Kuso had 3000 homes or 3000 familes or approxomately 12000 to 15000 inhabitants when Desoto came through. Add in a matching number of farm families along the valley sides and this suggests a population of as much as 50,000 in this valley complex.
Add in the nearby valley that dominated them and we have another 50,000. Throw in smallr tributary valleys and we can hope to house populations reaching 250,000.
These are educated guesses but that looks about right for this particular polity. It should have been easily replicated elsewhere as well.
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A Creek architect in the royal court of Kusa
https://peopleofonefire.com/a-creek-architect-in-the-royal-court-of-kusa.html
PART ONE
In
2005 and 2006, with the extensive cooperation of the U. S. Army Corps
of Engineers, the Muscogee-Creek Nation sponsored a comprehensive
architectural and geospatial study of Carters Bottoms, the location of
the fabled capital of Kusa. Much of the time was spent by the author,
canoeing around the lake, hiking the area where De Soto’s men camped and
in the mountains around Carters Bottom to discover their many stone
ruins. This is how it was discovered why Kusa was placed where it
was.
The
study climaxed on August 22, 2006 when the water level of the Lower
Reservoir was drained sufficiently to reveal for the first time since
1970, the actual mounds of Kusa. Utilizing satellite and infrared
imagery, plus on August 22 the physical surveying of mounds, it was
possible to create for the first time a three dimensional computer model
of Kusa and its environs. This series marks the first time that these
virtual reality images and photographs, as an ensemble, have been
presented to the general public.
Three
archaeologists, Warren K. Moorehead (1925), Arthur R. Kelly (1960s)
and David Halley (1969) spent brief periods of time at Carters Bottom.
However, they were “flatlanders” from elsewhere. They might as well
been studying a town site on Mars as far as understanding the ancient
and complex cultural history of North Georgia. Only archaeologist Robert
Wauchope seemed to understand that permanent, dense settlements had
occurred along the Georgia Mountain rivers almost a thousand years
before most locations in North America . . . AND that the Apalache
People of the Georgia Highlands were extremely advanced, but did not
build large mounds.
These
three archaeologists focused on certain mound sites in the river bottom
lands, ignored the areas where people lived and did not explore the
surrounding mountains, which abound in stone ruins. They really had no
clue who the people were that lived there and made no effort to find
out. Subsequent generations of archaeologists in Georgia have maintained
the same attitude, along with the assumption that there was nothing new
to learn.
Thus, the
brief descriptions of archaeological sites such as “Little Egypt” and
“Bell Field,”, maintained by the “purple gatekeepers” of Wikipedia, are
essentially glorifications of the archaeological profession and the
English names they gave to pottery styles. One walks away from these
articles not knowing anything about the people, who lived in these towns
. . . which is what anthropology elsewhere in the world is all about.
In
the ten years since the original study, researchers in the People of
One Fire have made major advances in understanding the Pre-European
history of the Southern Highlands. We are now able to translate almost
all the Native words, recorded by early European explorers. These
translations often change the orthodox interpretation of archaeological
findings. We also have much more information about the complex
inter-relationships between the indigenous provinces. They were never
“chiefdoms” and never should have been given that label by academicians.
Prior to working on the
study sponsored by the Muscogee-Creek Nation, the author was twice
before involved with studies near the site of Kusa. As an intern of
Governor Jimmy Carter in 1971, he was asked to examine the potential of
a pedestrian-oriented community next to the Lower Reservoir in lieu of a
conventional auto-oriented community as anticipated by local economic
leaders. After he had returned to Georgia from Europe and been on the
planning team of the Peachtree City Newtown, Governor Carter asked him
to study the potential of a wilderness area and Creek Indian
Reservation along Talking Rock Creek and on the banks of the Lower
Reservoir. At the time, Governor Carter was not made aware of any major
archaeological discoveries at Carters Lake, although he was keenly
interested in the subject.
Location (34°36’52.0″N 84°40’13.0″W)
Carters
Lake is in Northwest Georgia and immediately east of the Cartersville
Fault and US Hwy. 411. The lake is in parts of Gilmer, Pickens and
Murray Counties. The lake is 60 miles North-Northeast of Downtown
Atlanta and 50 miles southeast of Downtown Chattanooga Tennessee. The
Upper Reservoir covers 3,200 acres and is up to 540 feet deep.
The
Lower Reservoir is immediately west of Carters Dam, which at 790 feet,
is one of the tallest earthen dams in the world. As will be explained
in more detail in a later article, water from the Lower Reservoir is
pumped 800 feet up to the main Carters Lake each night in order to be
run down through the hydroelectric turbines during the daytime.
The
Upper and Lower Lakes have different climates, geology and vegetation
because of the change of altitude. The Upper Reservoir is part of the
Southern Highlands, while the Lower Reservoir is in the Great
Appalachian Valley. Prior to the construction of Carters Dam, the
Coosawattee River dropped over 40 feet at a waterfall on the edge of
Carters Bottom. In ancient times, Carters Bottom was a natural lake.
The dam was created by a stone ridge running parallel with the
Cartersville Fault.
At the
time of the Hernando de Soto Expedition’s rampage through the Southeast
(1539-1543) the capital of Kusa in northwest Georgia was the second
largest indigenous town north of Mexico and controlled a province
approximately 400 miles long that stretched from near Knoxville, TN to
near Childersburg, AL. The Spanish counted over 3,000 houses in
Metropolitan Kusa. Unbeknownst to the Spanish and contemporary
anthropologists, Kusa was actually a vassal of the Apalache, whose much
larger capital was along the headwaters of the Apalachee River in
Northeast Georgia. This is why both the De Soto Expedition and the two
Pardo Expeditions were steered around Northeast Georgia by their Native
guides.
This archeological
zone was originally known as Carters Bottom, named after Farrish Carter,
a member of the famous Carter family of Virginia, which scooped up a
vast tract along the Coosawattee River after the Cherokee Trail of
Tears. However, most of the central town and satellite village of Kusa
are now under the water of the Carters Lake Reregulation Reservoir,
formed by the confluence of the Coosawattee River and Talking Rock
Creek. The late 18th century Cherokee village of Coosawattee was
destroyed by the construction of the Reregulation Dam.
Etymology, Chronlogy and Ethnology
Kusa and Coosa are Anglicizations of the Panoan (Peruvian) word Kaushe, which means “strong” or “elite.” Today, the Upper Creek Indians name for themselves is Kauche. The name of the town in the De Soto Chronicles, Coça,
was an attempt of Late Medieval Castilian speakers to approximate
Kaushe, since at that time Castilian did not have a letter K or an “sh”
syllable. Coça is pronounced Kō : shă.
The
first Kusa village in Northwest Georgia was founded around 1300 AD and
located where the Cherokees later built their capital of New Echota . . .
at the confluence of the Coosawattee and Conasauga Rivers. A Kusa
Commoner village was founded around 1325 AD on the north side of the
confluence of the Coosawatee River and Talking Rock Creek. Around 1375
AD, after the abandonment of Etula (Etowah
Mounds) the Kusa built a new capital on the south bank of Talking Rock
Creek. Around 1450 AD a massive flood destroyed both the commoner’s
village and the western part of the elite village. A clay dyke was
constructed along the edges of the Coosawattee River and Talking Rock
Creek. The interior was filled with sand and alluvial soil then a new
acropolis was built on top of this platform. This second acropolis is
what Hernando de Soto saw in 1540 AD.
Cusabo is the Anglicization of the Panoan (Peruvian) word Kaushebo,
which means “Place of the Strong” or “Place of the Elite”. There is
still today an ethnic group named the Kaushebo in Peru. They are
located in Satipo (Satibo) Province. The elite of Kusa were definitely
the same general ethnic group as the members of the Cusabo Alliance on
the coast of South Carolina. It is not currently clear if the elite of
Kusa originated on the coast of South Carolina or if they were descended
from another group of Panoans, who immigrated up the Alabama River to
the Coosa River.
Like in
almost all major towns of the Apalache Confederacy, the elite spoke one
language and lived separately in their own villages. The commoners
spoke another language and lived in several satellite villages.
Metropolitan Apalache towns might have satellite villages, speaking two
more more different languages.
The commoners of the Kusa Kingdom were from several ethnic groups. They included Apalache (Conchakees or Apalachicola) in Northwest Georgia, Chickasaws in Northwest Georgia, Uchees in Southeast Tennessee, immigrants from western Vera Cruz later called the Kusate along the Upper Tennessee River, Koasate (Itsate speakers) on Hiwassee Island, TN and Apike (Muskogeans) near the confluence of the Holston and French Broad Rivers. At that time, the Holston was called the Shipibo-sipi
or Shipibo River. The Shipibo are a major Panoan Tribe in Peru. They
may have also been vassals of the Kaushe. To the west of the Shipibo
were the Chiska. The Chiscabo
are a Panoan tribe in Peru, who once spoke a language that mixed Panoan
with Southern Arawak. Traditionally, the Kusate and Chickasaw paired
their towns, although they maintained different languages and styles of
pottery.
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