Beschreibung:
Archaeologists of South Carolina and Florida and historians of the Native South, Spanish Florida, and British Carolina address elusive questions about Yamasee identity, political and social networks, and the fate of the Yamasees after the Yamasee War.
List of Illustrations List of Tables Foreword, by Alan Gallay Acknowledgments Introduction: Recovering Yamasee History Denise I. BossyPart 1. Yamasee Identity 1. Living at Liberty: The Ungovernable Yamasees of Spanish Florida Amy Turner Bushnell 2. Yamasee Migrations into the Mocama and Timucua Provinces of Florida, 1667–1683: An Archaeological Perspective Keith Ashley 3. Yamasee Material Culture and Identity: Altamaha/San Marcos Ceramics in Seventeenth- and Eighteenth-Century Yamasee Indian Settlements, Georgia and South Carolina Eric C. Poplin and Jon Bernard Marcoux 4. Cultural Continuity and Change: Archaeological Research at Yamasee Primary Towns in South Carolina Alexander Y. SweeneyPart 2. Yamasee Networks 5. Spiritual Diplomacy: Reinterpreting the Yamasee Prince’s Eighteenth-Century Voyage to England Denise I. Bossy 6. Yamasee-African Ties in Carolina and Florida Jane Landers 7. The Long Yamasee War: Reflections on Yamasee Conflict in the Eighteenth Century Steven C. HahnPart 3. Surviving the Yamasee War 8. The Persistence of Yamasee Power and Identity at the Town of San Antonio de Pocotalaca, 1716–1752 Amanda Hall 9. Refuge among the Spanish: Yamasee Community Coalescence in St. Augustine after 1715 Andrea P. White 10. Chief Francisco Jospogue: Reconstructing the Paths of a Guale-Yamasee Indian Lineage through Spanish Records Susan Richbourg Parker 11. The Yamasee in West Florida John E. Worth List of Contributors Index