Yehasuri, the Glossary
The Yehasuri are two feet tall creatures that are part of an ancient Catawba legend and are said to live on the Catawba Indian Reservation in South Carolina.[1]
Table of Contents
5 relations: Catawba people, Little people (mythology), South Carolina, Tobacco, Trickster.
- Catawba
- Indigenous topics of the Southeastern Woodlands
- Legendary creatures of the indigenous peoples of North America
- Mythological tricksters
- South Carolina culture
Catawba people
The Catawba, also known as Issa, Essa or Iswä but most commonly Iswa (Catawba: Ye Iswąˀ), are a federally recognized tribe of Native Americans, known as the Catawba Indian Nation. Their current lands are in South Carolina, on the Catawba River, near the city of Rock Hill. Yehasuri and Catawba people are Catawba.
See Yehasuri and Catawba people
Little people (mythology)
Little people have been part of the folklore of many cultures in human history, including Ireland, Greece, the Philippines, the Hawaiian Islands, New Zealand, Flores Island, Indonesia, and Native Americans. Yehasuri and Little people (mythology) are Legendary creatures of the indigenous peoples of North America and Mythic humanoids.
See Yehasuri and Little people (mythology)
South Carolina
South Carolina is a state in the coastal Southeastern region of the United States.
See Yehasuri and South Carolina
Tobacco
Tobacco is the common name of several plants in the genus Nicotiana of the family Solanaceae, and the general term for any product prepared from the cured leaves of these plants.
Trickster
In mythology and the study of folklore and religion, a trickster is a character in a story (god, goddess, spirit, human or anthropomorphisation) who exhibits a great degree of intellect or secret knowledge and uses it to play tricks or otherwise disobey normal rules and defy conventional behavior.
See also
Catawba
- 1738–1739 North Carolina smallpox epidemic
- Catawba Two Kings Casino
- Catawba in the American Civil War
- Catawba language
- Catawba people
- Catawban languages
- Yehasuri
Indigenous topics of the Southeastern Woodlands
- Big Cypress Indian Reservation
- Biltmore Mound
- Four Mothers Society
- Garden Creek site
- Irene Mound site
- Kituwa
- Red Sticks
- Southeastern Indian Artists Association
- Stone box grave
- Yehasuri
Legendary creatures of the indigenous peoples of North America
- Átahsaia
- Ababinili
- Achiyalatopa
- Altamaha-ha
- Amala (mythology)
- Amikuk
- Anaye
- Apotamkin
- Awakkule
- Bakwas
- Bigfoot
- Chenoo
- Chepi
- Chindi
- Deer Woman
- Dzoavits
- Fastachee
- Flathead Lake Monster
- Haakapainiži
- Haietlik
- Horned Serpent
- Jenu
- Kushtaka
- Little People of the Pryor Mountains
- Little people (mythology)
- Nimerigar
- Ogopogo
- Panti'
- Piasa
- Pukwudgie
- Rain Bird (legend)
- Rainbow crow
- Seelkee
- Sisiutl
- Skin-walker
- Skookum
- Thunderbird (mythology)
- Thunderbird and Whale
- Turtle Island
- Underwater panther
- Urayuli
- Wechuge
- Yehasuri
Mythological tricksters
- Agadzagadza
- Aguara
- Akhu Tönpa
- Alux
- Bodach
- Clurichaun
- Jack tales
- Juan Bobo
- Kijimuna
- Kitsune
- Kudan (yōkai)
- Leprechaun
- Leshy
- Mannegishi
- Mbeku
- Māui (Hawaiian mythology)
- Māui (Māori mythology)
- Nungpan Ponpi Luwaopa
- Pukwudgie
- Păcală
- Rokita (folklore)
- Signifying monkey
- Sisyphus
- Sri Thanonchai
- Takaonna
- Yehasuri
South Carolina culture
- Barbecue in South Carolina
- Boo hag
- Cannabis in South Carolina
- Carolina Dog
- Carolina Girls
- Carolina Gold
- Charleston Renaissance
- Gullah Gullah Island
- Gullah language
- Hash (stew)
- Koger Center for the Arts
- Lowcountry cuisine
- Millionaire pie
- Miss South Carolina
- Miss South Carolina Teen
- Miss South Carolina USA
- Miss South Carolina World
- Muhlenbergia sericea
- Music of South Carolina
- Order of the Palmetto
- Religion in South Carolina
- South Carolina Highway 65
- South Carolina folklore
- South Carolina literature
- Sqrambled Scuares
- Symbols of South Carolina
- Yehasuri