The Mougoulacha were a Native American tribe that lived near Lake Pontchartrain in Louisiana .
8-702: Some sources indicate that the Mougoulacha may have been the same tribe as the Quinipissa , Acolapissa , and the Tangipahoa . John Reed Swanton suggests that the Quinipissa merged into the surviving Mougoulacha. According to several sources related to the Houma , many tribes in the area of Lake Pontchartrain were called Mougoulacha. The name Mougoulacha, also spelled Mugulasha is a simplified version of
16-740: A group of Quinipissa living with the Koroa in a village on the western bank of the Mississippi River . The Quinipissa joined the Mougoulacha . The combined group shared a village with the Bayagoula . In 1700, the Bayagoula massacred both the Quinipissa and Mougoulacha, and they were not mentioned again by chroniclers of the time. The Quinipissa may have spoken the same language as the Mougoulacha and Bayagoula. The Bayagoula language
24-514: Is only attested with a single word. Albert Gatschet considered Quinipissa a Muskogean language Coast Choctaw ("Coast Chaʼhta") based on evidence that many peoples of this area spoke the lingua franca Mobilian Jargon and have names that appear to be exonyms of Mobilian Jargon or Muskogean origin. This is repeated by John W. Powell and John Swanton . However, a map by Nicolas de Fer states that all nations of this region spoke different languages and barely understood each other. Thus, there
32-546: The Mougoulacha had two temples in each village located on opposite sides of a large plaza. Quinipissa The Quinipissa (sometimes spelled Kinipissa in French sources) were an Indigenous people of the Southeastern Woodlands who were living on the lower Mississippi River , in present-day Louisiana , as reported by René-Robert Cavelier, Sieur de La Salle in 1682. In 1682, La Salle encountered
40-429: The letter was left by Tonti with the Quinipissa tribe fourteen years earlier. This led d'Iberville to believe that the Mougoulacha were actually the remaining members of the Quinipissa tribe. The Bayagoula and Mougoulacha settled together in one village by 1699, but in the spring of 1700, the Bayagoula attacked and almost completely destroyed the Mougoulacha. After that, the tribe is not described again by chroniclers of
48-460: The name Imongolosha , which may translate as "People from the other side". Ethnologist James Mooney estimated that the Mougoulacha, Bayagoula , and Quinipissa had a combined population of 1,500 in 1650. In 1699 Iberville said that the Bayagoula and Mougoulacha together had about 180 to 250 warriors and an estimated 1,250 people. The Mougoulacha language was a Southern Muskogean languages , closely related to Choctaw and Chickasaw . In
56-401: The time. The tribe maintained perpetual fires burning in two village temples. The temples were the same size as their homes but decorated with animal carvings. The explorer d'Iberville said that he saw many carvings of opossums which they called choucouacha in their Native language along with offerings of deer, bear, and bison skins inside the temple. A Jesuit priest named Paul du Ru said that
64-509: The year 1699 Pierre Le Moyne d'Iberville journeyed to the east of the Mississippi River Delta and encountered the Mougoulacha tribe. d'Iberville was amazed that the Mougoulacha chief was wearing a blue serge coat . The chief said that the coat was given to him many years ago when Henri de Tonti explored the area. The Mougoulacha chief then showed d'Iberville a letter that was written in French. d'Ibberville determined that
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