Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

The Lost City of Cahokia
Humanities | September/October 2004 | Emmett Berg

Posted on 01/17/2006 2:01:14 PM PST by robowombat

The Lost City of Cahokia Ancient Tribes of the Mississippi Brought to Life By Emmett Berg

The city of Cahokia, in modern-day Illinois, had a population of twenty thousand at its pinnacle in the 1300s. With pyramids, mounds, and several large ceremonial areas, Cahokia was the hub of a way of life for millions of Native Americans before the society's decline and devastation by foreign diseases.

Representatives from eleven tribes are working alongside archaeologists and anthropologists to assist the Art Institute of Chicago in developing an exhibition that explores artistic and cultural themes of a major branch of pre-Columbian civilization--the direct ancestors of most American Indians today. "Hero, Hawk and Open Hand: American Indian Art of the Ancient Midwest and South," opening November 20, comprises more than three hundred works. It's one of the largest showings of artifacts, design, and architecture dating from the rise and decline of Mississippian civilizations in the Midwest and the South between 2000 B.C.E and 1600 C.E.

"This particular exhibition has the potential to be the most important exhibition ever on Native American Indians. It could change the popular conception of what Native Americans were like," says Garrick Bailey, a Tulsa University professor of cultural anthropology who is part white, part Choctaw, and part Cherokee.

"One of the strongest images in American society, even today, is that of the American Indian," he says. "It seems to range only from red devil to noble savage--both a simple child of nature. It's very pervasive. It's had a tremendous impact on how white America sees Indians and increasingly how younger American Indians see themselves. Trying to address that issue is the most important one."

Tribal members will serve as docents for the exhibition. Mural-sized reconstruction drawings will evoke the panorama and complexity of ancient settlements found in present day Ohio, Indiana, and Illinois, along the Tennessee and Mississippi Rivers, and elsewhere in the South. The murals are meant to reinforce the shared themes and worldview of ancient America implicit in the artifacts, although there are regional distinctions and variation.

The objects on display include ceremonial pipes sculptured in animal and human forms, conch shells engraved with ritualistic scenes, copper repoussé plates of rulers in full regalia, masks of shell and wood, embellished ceramic vessels and figural forms, finely worked stone implements, mica figures, and jewelry. Many of the works come from private collections and have never before been viewed widely.

Hero, hawk, and open hand refer to three recurrent motifs in native mythology regarding life, death, and renewal. Pipe effigies and fertility figures depict heroes, or legendary figures--often ancestors or mythical sources of life--who were also supernatural protectors and models for human leaders. Figures such as the hawk were connected with forces in nature and were believed to be linked to humans; dreams and ritual offerings made by shamans, hunters, and rulers maintained the cycles of society. The open hand is a sign in the Native American constellation associated with the passage of the soul from the realm of the living to that of the dead. Such cosmological forces were invoked by rituals and by aligning ceremonial sites to the paths of the sun or moon and the movements of constellations.

The exhibition begins with a map of the eastern U.S. stripped of all detail except place names descended from Native American languages--a riposte to the American concept of "manifest destiny": the idea that America was a wilderness until Europeans arrived, and that native peoples were ill-equipped to forge a civilization of their own.

"Names of hundreds of places and geographical features, signs pointing to scattered archaeological sites, and many routes of overland travel testify to that fact that there never really was an untamed wilderness here--or at least not since the time of the mastodon and saber-tooth cat," writes Richard Townsend, the Institute's curator for Amerindian art, in his introduction to the exhibition catalog. "Many highways are also superimposed on roads traveled since early colonial times, which in turn followed centuries-old Indian trails . . . and the paths of seasonal animal migrations."

Retracing the steps of a culture from which so much has been washed away can be baffling. Bailey recounts a 1910 encounter between the Omaha anthropologist Francis La Flesche and the Osage priest Saucy Calf. For four days Saucy Calf performed ceremonial rites consisting of ninety songs, six long ritual prayers, and seven symbolic ritual acts called we'-ga-xe. Saucy Calf used a notched tally stick on which each notch represented a song--a finger holding his place as a memory aid. As La Flesche recorded Saucy Calf, he noticed that the priest would sometimes skip notches without singing a song, and asked why he did so.

"Saucy Calf replied that he should not concern himself about those songs, for the ones he had forgotten were of ’no particular importance,'" Bailey writes.

Though there are many skipped notches, the archaeological record is more complete: it begins with hunting and gathering peoples of the late Pleistocene epoch during the last phases of the Ice Age. They hunted mammoths and bison as well as deer, and collected fruits and plants in season. Their stone axe heads and other objects show a high level of symbolic activity, Townsend says. The largest known settlement, located on the banks of the river Bayou Maçon in northeastern Louisiana, was anchored by a fifty-foot-high ceremonial mound aligned to the sun's path.

Around 500 B.C.E. central Ohio became a beehive of new cultural activity. The Adena people built conical mounds to commemorate tribal leaders, and their practices were expanded by the Hopewell culture, which existed between the years 1 and 400 C.E. The Newark Earthworks is perhaps the best known. The site encompassed four square miles and included two giant circles, an ellipse, a square, and an octagon, all connected by parallel walls. Bradley T. Lepper writes in an essay included in the exhibition catalog, "Ephraim G. Squier and Edwin H. Davis, among the foremost of the early students of American archaeology, declared in 1848 that the works occupying this Ôremarkable plain' were so complicated that it was Ôimpossible to give anything like a comprehensive description of them'."

The Hopewell people had by this time expanded their artistic repertoire to specialized, supernatural figures such as the long-nosed god, the birdman, and the old-woman-who-never-dies. They employed exotic materials such as shell from the Gulf of Mexico, copper from present-day Michigan, mica from what is now North Carolina, and obsidian from the land that became Wyoming. Artisans painstakingly crafted walls and mounds from layers of clay of different colors, and topped them with sod. As development encroached upon the works, an increasing amount of artifacts were laid bare.

"The earthworks were not just symbols on the landscape, they were built to be part of the landscape; and, perhaps, to allow their builders to transcend the boundaries of the terrestrial sphere," Lepper writes. "In one section, called Observatory Mound, the intricate 18.6-year cycle of the moon can be encompassed by four points on the eastern horizon marking a maximum northern moonrise, a minimum northern moonrise, a maximum and minimum southern moonrise, and four points on the western horizon marking the corresponding moonsets."

The Hopewell people eventually spread westward to the Illinois River Valley and into Tennessee, where the Mississippian period began some time after 800 C.E. Cahokia was built near where the Missouri, Ohio, and Illinois rivers empty into the Mississippi.

As the region's capital, Cahokia was replete with flat-top pyramids, burial mounds, and a vast ceremonial concourse surrounded by commercial and residential areas as well as outlying agriculture zones. A central mound would grow to a height of one hundred feet--the largest mound north of the valley of Mexico. The city housed artisans, political embassies, and was a destination for religious pilgrims. Cahokians were ruled under matrilineal succession and practiced human sacrifice. The death of a leader required the sacrifice of the spouse and at times other family members.

The city's enduring legacy came in the form of highly trained artisans who supplied works to chieftains and elites. Cahokian elites most likely used figurines crafted into pipes, shells inscribed with supernatural characters, stylized copper plates, and other items as a means to disseminate their beliefs to outlying communities, including the ancient chieftaincies at Etowah, Georgia; Spiro, Oklahoma; and Moundville, Alabama. The body of art produced at Cahokia spread far and wide, helping to perpetuate and reinforce the central myths and rituals common to the people at the time.

"The objects in the exhibition belong to the symbolic domain but had utility originally," Townsend says. One such item is a bannerstone, which functioned as a tool for atlatl spear throwers but could take on symbolic value similar to a coat of arms. When intricate figures or designs were carved on bannerstones, perhaps identifying them as props in one of the great myths, they would assume the power of relics. "The objects become very special as part of trappings of secular and religious power." Increased food production led societies as large as Cahokia to thrive for more than two centuries, but according to Townsend, a drought may have set in motion the slow decline that eventually resulted in the abandonment of nearly every large town.

By the time Spanish explorer Hernando De Soto and six hundred Spanish soldiers landed near Tampa Bay in 1539, the world they found was a well-populated system of sociopolitical centers and dependent villages, such as the four-hundred-mile stretch of Tennessee and Alabama that once formed the extended environs of the city known as Coosa. Bailey recalls one of De Soto's chroniclers reporting, "When the expedition reached the banks of the river separating them from town of Cutifachiqui, the woman chief ’. . . came from the town in a carrying chair in which certain principal Indians carried her to the river.'

"At Talomeco [in present day South Carolina] they found a town of five hundred houses, abandoned, its fields choked with weeds," Bailey says. "They were told that a few years earlier the town had been struck by a pestilence, which had killed many of the people, and caused the survivors to flee. Some iron tools found at the deserted town by De Soto men showed that the people had already come in contact with Europeans. Most likely they had met the Spanish settlers at San Miguel de Guadalupe, a coastal settlement founded in 1526 and abandoned the following year."

Contacts that Europeans made with Native Americans in this era set off a wave of catastrophic outbreaks of measles, smallpox, diphtheria, and even the common cold. More than 90 percent of Indian populations perished within a century.

The Indian country most colonists found when they crossed the Appalachians lacked the sophistication of the Cahokia and the mound builders. The natives had cruder tools, and no explanation for the mounds, leading some of the Europeans to believe that another race entirely had been responsible for fantastic artifacts and earth works.

"It would be like if you visited Europe in the Middle Ages, and there were no royalty or nobles--only peasants," Bailey says.

What remains of Cahokia are not only artifacts. Its root language, Dhegiha, has a legacy west of the Mississippi with the Omaha, Ponca, Osage, and Kansa, and perhaps the Chiwere-Winnebago of the Great Lakes region.

Yet a legacy does not ensure survival. Tim Thompson, a medicine man fluent in the Muscogee language, said in an interview for the exhibition that the younger generation has an interest in languages, but as just one of many activities that form the time-honored passing on of sacred knowledge.

"When you're trying to teach a language, regardless of what kind, but especially a Native Indian language, it's hard to hold anybody's interest," Thompson says, "because this kind of language was never a written language to begin with. The language is part of culture, and culture, to me, is something you can't teach-- you've got to live it."

"What's crucial to re.member is that people themselves do survive," Bailey says. "The tribes that the early Anglo Americans found when they came over the Appalachians are the direct descendants of those who built the mounds. They are the same people, and they will go on."

Emmett Berg is a freelance writer in Los Angeles.

The Art Institute of Chicago has received $300,000 in support from NEH for the traveling exhibition, catalog, and public programs. "Hero, Hawk, and Open Hand: American Indian Art of the Ancient Midwest and South" opens November 20 and travels to the St. Louis Art Museum in February 2005.

Envisioning Cahokia: A Landscape Perspective, by Rinita A. Dalan, George R. Holley, William I. Woods, Harold W. Watters Jr., and John A. Koepke, analyzes ten years of archaeological work at Cahokia. Research for the book, published in 2003 by Northern Illinois University Press, was supported by an NEH grant of $63,935.

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Humanities, September/October 2004, Volume 25/Number 5


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Miscellaneous; US: Illinois; US: Missouri
KEYWORDS: 1540; americanindians; bookofmormon; cahokia; desoto; godsgravesglyphs; hernandodesoto; illinois; mauvilla; missouri; monksmound; mormons
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first 1-2021-4041-6061-64 next last
The words 'lost city' summons up images of jungle choked ruins or sand engulfed remnants of some vanished city not the suburbs of St. Louis, but there you have it.
1 posted on 01/17/2006 2:01:16 PM PST by robowombat
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | View Replies]

To: robowombat

Cool!


2 posted on 01/17/2006 2:08:41 PM PST by MNJohnnie (Is there a satire god who created Al Gore for the sole purpose of making us laugh?)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: robowombat
Around 500 B.C.E.

Ah, Common Era instead of Christ. I wonder what event marks the beginning of the Common Era?

3 posted on 01/17/2006 2:08:46 PM PST by Onelifetogive (* Sarcasm tag ALWAYS required. For some FReepers, sarcasm can NEVER be obvious enough.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: robowombat

Cahokia is not "lost", it is still there. Just....uninhabitable.

Much like a large part of the city of New Orleans.


4 posted on 01/17/2006 2:09:27 PM PST by alloysteel (There is no substitute for success. None. Nobody remembers who was in second place.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: alloysteel
Much like a large part of the city of New Orleans.

Maybe Ray Nagin can run for Mayor of Cahokia.

5 posted on 01/17/2006 2:11:35 PM PST by xrp
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 4 | View Replies]

To: robowombat
I visited Cahokia, and it's actually quite cool. It's also a cautionary tale against socialism. The (unknown) tribe that built the place, built a landscape of hills for their city. The chief forced workers to carry sacks of dirt from the river, to build a hill covering sixteen acres for his lodge:

Other mounds were used for homes for other elites, for burying important dead, and for ritual purposes. What made Cahokia a "lost" city is that only the mounds remain, along with whatever's under them.

6 posted on 01/17/2006 2:13:08 PM PST by Shalom Israel (Pray for the peace of Jerusalem.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: robowombat

Bump! (PS: Did the mound builders suffer from piles?)

parsy, the naive american.


7 posted on 01/17/2006 2:14:16 PM PST by parsifal ("Knock and ye shall receive!" (The Bible, somewhere.))
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Onelifetogive

Troublemaker.


8 posted on 01/17/2006 2:15:49 PM PST by biggerten
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 3 | View Replies]

To: robowombat

I grew up around St. Louis and frequent visits to the Cahokia Mounds were a part of my upbringing. I still visit every year or so. It used to be just a place to go for picnics, with a small museum, but in the past few years they have gone to great lengths to preserve the area as a historical/archaelogical site, and the new museum is very informative. It's a worthwhile stop for anyone passing through the area.


9 posted on 01/17/2006 2:19:39 PM PST by Southside_Chicago_Republican (Just say "No" to Judy Baar Topinka)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: robowombat

There is also a great mock-up of an Indian village scene in the interpretive center across the street from the "Great Pyramid". In present day Cahokia, several miles away, there stands a very interesting French Colonial vertical log cabin.


10 posted on 01/17/2006 2:23:57 PM PST by Riverine
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Southside_Chicago_Republican
Maybe you can comment on this sentence from the beginning of the article: Cahokia was the hub of a way of life for millions of Native Americans before the society's decline and devastation by foreign diseases.

I've been there twice. Most recently two years ago. I was under the impression that they were unsure of why the society declined and disappeared. I was more under the impression that it may have been do to climatic factors.

11 posted on 01/17/2006 2:30:26 PM PST by stayathomemom
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 9 | View Replies]

To: Riverine

I was always curious about what great new ideas came into Cahokia and central US around 500 B.C. Their art looks very Aztec.

When the native peopes of s.e. US, i.e. Mississippi were first contacted they had an elaborate class system.

I suspect the new religion or religious ideas included a priestly caste and human sacrifice.

The upright log cabin is very early French. Easterly made a Daguerrotype of the first courthouse in St. Louis, upright log, it was still standing in 1848.


12 posted on 01/17/2006 2:33:43 PM PST by squarebarb
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 10 | View Replies]

To: Onelifetogive
Ah, Common Era instead of Christ. I wonder what event marks the beginning of the Common Era?

The beginning of the fourth year after the birth of Christ, of course.

13 posted on 01/17/2006 2:34:26 PM PST by SedVictaCatoni (<><)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 3 | View Replies]

To: robowombat
They employed exotic materials such as shell from the Gulf of Mexico, copper from present-day Michigan, mica from what is now North Carolina, and obsidian from the land that became Wyoming.

The Mississippian Culture had a fascinating trade network. I've been to the museums at the Etowah mounds near Rome, Georgia, and at mounds near Spiro, Oklahoma- what, 1000 miles away? They show the extensive interchange of goods and materials between these peoples, east, west, north and south.

What I don't understand is how an article like this can neglect the most famous Mississippian mound complex of all: the Serpent Mound in southern Ohio.

14 posted on 01/17/2006 2:38:27 PM PST by mikeus_maximus (Voting for "the lesser of two evils" is still evil.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: robowombat

Still no sign of the wheel.


15 posted on 01/17/2006 2:38:46 PM PST by GOP_Party_Animal
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: stayathomemom
Maybe you can comment on this sentence from the beginning of the article: "Cahokia was the hub of a way of life for millions of Native Americans before the society's decline and devastation by foreign diseases."

I think the writer had a bit of a problem crafting this sentence. Plus, here and there, he shows some bias against European and American settlers. So, while there were indigenous peoples in later centuries who did die because of new diseases brought in by settlers, there's no evidence that this was true of Cahokia. You're right, it could have been climate-related, but every possible cause is speculation at this point, and the final decline of Cahokia remains a mystery.

16 posted on 01/17/2006 2:41:48 PM PST by Southside_Chicago_Republican (Just say "No" to Judy Baar Topinka)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 11 | View Replies]

To: stayathomemom
I was under the impression that they were unsure of why the society declined and disappeared.

In the history books I've seen that are more than about 5 years old, they always talk about a mysterious, unexplained decline in Indian population after 1500 or so.

In the things I've read that were written less than about 5 years ago (like this book), they invariably talk about a huge population decline caused by foreign diseases, to which the Indians had no resistance.

So I guess history writers feel the mystery has been solved.

17 posted on 01/17/2006 2:43:29 PM PST by 68skylark
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 11 | View Replies]

To: xrp
Heiroglyphics have been decyphered at the site. The ruling family was named Duh Lahi and the scepter was passed on for many generations.

I don't Nagin would stand a chamce.

18 posted on 01/17/2006 2:55:31 PM PST by Young Werther
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 5 | View Replies]

To: squarebarb
The long mound shaped like a serpent has 'Nazca' similarities.
19 posted on 01/17/2006 3:02:28 PM PST by johnny7 (“Iuventus stultorum magister”)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 12 | View Replies]

To: Onelifetogive

They should just keep B.C. and A.D. and tell people the initials stand for "backwards counting" and "after dat."


20 posted on 01/17/2006 3:04:40 PM PST by Verginius Rufus
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 3 | View Replies]


Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first 1-2021-4041-6061-64 next last

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson