Sequoyah wanted his people to remain free he thought that if his people could communicate with each other by reading and writing, then they could keep their independence of the white people because the Cherokees had no written language.
Sequoyah (1776-1843)
A Cherokee Indian wanted to keep the Cherokee nation alive long after he was gone. He wasn't literate in any language but was able to perfect a system of reading and writing.
The person who created the Cherokee Language was Sequoya.
Sequoyah named in English George Gist or George Guess, was a Cherokee silversmith. In 1821 he completed his independent creation of a Cherokee syllabary, making reading and writing in Cherokee possible.
Sequoya is credited was having created a writing system for the Cherokee language.
Sequoyah was the Cherokee who invented the Cherokee alphabet of 86 characters.
Sequoyah
Sequoya.
Sequoyah
We established Cherokee language immersion schools, master artisans for each of the Cherokee traditional arts and crafts, satellite communities in areas outside the Cherokee Nation where Cherokees may meet and learn about their culture, The Cherokee Phoenix -- the oldest American Indian newspaper in the U.S., now also available online, a written syllabary language invented by Sequoyah, traditional stickball (the forerunner of LaCrosse) and marble games, annual Hog Fry events, and the annual Cherokee Homecoming event in Tahlequah, Oklahoma, to name a few.
how is the Cherokees chief similar and different from our president
They are made from china
Those that are Christians - yes.
Latin
Sequoya
Sequoya
Because he invented written language
The Sumers invented the first ever written language.
Sequoyah
sequoyah was a cheerokee and he made symbols
Sequoia
Sequoia
The cultures of the Cherokee were they ran successful business, such as grain and limber mills. The Cherokees had their own schools, and some could speak and read English. Many had converted to Christianity. The Cherokees even had written an alphabet for their language. -Hope I helped any
We established Cherokee language immersion schools, master artisans for each of the Cherokee traditional arts and crafts, satellite communities in areas outside the Cherokee Nation where Cherokees may meet and learn about their culture, The Cherokee Phoenix -- the oldest American Indian newspaper in the U.S., now also available online, a written syllabary language invented by Sequoyah, traditional stickball (the forerunner of LaCrosse) and marble games, annual Hog Fry events, and the annual Cherokee Homecoming event in Tahlequah, Oklahoma, to name a few.
Mesopotamians invented the wheel chariot and mesopotamian women invented lipstick. The arch and the collumn were both developed in Mesopotamia, and are still used today in modern buildings and bridges.
The origin of written language dates back over 5,000 years ago to ancient Mesopotamia and Sumer, where the first known writing system, cuneiform, was developed. The creation of written language was a crucial step in human history, as it allowed for the recording and preservation of information, facilitating communication and the dissemination of knowledge.