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・ Gideon Johnson Pillow
・ Gideon Joubert
・ Gideon Jung
・ Gideon Kailipalaki Laanui
・ Gideon Kimbrell
・ Gideon Klein
・ Gideon Kleinman
・ Gideon Kliger
・ Gideon Koren
・ Gideon Kouoru
・ Gideon Lang
・ Gideon Lee
・ Gideon Lester
・ Gideon Levy
・ Gideon Levy (Dutch journalist)
Gideon Lincecum
・ Gideon London
・ Gideon Louw
・ Gideon Mace
・ Gideon Macon
・ Gideon Mantell
・ Gideon Meir
・ Gideon Meitlis
・ Gideon Mendel
・ Gideon Mer
・ Gideon Moi
・ Gideon Mung'aro
・ Gideon Mwiti
・ Gideon Ndambuki
・ Gideon Nieuwoudt


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Gideon Lincecum : ウィキペディア英語版
Gideon Lincecum

Gideon Lincecum (22 April 1793 – 28 November 1874) was an American pioneer, historian, physician, philosopher, and naturalist. Lincecum is known for his exploration and settlement of what are now the U.S. states of Alabama, Mississippi and Texas, which was then beyond the western borders of the Thirteen Colonies. Lincecum had good relations with Native Americans as he explored the wilderness in the American Deep South. He was son of Hezekiah and Sally (Hickman) Lincecum, and was born in Warren County, Georgia, on April 22, 1793.〔
〕 Lincecum was self-educated. He spent his boyhood principally in the company of Muskogees. After successive moves, he and his wife, the former Sarah Bryan, moved in 1818 with his parents and siblings to the Tombigbee River, above the site of present Columbus, Mississippi.
While living among the Choctaw in Mississippi, he recorded their legends and traditions in the Choctaw language. After moving to Texas, he translated it to English as the ''Chahta Tradition''.
He sought a new frontier in 1868 and, at the age of seventy-six, with a widowed daughter and her seven children, joined a Confederate colony in Tuxpan, Veracruz, Mexico. He died on November 28, 1874 after a long illness at his Long Point, Texas, home.〔
==Historian==

Lincecum had contact with Chickasaw, Creek (Muscogee), and Choctaw Native Americans before the Indian Removals of the 1830s began. He learned how to speak and write their languages, learned about their medicine, and recorded their history. Lincecum frequently visited an elderly Choctaw man named ''Chahta Immataha'', who gave him a detailed account of Choctaw oral history.〔
〕 Historian Patricia Galloway notes that Lincecum's "narrative is not reliable."〔


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