| View Larger Image | The Catawbas (Indians of North America) | Library Bindingby James H. Merrell (Author), Frank W. Porter (Editor)
| List Price: | $14.95 | |
| | Binding: | Library Binding | | Publisher: | Chelsea House Publications | | Page Count: | 112 Pages | | Publication Date: | January 01, 1989 | | Sales Rank: | 395,145th |
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SIMILAR PRODUCTS |

| Catawba Indian Nation: Treasures in History by Thomas J. Blumer (Author), E. Fred Sanders (Afterword), Robert P. Smith (Afterword)
I am one of the lingering members of an almost extinguished race. Our graves will soon be our only habitations...I pursued the deer for my subsistence, the deer are disappearing, and I must starve. God ordained me for the forest, and my ambition is the shade, but the strength of my arm decays, and my feet fail in the chase. In my youth I bled in battle, that you might be independent, let not my heart in my old age, bleed, for the want of your commiseration. Peter Harris, a plea...
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| The Indians' New World: Catawbas and their Neighbors from European Contact through the Era of Removal by James H. Merrell (Author)
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| Catawba Valley Mississippian: Ceramics, Chronology, and Cawtawba Indians by David G. Moore (Author)
By the 18th century, the modern Catawba Indians were living along the river and throughout the valley that bears their name near the present North Carolina-South Carolina border, but little was known of their history and origins. With this elegant study, David Moore proposes a model that bridges the archaeological record of the protohistoric Catawba Valley with written accounts of the Catawba Indians from the 17th, 18th, and 19th centuries, thus providing an ethnogenesis theory for these Native...
| | | Catawba Indian Pottery: The Survival of a Folk Tradition (Contemporary American Indians) by Thomas John Blumer (Author), William L. Harris (Foreword)
When Europeans encountered them, the Catawba Indians were living along the river and throughout the valley that carries their name near the present North Carolina-South Carolina border. Archaeologists later collected and identified categories of pottery types belonging to the historic Catawba and extrapolated an association with their protohistoric and prehistoric predecessors. In this volume, Thomas Blumer traces the construction techniques of those documented ceramics to the lineage of their...
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