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Related: About this forumUncovering The Vibrant City Life Of Ancient Cahokia
From towering earthen pyramids to bustling ceremonial centers, this forgotten Native American city was once the largest urban center in North America.
by Annalee Newitz, on February 4, 2021
The following is an excerpt from Four Lost Cities: A Secret History of the Urban Age by Annalee Newitz.
Joining The Movement
By the reckoning of the Roman calendar, people started erecting Cahokias first monuments in the late 900s. At the time, European civilization was mired in the superstitions and brutal monarchies of the Middle Ages. But in North America, there was no entrenched medieval aristocracy, nor ancient Latin texts hinting at a lost great civilization. Instead, there were powerful but ever-changing social movements that temporarily united tribes and nations, and whose closest modern analogues might be political revolutions or religious revivals. And these unfolded against a backdrop of living urban history in the Americas, embodied in massive earthworks and stone monuments, whose origins went back thousands of years.
Based on what we know from indigenous oral histories and observations by Europeans in the 18th and 19th centuries, its likely that Cahokia was founded by leadersor maybe one charismatic leaderwho promised a spiritual and cultural rebirth. Some call Cahokia a city built on religion, but its origins were more complicated than that. Perhaps the best way to put it would be to say the city was spawned by a social movement that swept across the US south and Midwest, along the shores of the Mississippi River.
The Cahokians left no writing behind, so we cant say for sure what this movement was. But it was inspired by the founders knowledge of North American history. Mound cities are an ancient tradition in this part of the continent, going back millennia before Cahokia. North Americas first known earthworks are in Louisiana. The oldest, called Watson Brake, dates back 5,500 yearscenturies before the first Egyptian pyramids were built. Another is at Poverty Point, built 3,400 years ago near the Mississippi in northern Louisiana. Today you can still see Poverty Points crescent-shaped mounds towering like huge nested parentheses on a bluff overlooking a now-dry riverbed. A thousand years after Poverty Point was abandoned, people from the Hopewell culture built even more astounding mound cities in Ohio and throughout the northeast. The Cahokians would have known about these mounds from ancestral historiesand could have seen them along the Mississippibut they might also have been influenced by contemporary pyramids in the Mayan and Toltec metropolises farther south.
The builders of Cahokia probably intended to build a city in the image of these previous civilizations. They also built it extremely fast, as if spurred on by enthusiastic belief. University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign archaeologist Tim Pauketat has studied Cahokia for most of his career. He says that its mounds appear so abruptly in the archaeological record that its as if they were built directly on top of a constellation of small towns that belonged to people known today as the Eastern Woodlands tribes. As the city grew, so too did its farms, and the cultivated fields spread outward from Cahokia into the Illinois uplands. We find traces of Mississippian culture all along the river, where towns and small cities built mounds and shared some of the rituals of Cahokia. Its likely the city was something like Angkor, whose architectural styles and bureaucratic influence at some points reached thousands of kilometers beyond the city itself.
Cahokia was like Angkor in other ways, too. It had the urban design of a tropical city, with big stretches of farmland between neighborhoods, and earthen mounds that became city centers. Early residents of Cahokia spread to both sides of the Mississippi, reshaping the land with crops and earthworks. The city footprint was enormous, and archaeologists sometimes say the metropolis had precincts: the densely populated center around Monks Mound, as well as another center identified in East St. Louis, yet another where the city of St. Louis stands today. Its likely these werent separate cities; they were more like downtown neighborhoods separated by farms.
More:
https://www.sciencefriday.com/articles/cahokia-native-american-city/
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Uncovering The Vibrant City Life Of Ancient Cahokia (Original Post)
Judi Lynn
Feb 2021
OP
Judi Lynn
(160,621 posts)1. So sorry, meant to post this in the Anthropology forum...
eppur_se_muova
(36,289 posts)2. No biggy, anthropology is a science ...
After all, it ends in "ology".
I guess the post "these black women helped send us to the moon" was meant for Science?