Brothers of Coweta : kinship, empire, and revolution in the eighteenth-century Muscogee world /

This book examines how family and clan fundamentally structured the Creek world, and how a particular family and clan emerged out of the historical shadows to become central players in the Creek world and shaped the forces of empire, colonialism and revolution that transformed the South during the e...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Rindfleisch, Bryan C. (Author)
Format: Book
Language:English
Published: Columbia : University of South Carolina Press, [2021]
Subjects:
Description
Summary:This book examines how family and clan fundamentally structured the Creek world, and how a particular family and clan emerged out of the historical shadows to become central players in the Creek world and shaped the forces of empire, colonialism and revolution that transformed the South during the eighteenth-century. The manuscript pieces together the story of a specific Creek Indian family in eighteenth-century America, and their experiences at the crossroads of the British, French and Spanish empires in the American South. For the most part, scholars of early America and Native America have been unable (and in some cases unwilling) to fully appreciate the kinship, clan and familial dynamics of Indigenous groups in North America. However, European authorities, imperial agents, merchants and a host of other individuals left a surprising paper trail when it came to two Creek personalities, Escotchaby and Sempoyaffee of Coweta, brothers. By following that trail and drawing upon the broader literature related to the Creek Indians in the eighteenth-century, Rindfleisch seeks to recover the intensely intimate and familial dimensions of the Creek world. The central importance of family and clan in the eighteenth-century Creek world has yet to be fully explored or articulated by scholars of early America and Native America. Instead, historians have demonstrated how one's loyalties to a talwa or community like Coweta, regional identities like Upper Creeks and Lower Creeks, or even national aspirations of a Creek Nation or Confederacy proved foundational throughout a Creek person's life. And while scholars concede that 'family was a critical component of eighteenth-century Creek local life, particularly for structuring political relations within a community,' there is little that historians understand about the importance of family and clan within the Creek world. Yet the central premise of the book is to suggest that we can in fact understand and read more into the ways in which family and clan directed the Creek world, as much as, if not more than, talwa, region and nation.
Physical Description:xi, 194 pages : illustrations, maps ; 24 cm.
Bibliography:Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN:9781643362021
164336202X
9781643362038
1643362038