As locally understood cryptic script, it was the obvious choice for a local script. That changed quickly and soon enough english script dominated.
Yet we learn a lot of the various strains of peoples learning to live in what was a vast rich country,
None of it is truly important except as part of a historical narrative. .
Why Sequoyah’s Cherokee Syllabary Looked like the Circassian Alphabet
The
famous Cherokee scholar, Sequoyah, probably never even saw the
“Cherokee Syllabary” used today. The current Cherokee Syllabary was
created in 1827 by Elias Boudinot, editor of the Cherokee Phoenix
Newspaper and the Rev. Samuel Worcester, missionary to the Cherokees at
New Echota. Sequoyah had been living on the frontier, west of the
Mississippi for six years at that time.
Sequoyah
was not even his original name. That was his mother’s last name. He is
called George Gist on a medal awarded to him in 1825 by the Cherokee
National Council. Since he was not able to travel east to receive the
honor, it was later taken to him. These are just two of many “dirty
little secrets” that surround the life of George Gist. In fact, most
historians agree that there is very little about George Gist’s life that
today can be collaborated by hard evidence. There are so many
contradictions within the individual versions of Sequoyah’s life, it is
almost impossible to determine what is 100% factual.
Perhaps
what is equally surprising is that the mother of Sequoyah, Wutah, had
name that was either African or Gullah. It has no meaning in Cherokee
or Creek. The word means, “witch.” Later in life, Sequoyah would be
charged with witchcraft.
However,
if one digs deeper into the linguistic and historic evidence, the
situation gets far more complex than even the historians acknowledge.
Most academicians are not even aware that the Cherokee syllabary is not
the same thing as the Sequoyah Syllabary. You certainly won’t be told
that tourist literature or official Cherokee histories, offered to the
public.
Oh . . . did we mention that the Circassians call themselves the Cherikess?
The old and new Cherokee syllabaries
George
Gist had created a quite different syllabary, which primarily consisted
of complex curves. Many of the letters are identical to those of
Circassian Medieval Script and slightly less similar to Armenian and
Georgian Medieval Scripts. All three peoples lived east of the Black
Sea in the southern Caucasus Mountains. Standard histories of Sequoyah
say that he had seen writing systems, but could not read English. How
in the world would he have been exposed to obscure writing systems from
the Caucasus Mountains?
George
Gist’s letters were difficult to mold into the metal types, used for
printing newspapers. Furthermore, many whites considered them to be the
work of the devil, because they were so different than the Roman
alphabet. Boudinot and Worcestor therefore created a new syllabary that
more closely resembled the Cyrillic alphabet, used in Russia.
So
the Cherokees, who learned Sequoyah’s original syllabary, had to learn a
new one, when the Cherokee Phoenix began publication. In truth, the
Cherokee syllabary portion of the newspaper was never more than two
columns, and by the end of the newspaper’s life in 1832, had dwindled
down to a token presence. Sequoyah’s syllabary played a major role in
the unification of the Cherokee People in the 1820s. From then on, the
syllabary became more of a statement of ethnic identity than a useful
tool for trade and government. The Cherokees learned that it was of
little value in a world controlled by white men, when they had to deal
with white men.
The Circassians
The
Circassians were originally a cluster of tribes, speaking similar
languages, within the first Christian nation, the Kingdom of Georgia.
King Mirian declared Christianity to be the official state religion of
the nation in 337 AD. However, Zoroastrianism effectively functioned as
a second state religion, well into the Middle Ages. Zoroastrianism is
quite similar to the traditional religion of the Cherokees, which
involves the conjuring of demons in fires and springs in order to guide
decisions.
Many of the
Circassian tribes were forcibly converted to Islam during the Middle
Ages, but the Circassians refused to switch to speaking Arabic or use
the Arabic writing system. Until the majority were forced to change
their religion, there was little culturally, which distinguished the
Circassians from their neighbors, the Georgians and Armenians. Some
Circassian tribes to this day remain Christian and continue to resist
pressure to convert.
Because
of their refusal to accept Arabic cultural traditions, the Circassians
were treated by their Persian and Turkish Muslim overlords in the same
manner as Christians and Jews. During the Middle Ages most Muslims were
exempt from forced military service. However, Christian, Jew and
Circassian males were drafted. The rugged mountain shepherds and farmers
of the Circassians became known as excellent soldiers. Hence they
received the name that they call themselves today Çherikess. The word means “Warrior People.”
Between
1514 and 1823, the Ottoman and Persian Empires fought 11 wars. All of
these wars included military campaigns in Armenia, Georgia and
Circassian. All three were vassals of Muslim nations, but the Turks and
Persians typically treated the non-combatants in territory held by
their enemy as the enemy, even though the Christians and Circassian
Muslims in Eastern Anatolia and the Caucasus were little better off than
serfs and also unarmed.
The
scale of Turkish and Persian Muslim brutality in this region is
unimaginable. In 1500, 1/3 of the population of the Ottoman Empire was
Christian and about 80-90% of eastern Anatolia (Turkey) was Christian.
At least three million Armenian civilians were killed in the 16th
century alone. Another three million were either enslaved or exiled by
the Turks, or deported to central Persian by the Iranians. These
numbers might be conservative. During one campaign, Turkish soldiers
killed over 250,000 unarmed Christians in two days on one city!
The
Circassians didn’t fare much better. Although fewer Circassians were
massacred, unless they were Christians, vast numbers of Circassians were
deported to other parts of the Ottoman or Persian Empires. Furthermore,
lacking full citizenship, their young men were drafted to serve in the
vast armies and fleets that the Ottoman Empire assembled in its repeated
efforts to capture the Vatican by the 1000th anniversary of
Mohammed’s death. Many never returned home. Mohammed had prophesized in
the Qu’ran that all Christendom would be conquered by the Muslims
within 1000 years.
The Circassian alphabet enters the world of espionage.
Thousands
upon thousands of Eastern Christian and Circassian prisoners of war
fell into Spanish hands as Christianity won more and more battles
against the Ottoman Armies. Christians were usually freed, but could not
live in Spain unless they converted from Orthodox Christianity to
Catholicism. These battles occurred during the same period of time when
Spain was colonizing the New World. Most of the galley slaves in the
Spanish navy were Muslim prisoners of war, captured in the wars with the
Turks. Undoubtedly, a substantial percentage of those were Circassian
Moslems. The galley slaves in the Ottoman ships were mostly Christians.
Somewhere
along the line, Spanish scholars became aware of the Circassian
Medieval Script. Jesuits devised a double cipher secrete code for the
extensive network of Spanish spies in Europe called the Circassian
Codex. The coded messages were written in the Circassian alphabet, but
the meanings of the letters were changed. So even if an enemy was able
to translate Circassian letters, the resultant translation would still
appear to be gobbledygook.
During
the 1600s and early 1700s the Circassian Codex became the favorite
means of covert communication between Spanish spies, but also between
exiled Sephardic Jews. Very, very few people knew how to convert the
Circassian alphabet into the Roman alphabet. Even if they did, they
would need a second cipher sheet to understand a message’s meaning.
The
French became aware of the Circassian Codex around 1665 during a war
with Spain in what is now Belgium. Spanish agents within and near
Versailles Palace communicated with each other as the planned the
assassination of King Louis XIV. One of the agents was captured then
tortured until he confessed the full contents of the double cipher,
which revealed the names of the other conspirators. Thereafter, both
Spain and France used the Circassian Codex in their espionage work, but
the letters became increasingly similar to that of the original
“Sequoyah” Syllabary.
Sephardic
Jewish merchants and pirates often used their version of the Circassian
Codex in a triple cipher which also included Arabic and Hebrew
letters. As such they were extremely difficult to translate by their
enemies . . . primarily the Spanish, Jesuits and Holy Office (Roman
Catholic Inquisition).
Sequoyah’s mysterious ancestry
One
of the major problems with determining anything factual about
Sequoyah’s life is that there are at least three different versions . .
. mainstream history books, official Cherokee Nation and the far more
detailed account by Traveler Bird, a Kitoowah Cherokee, who claimed to
speak for Sequoyah’s descendants. These versions have his father being
either a white man (traditional), a halfbreed (Cherokee) or a full blood
(Traveler Bird). They have different dates for his birth and death.
They have different locations for his birthplace. Two say that Sequoyah
never returned to the east after moving to Arkansas and that a Cherokee
man named William Maw posed as Sequoyah, when his portrait was painted
in Washington, DC by Charles Bird King.
Two
versions say that as a young boy, Sequoyah was lame so he couldn’t play
sports and go hunting with the other Cherokee boys, yet two describe
him going off at age 15 to fight for the Chickamauga Cherokees and three
describe Sequoyah fighting in the Creek Red Stick War and going hunting
out West when he was an elderly man.
Sequoya
was not this famous man’s name. It was his mother’s last name. George
Gist, the real name of this scholar, wanted to get rid of his European
name, so he took his mother’s last name, probably without knowing its
real meaning. The Cherokee spelling of her adopted name is Wuteh
S-si-qua-ya. Here name may have actually been Wotah or Wutah. Remember, it was written down by white English speakers.
This
is when it gets real interesting. Sequoya is the Anglicization of the
Cherokee-nization of Sikuya, which meant “slave” or “war captive” in the
18th century Creek languages. It makes no sense that his mother would be named a slightly modified Cherokee word for pig, siqua, as some references state.
Wuteh
and Wutah are African and Georgia Gullah words for witch! All three
versions of his life acknowledge that Sequoyah and his wife were charged
with witchcraft. Two versions claim that he and his wife were tortured
and maimed before escaping. The sanitized Cherokee version says he
wasn’t . . . BUT . . . a well-researched biography on the Ridge Family
(Major Ridge, John Ridge) states matter-of-factly that John Ridge, as
commander of the Georgia Cherokee Light Horse raced up to North Carolina
to save his friend Sequoyah and his wife as they were at the time being
tortured until death for witchcraft.
It
sounds like that Sequoyah’s mother was a Mustee (mixed African-Native
American) slave from the Creek-speaking part of South Carolina or
Georgia. In the various versions of Sequoyah, she is either operator
or the owner (highly unlikely) of a trading post. All three versions
state that George Gist grew up in a household headed by his mother. One
version says he was an only child. Another says that he had a couple
of half-siblings, whose fathers are unknown. The third version says
that he was a full blooded son of a father and mother, living together
with a large family.
In the
late 1700s, almost all the Cherokee and Creek trading posts were owned
by white Indian traders, based on the Savannah River in Augusta, GA or
slightly farther south. They preferred using Mustee slaves or freewomen
to manage their branch trading posts. The Mustees were usually either
mixed Uchee-African or Creek-African, whose cultures had long traditions
of being involved with regional trade systems.
George
Gist and his mother are described as being poor. As such she would
have had no capital to stock up a trading post. If she actually owned
the trading post, she would not have been poor. She would have been one
of the wealthiest Cherokee women in her area, and thus would have had
Cherokee men “beating down her doors” to be her husband . . . or at
least, live-in lover. This would not to be the case if Wutah was known
to be a witch. Not being ethnic Cherokee, she would be immune to
execution, but nevertheless, been taboo.
Along
with Charles Hicks, David Hicks, David Vann and John Ridge, Gist was
among the survivors of the disastrous Battle of Etowah Cliffs in Rome,
GA on October 17, 1793. They fled to the Natchez village of Pine Log in
what is now northern Bartow County. Ridge’s sister lived there. Gist
lived for several years in Pine Log where he made a living as a
silversmith for wealthy Cherokee families such as the Ridges and Vanns.
That
leads to a very pertinent question. If Gist lived in poverty with his
mother until age 15 then was on the warpath until late 1793, how in the
world did he learn how to make professional quality silverware. That is
skill that very few whites would have had? This is one of many
contradictions in all the versions of Sequoyah’s life.
Did George Gist really create the letters for his syllabary?
All
three versions of George Gist’s life agree that in 1824, the Cherokee
National Council created a silver medal to honor his creation of the
Cherokee Syllabary. The mainstream story of Sequoyah says that he
worked independent to create an entirely new syllabary over a period of
20 years . . . from when the Chickamauga War ended in 1793 until just
before the War of 1812. The Official Cherokee version says that he
worked independently on entirely new syllabary symbols from the end of
the Redstick War in 1815 to around 1821.
The
Traveller Bird version tells an entirely different story. He stated
that the Cherokees had a writing system for many centuries. Supposedly,
a “poor tribe from the west named the Talliwa arrived in their
territory long in the past.” This tribe had a writing system, which was
maintained on gold foil. In gratitude for being taken in, the Taliwa
taught the Taskegi Clan of the Cherokees how to write. The Taskegi were
known for their intelligence and powerful memories. Afterward they
kept the writing system and tribe’s history recorded on gold foil.
According
to Bird, the Taskegi writing system was utilized by the Chickamauga
Cherokees in their war with the white settlers in Tennessee. Cryptic
messages were carved or painted on to trees so war parties could
communicate with each other. While fighting for the Chickamauga’s
learned this cryptic system.
Again
according to Bird, the Cherokees continued to use the Taliwa symbols
after there was peace. The leaders of the Chickamaugas soon became the
dominant faction of the Cherokee Nation. Meanwhile, while working as a
silversmith, Sequoyah began adapting these symbols and some more he
created into a system that symbolized the syllables in the Cherokee
language. While fighting in the Red Stick War, Sequoyah began teaching
the more sophisticated use of the Taliwa symbols to other Cherokee
soldiers.
Facts:
Abstract symbols have been found on ancient trees within the
territorial boundary of the Cherokee Nation in Georgia. The memoir of
Captain René de Laundonniére, Commander of Fort Caroline (1564-1565),
specifically mentioned that the Apalache Creeks in Northeast Georgia
manufactured gold foil and exported it to other tribes in the Southeast.
He stated that the foil was used to record information.
While
camped out in the Tuskeegee Community, NC, I found a Sephardic Jewish
inscription on the mountain overlooking Fontana Lake, which was dated
September 15, 1615. That means that Sephardic Jews were in direct
contact with Taskegees by that date or earlier.
Eyewitness
accounts by Richard Briggstock in 1653, James Needham & Gabriel
Arthur in 1673 and Governor James Moore of Carolina in 1693, place
Spanish and Portuguese colonists in North Georgia and Eastern Tennessee
in the 1600s. Needham and Arthur also encountered a large European
town, built of brick, near the confluence of the Holston and French
Broad Rivers. The town contained a brick church with a bell tower
containing a single massive bell. The bell tolled three times a day to
call Christians there to pray. This is a precise description of
Armenian, Georgian and Christian Circassian towns of that era in the
Caucasus.
Horse manure:
Taliwa was also the name used by other Cherokee storytellers to label a
mythical town on the Etowah River, which the Cherokees supposedly razed
in 1755 and in doing so, captured all of North Georgia. There was no
tribe and no town named Taliwa, anywhere in the United States or
Mexico. The ruins that the Cherokees claimed were Taliwa, where of a
large town abandoned around 1600 AD. Archaeologists have never found an
example of writing at the so-called Taliwa town site in Cherokee
County, GA.
The Taskegi (Tuskegee
in English) were a major branch of the Creek Confederacy. They were
originally located on the Little Tennessee River in present day Graham
County, NC and were visited there in the spring of 1540. Their
neighbors to the east were the Chiaha, who were Itza Maya immigrants.
Taskegee Creeks where shown to still be living at that location on the
1701 map of Mexico and La Florida by the French mapmaker, Guillaume de
Lisle. By 1717, the majority of Taskegee had been forced out of the
North Carolina Mountains and were then shown living in Northwest Georgia
and along the Upper Coosa River in Northeast Alabama.
The
Taskegee towns eventually settled on the Middle Coosa and Chattahoochee
Rivers. Nevertheless, there was a Cherokee village built on the burned
out ruins of the Creek town of Taskegi. The location is on the banks
of Fontana Lake and is the source of the name of Tuskeegee Community.
Plausible Speculations:
The word “Charakeys” first appeared on a map in 1715. Their villages
were shown to be located in the exact same region where Needham and
Arthur encountered an Eastern Orthodox Christian town. Prior to 1715,
French maps show Northeast Tennessee occupied by Chiska, Shawnee,
proto-Creek and Tongoria towns.
(1)
It is possible that the origin of the Anglicized ethnic label,
Cherakees, is the actual name that the Circassians called themselves . .
. Cherikess. The connection might seem far-fetched, but there were
hundreds of thousands of Armenians, Georgians and Circassians wandering
around the world at that time due to their expulsion by the Otttoman
Empire.
(2) It is quite
possible that interactions and marriages between Eastern Orthodox
colonists and local indigenous peoples allowed the transfer of knowledge
about writing systems to be partially absorbed by subsequent
generations of mixed-heritage peoples. Perhaps at some point, the
descendants knew the alphabetical letters, but didn’t know their
meanings.
(3) French
officers, marines and traders began exploring eastern Tennessee and
western North Carolina in the 1680s. By then senior officers involved
with clandestine activities would have known the French version of the
Circassian Codex. The French built a large fortified trading post on
Bussell Island at the confluence of the Tennessee and Little Tennessee
Rivers during that period. It was still there in 1715. Perhaps
(4)
The Sequoyah Syllabary may have been derived by George Gist from a
Creek writing system, learned by his mother, Wuteh, Wutah or Wotah. If
she was indeed a slave, as indicated by her last name, there is no
telling what her ethnic background was or who she had been in contact
with in the past.
A sample has been found of a Creek writing system from the mid-1700s. (See below)
I predates the Cherokee system by several decades. Of course,
Principal Chief Chikili presented a example of a complete Apalache-Creek
writing system to the leaders of Savannah on June 7, 1735 . . . so the
Cherokee’s claim to have been the only tribe in the United States to
have ever been literate is just not true.
If
historians could ever determine how Sequoyah learned the skills of a
silversmith, the understanding of the origins of his syllabary might
become more obvious. Until then there will always be many mysteries
about this man, who called himself Sequoyah.
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