Florida Indians and the Invasion from Europe

Jerald T. Milanich

Details: 304 pages     6 x 9
Paper: $19.95   ISBN 13: 978-0-8130-1636-8   ISBN 10: 0-8130-1636-3   
Pubdate:
Review(s): 17 available

Paper:

Overview

"An authoritative overview of the development of Florida's aboriginal peoples . . . blended with accounts of the European invasions and the dire consequences for the natives of their contacts with the newcomers. . . . Particularly valuable for its use of archaeological and historical data."--John H. Hann, San Luis Archaeological and Historic Site, Tallahassee


"An exciting book that brings together for all of Florida the earliest historic records of indigenous peoples and Old World invaders alike, combining archaeology and history to reconstruct events and lifeways of ethnic groups so quickly devastated by the European presence."--Nancy White, University of South Florida


When the conquistadors arrived in Florida in the early sixteenth century, as many as 350,000 native Americans lived in the territory. For more than twelve centuries their ancestors had resided here, fishing, hunting, gathering wild plants, and sometimes cultivating crops. Two and a half centuries later, Florida's Indians were gone.
Focusing on those native peoples and their interactions with Spanish and French explorers and colonists, Jerald Milanich delineates this massive cultural change. Using information gathered from archaeological excavations and from the interpretation of historical documents left behind by the colonial powers, he explains where the native groups came from, where they lived, and what happened to them. He closes with the tragic disappearance of the original inhabitants in the eighteenth century and the first appearance of the ancestors of Florida's present Native Americans.
With maps, photographs, drawings, and a vivid writing style, Milanich creates a sense of history and place--an opportunity to correlate modern towns to colonial events and sixteenth-century trails to twentieth-century highways--that will illuminate history for residents and tourists of Florida as well as for archaeologists and historians.


Jerald T. Milanich is curator of archaeology in the Department of Anthropology at the Florida Museum of Natural History, Gainesville. He is the author or editor of twelve books and monographs, including Tacachale: Essays on the Indians of Florida and Southeastern Georgia during the Historic Period (with Samuel Proctor, UPF, 1978, reprinted 1994), Archaeology of Precolumbian Florida (UPF, 1994), and Hernando de Soto and the Indians of Florida (with Charles Hudson, UPF, 1993), the last two of which received the Rembert Patrick Award from the Florida Historical Society.
 
Other JERALD MILANICH Books
Archaeology of the Everglades
Frolicking Bears, Wet Vultures, and Other Oddities: A New York City Journalist in Nineteenth-Century Florida
First Encounters: Spanish Explorations in the Caribbean and the United States, 1492-1570
Tacachale: Essays on the Indians of Florida and Southeastern Georgia during the H
Archaeology of Northern Florida, A.D. 200-900: The McKeithen Weeden Island Culture
Florida's Indians from Ancient Times to the Present
Laboring in the Fields of the Lord: Spanish Missions and Southeastern Indians
Hernando de Soto and the Indians of Florida
Archaeology of Precolumbian Florida
Famous Florida Sites: Mt. Royal and Crystal River