Want this question answered?
From the Native Americans of the same name.
From the Indian name for "Black Warrior", Tuskaloosa
The word Alabama is believed to have originated from the Choctaw language, and was later adopted by the Alabama tribe as their name. The tribe was a Muskogean speaking tribe.
His warrior name is Talltail. He is mentioned in Bluestar's Prophecy.
I believe that is the Tennessee River, which swings down into Alabama near Muscle Shoals and back up into Tennessee.
Chattahoochee
Tuskaloosa (aka Tuskalusa, Tastaluca, Tuskaluza) was a paramount chief of a Mississippian group, the possible ancestors of the several southern Native American tribes ( the Choctaw and Creek peoples), in what is now the U.S. state of Alabama. The modern-day city of Tuscaloosa, Alabama, is named for this Native American chief. He is famous for leading a battle against the Spanish conquistador Hernando de Soto. His name is of western Muskogean origin (taska, losa), meaning "Black Warrior".[1] He is described as being very tall and well built, with some of the chroniclers saying he stood a foot and a half taller than the Spaniards.
That would have to be Alabama. What state (Alabama) is next to a very large river (Mississippi River) that shares a name with one of the boarder state (Mississippi).
for this answer its in the warrior book:stone river
howard university
Iron Man by Black Sabbbath
There are theories about how Alabama got its name, but one of them is not about the sticky black clay found there. Alabama is a Native American Indian word that means tribal town in Creek. Alabama also means plant cutters in the Choctaw Indian language.