Chief Chicagou, also known as Agapit Chicagou, was an 18th-century Native American leader of the Mitchigamea. He visited Paris and participated in the Chickasaw Wars.
'Agapit' may be a corruption of "Akapia," a Miami-Illinois term for the chief's ceremonial assistant.
The chiefs met with King Louis XV on November 22. The Mercure de France reported that Chicagou made a speech to the young French king pledging allegiance to the crown. On the next day, the king took the chiefs on a rabbit hunt.
It was while the chiefs were in Paris that Jean-Philippe Rameau attended a performance given by them at the Theatre Italien. At this performance they danced three kinds of dance: the Peace, War and Victory dances. Rameau was inspired by this to write a piece for harpsichord entitled Les Sauvages. This was later published in Nouvelles Suites de Pieces de Clavecin.
Next it is reported that the Illiniwek warriors participated in the Battle of Ogoula Tchetoka during the Chickasaw Wars in 1736. While attacking a village of Natchez people refugees near present day Pontotoc, Mississippi, they were defeated and fled when the Chickasaw and England surprised them from behind a hill.
The last mention is by Jean Bernard Bossu in his journal; here he describes meeting with an Indian prince Chicique (probably not pronounced "Chi-ki-kwe" as the ending "kwe" would denote a woman's name) who was the son of the since deceased Chief Chicagou who visited Paris.
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