The Yazoo and Koroa join with the …
Years: 1729 - 1729
December
The Yazoo and Koroa join with the Natchez in attacking the French in 1729, killing more than two hundred people.
The French had established a fort near the village of St. Pierre in 1718 to command the mouth of the Yazoo River at the Mississippi.
The young Jesuit priest Jean Rouel had been given the Yazoo mission, near the French post, in 1722; he has remained until the outbreak of the Natchez War, when the Yazoo and Koroa, on learning of the event, waylay and kill Father Rouel and an enslaved black man in his service on December 11, 1729.
They attack the neighboring post the next day, killing the whole garrison.
The tribes bury Father Rouel's body; his bell and some books will afterward be recovered and restored by the Quapaw.
Locations
People
Groups
- Natchez (Amerind tribe)
- Koroa (Amerind tribe)
- Choctaw (Amerind tribe)
- Chickasaw (Amerind tribe)
- Quapaw, or Arkansas (Amerind tribe)
- Tunica people
- Yazoo (Amerind tribe)
- New France (French Colony)
- Jesuits, or Order of the Society of Jesus
- France, (Bourbon) Kingdom of
- Carolina, Province of (English Colony)
- Louisiana (New France)
- Britain, Kingdom of Great
