French missionaries first encounter the Miami in …

Years: 1650 - 1650

French missionaries first encounter the Miami in the mid-seventeenth century, noting many linguistic and cultural similarities between the Miami bands and the Illiniwek.

The Miami, thought by anthropologists to be one of the cultural descendants of the Mississippian culture, are characterized by maize-based agriculture (they seem also to have enjoyed hunting), chiefdom-level social organization, extensive regional trade networks, hierarchical settlement patterns, and other factors.

The name 'Miami' derives from the tribe's name for themselves in their own language, Myaamia (plural Myaamiaki).

(Some sources say that the Miami called themselves the Twightwee (also spelled Twatwa), an onomatopeic reference to their sacred bird, the crane.

However, "Twightwee" appears to in fact be a Delaware name for the Miamis, and some Miamis have stated that this was only a name used by other tribes for the Miamis, and not a name the Miamis used for themselves.

Another common usage was Mihtohseeniaki, "the people.")

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