(Yes, I realize I still have to finish up Carthage. But hey, it's not a crime to run two of these at once, is it? At any rate, I'm running a huge Earth map with 11 civs. I'm playing as the Native Americans, renamed as the Mississippian people.)
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Around the year AD 600, a group of peoples along the Mississippi river came together to form a village. Eventually, it became a city, which flourished until the 15th century, when its inhabitants abandoned the site. It was more populous than London, and its population would not be surpassed in the Americas until Philadelphia reached 40,000 inhabitants in the early 19th century. It posessed the largest structure north of Mexico, and the potential to have become a great city, had it survived.
What if it had?
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Around the year AD 600, a group of peoples along the Mississippi river came together to form a village. Eventually, it became a city, which flourished until the 15th century, when its inhabitants abandoned the site. It was more populous than London, and its population would not be surpassed in the Americas until Philadelphia reached 40,000 inhabitants in the early 19th century. It posessed the largest structure north of Mexico, and the potential to have become a great city, had it survived.
What if it had?
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The Beginning
"May the Great Sun smile upon your harvest, and bring prosperity to your family." - Archaic Cahokian greeting, first words recorded by a system of writing.

"May the Great Sun smile upon your harvest, and bring prosperity to your family." - Archaic Cahokian greeting, first words recorded by a system of writing.
In the year 4000 BC, a small village across the Mississippi from what is now St. Louis discovered that they could store their corn harvest in pots to gain a surplus. The population of the city boomed, and more and more trade came down the Missouri, Mississippi, and Illinois rivers which made it grow further. Great earthworks grew from the ground upward, reaching towards the great sky. Among these was the greatest mound of all, and atop this the chieftain would live.
Thirteen acres at the base (5.5 hectares) and 100 feet tall (30 meters), it was the largest earthwork on the planet, with a base comparable to that of the Great Pyramid. Atop the structure was a building which brought the height an additional fifty feet higher. From here, the chieftain, a man of great wisdom would rule his people.
We don't know what the people called their city. But we call it Cahokia.
Thirteen acres at the base (5.5 hectares) and 100 feet tall (30 meters), it was the largest earthwork on the planet, with a base comparable to that of the Great Pyramid. Atop the structure was a building which brought the height an additional fifty feet higher. From here, the chieftain, a man of great wisdom would rule his people.
We don't know what the people called their city. But we call it Cahokia.

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