw Nation in Oklahoma is the 13th-largest federally recognized tribe in the United States. Its members are related to the Choctaw and share a common history with them. The Chickasaw were divided into two groups (moieties): the Imosak Cha'a' (chopped hickory) and the Inchokka' Lhipa' (worn out house), though the characteristics of these groups in relation to Chickasaw villages, clans, and house groups is uncertain. They traditionally followed a kinship system of matrilineal descent, in which inheritance and descent are traced through the maternal line. Children are considered born into the mother's family and clan, and gain their social status from her. Women controlled most property and hereditary leadership in the tribe passed through the maternal line.