Everything about The Apalachee totally explained
The
Apalachee are an
Indian tribe that lived in
Apalachee Province,
Florida, until the tribe was largely destroyed and dispersed in the 18th century. They lived between the
Aucilla River and
Ochlockonee River, at the head of
Apalachee Bay and were first encountered by
Spanish explorers in the 16th century. The Apalachee spoke a
Muskogean language which is now
extinct, documented by letters written in the Spanish Colonial period.
There is a small remnant of the tribe living in
Louisiana.
The
Appalachian Mountains were named after them.
Culture
Around 1100
agriculture became important in the area that became the Apalachee domain. This area was part of the
Fort Walton Culture, a Florida culture influenced by the
Mississippian culture. The Apalachee capital was
Anhaica (present-day
Tallahassee, Florida) at the time of
Hernando de Soto's visit in 1539-1540. The Apalachee lived in towns of various size, or on individual farmsteads of 1/2 acre or so in size. Smaller settlements might have a single
mound and a few houses. Larger towns (50 to 100 houses) would have several mounds. Villages and towns were often situated by lakes. The largest Apalachee community was at
Lake Jackson on the north side of present-day
Tallahassee. This community had several mounds, some of which are now protected in
Lake Jackson Mounds Archaeological State Park, and 200 or more houses.
The Apalachee grew
corn,
beans,
squash,
pumpkins and
sunflowers. They gathered
wild strawberries, the roots and shoots of the
greenbrier vine, greens such as
lambsquarters, the roots of one or more unidentified aquatic plants used to make flour,
hickory nuts,
acorns,
saw palmetto berries and
persimmons. They caught fish and
turtles in the lakes and rivers, and
oysters and fish on the
Gulf Coast. They hunted
deer,
black bears,
rabbits and
ducks.
The Apalachee were part of a trade network that extended from the Gulf Coast to the
Great Lakes, and westward to what is now
Oklahoma. The Apalachee acquired
copper artifacts, sheets of
mica,
greenstone and
galena through this trade. The Apalachee probably paid for these imports with shells, pearls, shark teeth, preserved fish and
sea turtle meat, salt and
cassina leaves and twigs (used to make the
black drink).
The Apalachee made tools from stone, bone and shell. They made pottery, wove cloth and cured
buckskin. They built houses covered with
palm leaves or the bark of
cypress or
poplar trees. They stored food in pits in the ground lined with
matting, and
smoked or
dried food on racks over fires. (When
Hernando de Sotò seized the Apalachee town of Anhaico in 1539, he found enough stored food to feed his 600 men and 220 horses for five months.)
The Apalachee men wore a deerskin
loincloth. The women wore a skirt of
Spanish moss or other plant fibers. The men painted their bodies with
red ochre placed feathers in their hair when they prepared for battle. The men smoked
tobacco.
The Apalachee
scalped opponents they killed and exhibited the scalps as a sign of their ability. Taking a scalp was a means of entering the
warrior class, and was celebrated with a scalp dance using headdresses made of bird beaks and animal fur. The village or clan of a slain warrior was expected to avenge his death.
The Apalachee played a ball game that was described in detail by Spaniards in the 17th century. Two teams kicked and hit a small ball, made by wrapping buckskin around dried mud, trying to hit a goal post. There was only one goal, with an
eagle's nest set on top. Players scored one point if they hit the post with the ball, and two points if the ball landed in the nest. Eleven points won the game. Spectators gambled heavily on the games.
Up to 50 men played on a team. The best players were highly prized, and villages gave them houses, planted their fields for them, and overlooked their misdeeds in an effort to keep such players on their teams. The giving of challenges for a game and the erection of goalposts involved rituals and ceremonies. The game had few rules and could be quite violent. Serious injuries and even deaths occurred in the games.
Spanish encounters
Two
Spanish expeditions encountered the Apalachee in the first half of the 16th century. The expedition of
Pánfilo de Narváez entered the Apalachee domain in 1528. Spanish cruelty towards the Apalachee was met with resistance, and the
Narváez expedition turned to the coast on Apalachee Bay, where it built five boats and attempted to sail to
Mexico.
In 1539, Hernando de Sotò landed with a large contingent of men and horses on the west coast of the
peninsula of Florida, searching for gold. The people he encountered told him that gold could be found in
Apalachee. It isn't known if this was a reference to the mountains of northern
Georgia, which is a source of gold, or to the copper artifacts that the Apalachee had acquired through trade. In any case, it served to send de Sotò and his men away.
Because of their prior experience with the Narváez expedition and the reports they heard of the fighting between the de Sotò expedition and the tribes it encountered, the Apalachee feared and hated the Spanish. The de Sotò expedition entered the Apalachee domain, and the Spanish soldiers are described as
lancing every Indian encountered on both sides of the road. De Sotò and his men seized the Apalachee town of Anhaica and spent the winter of 1539-1540 there.
The Apalachee fought back with small raids and ambushes. Their arrows could penetrate two layers of
chain mail. They quickly learned to target the horses, which could give the Spanish a large advantage against the unmounted Apalachee. The Apalachee were described as
being more pleased in killing one of these animals than they were in killing four Christians. In the spring of 1540, de Sotò and his men left the Apalachee domain and headed north into what is now the state of Georgia.
Spanish missions
About 1600 the
Spanish Franciscans founded a successful mission among them, but in 1704 (during
Queen Anne's War) forces from the
Province of Carolina in
North America, made up mostly of
Creek and
Yamasee Indians, traveled southwards to Florida and attacked the Apalachee and the Spanish missionaries who lived amongst them, in what became known as the
Apalachee Massacre. Some of the Apalachee were killed, others who were captured and sold into slavery kept their tribal identity for some time. Others were taken as slaves by the Creek and Yamasee Indians to be sold in the British
Indian slave trade, and others fled westward accepting an offer to live in French-controlled
Mobile. In 1763, most of these Apalachees relocated to
Rapides Parish in
Louisiana. The tribe's descendants are still in Rapides Parish Louisiana under the guidance of Chief Gilmer Bennett.
Present tribe
Today the tribal office located in
Libuse, Louisiana, serves approximately 300 members. The tribe has been featured in The
Wall Street Journal along with other news publications. The
Public Broadcasting Service show "
History Detectives" aired a special about the tribe in 2006. Mission San Luis, a
living history museum in Tallahassee, Florida, that re-creates one of the Spanish missions to the Apalachee, received the
Preserve America Presidential Award in 2006.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Apalachee'.
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