Precontact valley The Taensa and the closely related
Natchez are descendants of the late precontact
Plaquemine culture (1200–1700 CE). The Plaquemine culture was a
Mississippian culture variant centered on the
Lower Mississippi River valley. They had complex political and religious institutions and lived in large villages centered on ceremonial
platform mounds. They were primarily agriculturists who grew
maize,
pumpkins,
squash,
beans and
tobacco. They had a deep history in the area stretching back through the earlier
Coles Creek (700–1200 CE) and
Troyville cultures (400–700 CE) to the
Marksville culture (100 BCE to 400 CE), which was contemporaneous with the
Hopewell cultures of present-day Ohio and Illinois. The
Tensas Basin region where their villages were found has several Coles Creek and Plaquemine era ceremonial sites with platform mounds located very nearby, including the Coles Creek era
Balmoral Mounds (occupied and 1200 CE), and the Plaquemine era
Routh Mounds (occupied to 1350 CE) and
Flowery Mound (occupied –1541) sites. The
Jordan Mounds site on a relict channel of the
Arkansas River in northeastern Louisianas
Morehouse Parish was constructed during the protohistoric period between 1540 and 1685. The builders were an intrusive group in the area, Mississippianized peoples who were possibly refugees from the Mississippi River area to the east and were escaping the collapse of their society brought about by the aftereffects of European contact. By the late 1600s the site was abandoned. Historians and archaeologists such as Marvin Jeter have theorized that the Plaquemine "Northern Natchezan" ancestors of the Taensa were in part some of the peoples documented in the early 1540s by the de Soto expedition in southeastern Arkansas and northwestern Mississippi. After the disastrous encounter and subsequent population crash due to the introduction of European diseases and political upheaval left in de Soto's wake, remnant populations of Northern Natchezans migrated down the Mississippi toward their Southern Natchezan cousins.
European contact with the Taensa, by artist
George Catlin The first securely documented European contact with the Taensa was by the French
La Salle expedition of 1682. They were described as having a village on Lake St. Joseph, a narrow crescent shaped
oxbow lake located west of the Mississippi, between the
Yazoo River and
Saint Catherine Creek (near
Newellton in modern
Tensas Parish, Louisiana). On March 22, 1682, a
recollect chaplain who accompanied LaSalle, Father Zenobius, preached to the tribe at this location. La Salles associate
Henri de Tonti visited the Taensa again in 1686 and 1690. They numbered approximately 1,200 people scattered throughout seven or eight villages on the western end of the lake and another on the
Tensas River near present-day
Clayton in
Concordia Parish. In 1698 French Catholic missionary priests
Antoine Davion and
François de Montigny and J. B. La Source (a lay person and possible servant to the priests) visited the Taensa; de Montigny founded a short-lived mission among them. De Montigny at that time records their population as being 700 people. In 1699 French explorer
Pierre Le Moyne d'Iberville recorded the Taensa as having 300 warriors and living in seven villages named as Taensas, Chaoucoula, Conchayon, Couthaougoula, Nyhougoula, Ohytoucoulas, and Talaspa. The majority of these names are in the Muskogean
Mobilian Jargon and not the Natchezan Taensa language.
Later history During the late 17th and early 18th centuries, French colonists in the American Southeast initiated a power struggle with those living in the colony of
Carolina. Traders from Carolina had established a large trading network among the indigenous peoples of the American Southeast, and by 1700 it stretched west as far as the
Mississippi River. The
Chickasaw tribe, who lived north of the Taensa, were frequently visited by Carolinian traders, thus giving them access to a source of firearms and alcohol. One of the most lucrative trades with Carolinian merchants involved trading in
Indian slaves. For decades, the Chickasaw conducted slave raids over a wide region in the American Southeast, often being joined by allied Natchez and
Yazoo warriors. These raiding parties moved over great distances to capture slaves from hostile tribes, such as the Taensa. In 1706, fearing a slaver raid by a combined force of Chickasaw and Yazoo raiders, the Taensa abandoned their village on Lake St. Joseph. They headed south to seek shelter with the
Bayogoula at their village on the western bank of the Mississippi, roughly south of present-day
Baton Rouge. Conflicts soon developed, and the Taensa attacked and nearly exterminated the Bayogoula peoples and burned their village down—an act described as treacherous by later historians. The Taensa, along with the
Apalachee and
Pakana, relocated again, this time west of the Mississippi to French territory on the
Red River. There they eventually merged with the Chitimacha. According to historian
James Mooney, they numbered about 100 persons in 1805. Early in the nineteenth century, the Taensa petitioned the
Spanish colonial authorities for land on which to settle in southeastern
Texas; they were given permission to settle land lying between the
Trinity and the
Sabine rivers, but ultimately did not migrate. This was the last appearance of the tribe in historical records. They later moved south to Bayou Boeuf and later still to
Grand Lake, "after which the remnant disappear[ed] from history." ==Culture==