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The Moundville site, occupied from around A.D.
1000 until A.D. 1450, is a large settlement
of Mississippian culture on the Black Warrior
River in central Alabama. At the time of Moundville's
heaviest residential population, the community
took the form of a three hundred-acre village
built on a bluff overlooking the river.
The
plan of the town was roughly square and protected on three sides
by a bastioned wooden palisade. Moundville, in size and complexity
second only to the Cahokia site in Illinois, was at once a populous
town, as well as a political center and a religious center.
Within
the enclosure, surrounding a central plaza, were twenty-six earthen
mounds, the larger ones apparently supporting noble's residences
alternating with small ones that supported buildings used for mortuary
and other purposes.
Of
the two largest mounds in the group, Mound A occupies the center
of the great plaza, and Mound B lies just to the north on the site's
central axis. The latter is a steep pyramid with two ramps, rising
to a height of fifty-eight feet. The arrangement of the mounds and
plaza gives the impression of symmetry and planning. In addition,
archaeologists have found evidence of borrow pits, other public
buildings, and dozens of small houses constructed of pole and thatch,
many of which have yielded burials beneath the floors.
Striking
differences between the nobles and commoners showing a highly stratified
society can be seen among the excavated burials with their grave
goods. Some include rare artifacts that may be associated with particular
political or religious offices. Evidence shows that Moundville was
sustained by tribute of food and labor provided by the people who
lived in the nearby Black Warrior Valley floodplain farmsteads as
well as other smaller mound centers. At its height the Moundville
community contained a population of about one thousand with around
ten thousand in the entire valley. Like other Mississippian societies,
Moundville's growth and prosperity were made possible by intensive
cultivation of maize, or Indian corn. The nobility dominated a traffic
in such imported luxury goods as copper, mica, galena, and marine
shell. Renowned particularly for their artistic excellence in pottery,
stonework, and embossed copper, the inhabitants of Moundville produced
artifacts bearing a high degree of skilled workmanship, making the
site a benchmark in the study of Mississippian imagery.
Neither
the rise of Moundville nor its eventual decline is well understood
by scholars. The immediate area appears to have been thickly populated,
containing a few very small single-mound centers just before the
creation of the public architecture of the great plaza and erection
of the palisade about A.D. 1200. However, by about A.D. 1350, Moundville
seems to have undergone a change in use. The site lost the appearance
of a town, but retained its ceremonial and political functions.
A decline ensued, marked by abandonment of some mounds and the loss
of religious importance in others. There was also a decrease in
the importation of goods which had given prestige to the nobility.
By the 1500s, most of the area was abandoned with only a few portions
of the site still occupied. Although the first Europeans reached
the Southeast in the 1540s, the precise ethnic and linguistic links
between Moundville's inhabitants and what became the historic Native
American tribes are still not well understood.
Dr. Vernon James Knight, Associate Professor of Anthropology
at the University of Alabama, is the Museum's Curator of Southeastern
Archaeology.
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At
its height the Moundville community contained a population of
about one thousand with around ten thousand in the entire valley.
Copyright Pam Ronsaville, Wood Ronsaville Harlin, Inc.

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