- The
Caddoan languages are a
family of
languages native to the
Great Plains spoken by
tribal groups of the
central United States, from present-day North...
-
somewhat lower level of
social stratification. The
Caddoan people were
speakers of one of the many
Caddoan languages.
These languages once had a
broad geographic...
- The
Caddoan Mississippian culture was a
prehistoric Native American culture considered by
archaeologists as a
variant of the
Mississippian culture. The...
-
Oklahoma City. & E. Mott
Davis 1961,
Caddoan Area: An
Introduction To the Symposium. In:
Relationships Between the
Caddoan Area and the
Plains pp. 3–10. 1961...
- from the
Arkansas Valley Caddoan culture. that
remains from an
American Indian culture that was part of the
major northern Caddoan Mississippian culture...
- are a
proposed language family that
includes the Siouan, Iroquoian, and
Caddoan families. Most
linguists remain unconvinced that
these languages share...
- Arkansas, and
southeastern Oklahoma.
Prior to
European contact, they were the
Caddoan Mississippian culture, who
constructed huge
earthwork mounds at several...
-
headquartered in Pawnee, Oklahoma.
Their Pawnee language belongs to the
Caddoan language family. Historically, the
Pawnee lived in
villages of
earth lodges...
-
Historically they
spoke the
Wichita language and
Kichai language, both
Caddoan languages. They are
indigenous to Oklahoma, Texas, and Kansas. Today, Wichita...
-
Several Native American tribes hold or have held
territory within the
lands that are now the
state of Iowa. Iowa,
defined by the
Missouri River and Big...