ETOWAH INDIAN MOUNDS
'Etowah Indian Mounds' is an archaeological site in Bartow County, Georgia south of Cartersville, Georgia in the United States. The site sits on the north shore of the Etowah River. ''Etowah Indian Mounds Historic Site'' is managed by the Georgia Department of Natural Resources. There are three main mounds at the site and three lesser known mounds. The community was inhabited from about 1000-1550 A.D. by Native Americans of the Mississippian culture. The town was occupied in three distinct architectural phases (c. 1000-1200 AD) (c. 1250-1375 AD) and (c. 1375-1550 AD.) Older pottery found on the site suggest that there was an earlier village (c. 200 BC-600 AD,) associated with the Swift Creek Culture. Approximately, two miles downstream (west) of the Mississippian town was a much older town with some large mounds, dating from at least 0 AD.
The town was protected by a sophisticated semi-circular fortification system. An outer band formed by nut tree orchards prevented enemy armies from shooting masses of flaming arrows into the town. A deep moat blocked direct contact by the enemy with the palisaded walls. The moat also functioned as a drainage system during the major floods, which were common on the Etowah River until Allatoona Dam was built upstream in 1947. The timber palisade was formed by setting tree trunks into a ditch approximately 12 inches on center and then back-filling around the timbers to form a levee. Guard towers for archers were spaced approximately 80 feet apart.
Artifacts discovered in burials within the Etowah site indicate that its residents developed an artistically and technically advanced culture. Numerous copper tools, weapons and ornamental plates accompanied these burials. Where proximity to copper protected the fibers from degeneration, archaeologists also found brightly colored cloth with ornate patterns. These were the remnants of the elite's clothing. Also, numerous stone and clay statues have been found through the years in the vicinity of Etowah. Many are paired statues, which portray a man sitting cross-legged and a woman kneeling. Both figures are wearing turbans and ornate, patterned cloth. Individual statues of young women also show them kneeling and ornately clothed, but with a variety of hair styles. Even today, male Muskogee (Creek) Indians usually sit cross-legged, while the women kneel.
Archaeological research on the subject is not conclusive, but the Etowah site may be the same as a village of a similar name visited by Spanish conquistador Hernando deSoto in 1540. However, the chroniclers of the de Soto Expedition make no mention of any large mounds when visiting a town named Itaba. Itaba means "boundary" or trail crossing in the Alabamo language. The origin of the English name for the mounds, Etowah is the Archaic Muskogee place name, Etalwa. Etalwa probably referred to the "solar cross" symbol originally, but in Modern Muskogee means a "mother town."
Despite the fact that until the late 20th Century, Etowah was assumed by most Georgians to have been built by the Cherokees, the mound complex was unquestionably a Muskogean community until abandoned. Cherokees did not arrive in that part of Georgia until the late 1700s. The Cherokees were never associated with mound construction, although in some locations they did construct council houses on top of smaller Muskogean mounds. Both the Oklahoma and Eastern Creeks consider Etalwa to be their most important ancestral town, and in fact, the official title of the Oklahoma Principal Chief is "Etalwa Mikko." A new large scale model of Etalwa is on permanent display in the rotunda of the Muskogee (Creek) Capitol in Okmulgee, OK.>
Although Cyrus Thomas and John Rogan tested the site for the Smithsonian Institution in 1883, the first well-documented archaeological inquiry at the site was conducted by Warren K. Moorehead, beginning in the winter of 1925. His excavations into Mound C at the site revealed an incredibly rich array of Mississippian culture burial goods. These artifacts, along with the collections from Cahokia, Moundville, Lake Jackson (Florida), and Spiro Mounds, would later become the majority of the materials used to define the Southeastern Ceremonial Complex. The professional excavation of this enormous burial mound contributed a major research impetus to the study of Mississippian artifacts and peoples, and greatly increased the understanding of pre-Contact Native Americans artwork.
The Etowah site was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1964.
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| External links |
| References |
External links
★ LostWorlds.org | Etowah Mounds
★ Etowah Indian Mounds Historic Site
References
★ 1932 Explorations of the Etowah Site in Georgia: The Etowah Papers. Edited by Warren King Moorehead, Yale University Press.
★ 1985 Coosa: A Chiefdom in the Sixteenth-Century Southeastern United States. Charles Hudson; Marvin Smith; David Hally; Richard Polhemus; Chester DePratter. ''American Antiquity'', Vol. 50, No. 4., pp. 723-737.
★ 2007 Ancient Roots I: The Indigenous People of the Southern Highlands. Richard L. Thornton, AIA Lulu Publishing Co., Morris, NC.
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