Etowah
An edition of Etowah (2003)
the political history of a chiefdom capital
By Adam King
Publish Date
2003
Publisher
University of Alabama Press
Language
eng
Pages
178
Description:
This is a detailed reconstruction of the waxing and waning of political fortunes among the chiefly elites at an important center of the prehistoric world. At the time the first Europeans arrived in the New World, thousands of earthen platform mounds dotted the landscape of eastern North America. Only a few of the mound sites have survived the ravages of time and the devastation of pilferers; one of these valuable monuments is Etowah, located near Cartersville in northern Georgia. Over a period of more than 100 years, excavations of the site's six mounds--and in particular Mound C--has yielded.
subjects: Chiefdoms, Mississippian pottery, Mississippian culture, Social archaeology, Antiquities, Mississippian culture--georgia--etowah river valley, Chiefdoms--georgia--etowah river valley, Mississippian pottery--georgia--etowah river valley, Social archaeology--georgia--etowah river valley, E99.m6815 k56 2003, 975.8/35
Places: Etowah River Valley, Georgia, Etowah River Valley (Ga.), Etowah Indian Mound State Historic Site (Ga.)