- Great Tellico
Great Tellico was a
Cherokee town at the site of present-dayTellico Plains, Tennessee , where theTellico River emerges from theAppalachian Mountains . Great Tellico was one of the largest Cherokee towns in the region. Its name in Cherokee is more properly written Talikwa. It is sometimes spelled Telliquo, or, in Oklahama, Tahlequah. There were several Cherokee settlements named Tellico, the largest of which is distinguished from the others by calling it "Great". The meaning of the word "Talikwa" is thought to be lost by the Cherokees.The Warrior Path— a branch of the
Great Indian Warpath — passed through Great Tellico, linking it to Chota in the north andGreat Hiwassee in the south, viaConasauga Creek . In addition, theTrading Path (Tellico Road), later called the "Unicoi Turnpike", ran from Great Tellico southeast over theUnicoi Range of the Appalachian Mountains, linking theOverhill Cherokee to the Middle and Lower Cherokee towns in North Carolina and South Carolina. The Trading Path became the main route of trade between the British and the Cherokee during the 18th century (Duncan 2003:245).In the early 18th century, Great Tellico was the de facto capital of the Overhill Cherokee. Several prominent Cherokee leaders came from the town, such as
Moytoy II . After the death of Moytoy II in 1741, Great Tellico began to fade. By the 1750s, Chota was largely recognized as the principal town of the Overhill Cherokee.References
*Mooney, James "Myths of the Cherokee" (1900, repr. 1995)
*Duncan, Barbara R. and Riggs, Brett H. "Cherokee Heritage Trails Guidebook". University of North Carolina Press: Chapel Hill (2003). ISBN 0-8078-5457-3*Thornton, Richard, "Ancient Roots I: The Indigenous People of the Southern Highlands." Lula Publishing:Morris, NC (2007) ISBN 978-1-4303-1828-6
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