Abstract

Part One, Geography and Population Introduction, Peter H. Wood (Duke University) Land and Water Communication Systems of Southeastern Indians, Helen Hornbeck Tanner (Newberry Library) Aboriginal Population Movements in Early Historic Period Interior Southeast, Marvin T. Smith (Valdosta State University) Changing Population of Colonial South: An Overview by Race and Region, 1685-1790, Peter H. Wood (Duke University) Interconnectedness and Diversity in Louisiana, Kathleen DuVal (UNC-Chapel Hill) American in Colonial New Orleans, Daniel H. Usner, Jr. (Vanderbilt University) Part Two, Politics and Economics Introduction, Gregory A. Waselkov (University of South Alabama) Ruling the Republic of Indians in Seventeenth-Century Florida, Amy Turner Bushnell (College of Charleston, emeritus) Early English Effects on Virginia Algonquian Exchange and Tribute in Tidewater Potomac, Stephen R. Potter (National Park Service) Cockacoeske, Queen of Pamunkey: Diplomat and Suzeraine, Martha W. McCartney (Independent scholar) Our Bond of Peace: Patterns of Intercultural Exchange in Carolina Piedmont, 1650-1750, James H. Merrell (Vassar College) Cherokee Women Farmers Hold Their Ground, Tom Hatley (Western Carolina University) Part Three, Symbols and Society Introduction, Tom Hatley (Western Carolina University) The Chief Who Is Your Father: Choctaw and French Views of Diplomatic Relation, Patricia Galloway (University of Texas-Austin) Calumet Ceremony in Southeast as Observed Archaeologically, Ian W. Brown (University of Alabama) Symbolism of Mississippian Mounds, Vernon James Knight, Jr. (University of Alabama) Indian Maps of Colonial Southeast, Gregory A. Waselkov (University of South Alabama) Graysons' Dilemma: A Creek Family Confronts Science of Race, Claudio Saunt (University of Georgia)

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