Tetinchoua

Tetinchoua was a Miami chief who had lived during the 17th century. Nicolas Perrot, a French traveler, met him in Chicago in 1671. He characterizes Tetinchoua as being "the most powerful of Indian chiefs".[1] Perrot stated that the Miami chief could easily manage approximately five thousand warriors as evidence of his authority and power. He never lacked guarded protection of at least forty men who were even posted around Tetinchoua's tent while he slept. Although he was a leader who hardly had personable interface with his people, he was successful in his ability to communicate through subordinates who would relay orders.[1] Despite his highly regarded warrior reputation, he was also described as being attractive and bearing a softness to his features and mannerisms according to Father Claude Dablon.[2]

  1. ^ a b Wilson, James Grant; Fiske, John, eds. (1968). Appleton's Cyclopaedia of American Biography. Gale Research Co. OCLC 300500707.
  2. ^ (Ohio), Daughters of the American Revolution (1963). Index to History of Greene County : together with historical notes on the Northwest and the state of Ohio by R.S. Dills. Filmed by the Genealogical Society of Utah. OCLC 866295797.