On March 29, 1539, the
Hernando de Soto entrada, while winding northward after leaving Florida, recorded coming upon the province of
Ichisi, which may have been part of the larger
paramount chiefdom of
Ocute. They were greeted at the first village by women dressed in white mantles, offering gifts of corn cakes and wild onions. On March 30 they were ferried across the Ocmulgee River in dugout canoes and met the
paramount chief of the province, who they noted had only one good eye. The Spanish expedition spent several days at the village as guests of this chief. He gave de Soto gifts of food, and offered him porters and translators to assist him in getting to the next chiefdom to the northeast,
Ocute. This people were recorded as speaking a different language than the Ichisi. Before leaving on April 1, the Spaniards erected a large wooden cross atop one of the village
platform mounds and tried to explain its significance to the villagers. Noted historian and de Soto researcher
Charles M. Hudson theorized in the 1980s and 90s, that the de Soto entrada crossed the Ocmulgee River near the future site of
Macon, Georgia, and that the Lamar Mounds may have been the location of the paramount town of the Ichisi. But archaeological work in 2009 at a site in rural
Telfair County, Georgia, near the present-day town of
McRae, discovered evidence that calls this identification into question. Evidence from the Telfair site suggests that de Soto's crossing of the Ocmulgee River took place here, approximately further south than at Lamar Mounds. Archaeologists and historians are still debating which of the two sites was visited by de Soto and his men. ==Lamar name==