221:, killing more than 200 people, including the Jesuit priest Paul Du Poisson. They carried off as captives most of the French women and children, and their African slaves. On learning of the event, the Yazoo and Koroa, on December 11, 1729, waylaid and killed Rouel and his black slave. The next day, they attacked the neighboring post, killing the whole garrison. The tribes buried Rouel's body. His bell and some books were afterward recovered and restored to the French by the
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Caribbean plantations. The Chickasaw captured many other Yazoo men and sold them into slavery to Carolina-based traders. This ended the Yazoo as a tribe; their survivors intermarried with the Chickasaw, Africans, and other peoples.
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in killing the French priest
Nicholas Foucault and his three companions. The seminary temporarily withdrew Fr Antoine from the area.
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priest Jean Rouel was given the Yazoo mission near the French post. He worked there until the outbreak of the
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In 1718, the French established a fort near the village of St. Pierre to command the river. In 1722 the young
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of 1729 was a disaster for French settlements in
Louisiana. The colonists withdrew in retreat to
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gathering several dozen people with purported Yazoo ancestry to seek tribal status. He gains
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in attacking the French colonists, in an attempt to drive them out of the region altogether.
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for retaliation and overwhelmingly defeated the
Natchez and Yazoo. They sold survivors into
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Gibson, Arrell M. "The
Indians of Mississippi", in McLemore, Richard Aubrey, ed.
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of the Quebec
Seminary of Foreign Missions in New France (Canada) established a
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was an explorer who, in the late 1600s or early 1700s, may have made the first
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Nothing is definitely known about their language, believed to be related to
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French explorers and missionaries documented the tribe. In 1699, Father
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on the
Atlantic coast. In 1702, the Yazoo aided the
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27:Historical Native American tribe from Mississippi
385:Indigenous peoples of the Southeastern Woodlands
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352:"Catholic Indian Missions of the United States"
298:round trip transcontinental journey across
217:On November 29, 1729, the Natchez attacked
135:–speaking peoples, especially the Tunica,
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321:Encyclopedia of Native American Tribes
390:Native American tribes in Mississippi
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184:At this time, the Yazoo, like the
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253:In fiction
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186:Chickasaw
68:Languages
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190:Carolina
143:Language
102:, Tioux
80:Religion
246:slavery
242:Choctaw
212:Natchez
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159:History
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