Caddo Landscapes in the East Texas Forests

Caddo Landscapes in the East Texas Forests - American Landscapes

Paperback (31 May 2017)

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Publisher's Synopsis

In this major, highly illustrated, new study Tim Perttula explores the cultural and social landscape of the Caddo Indian peoples (hayaanuh) for about 1000 years between ca. A.D. 850-1850. There were continual changes in the character and extent of ancestral landscapes, through times of plenty, risk, and hardship, as well as in relationships between different communities of Caddo peoples dispersed or concentrated across the landscape at different points in time. These ancestral peoples, in all their diversity of origins, material culture, subsistence, and rituals and religious beliefs, actively created their societies by establishing connected places on the land that became home and lead to the formation of social networks across environments with a diverse mosaic of resources. Established places lent order to the chaotic worlds of people and nature, and they embodied history and the cosmos here on earth. Caddo Landscapes explores the ancestral Caddo constructed landscape, providing detailed information on earthen mounds, specialized non-mound structures, domestic settlements and their key facilities as well as associated gardens and fields, and places where salt, clay, lithic raw materials, and other materials were obtained and the social ties that linked communities in numerous ways. The character and key sequences of ceramics are discussed and radiometric dating evidence provided.

Book information

ISBN: 9781785705762
Publisher: Oxbow Books
Imprint: Oxbow Books
Pub date:
DEWEY: 976.01
DEWEY edition: 23
Language: English
Number of pages: iv, 282
Weight: 794g
Height: 187mm
Width: 244mm
Spine width: 23mm