Acuera

Acuera was the name of a town and a province or region in central Florida during the 16th and 17th centuries. The people of Acuera spoke a dialect of the Timucua language. The town was raided by soldiers of Hernando de Soto's expedition in 1539, and was known to the French in their brief tenure (1564-1565) in northern Florida. Acuera came under Spanish influence late in the 16th century, and two or three Spanish missions were established in the Acuera province in the 17th century.

Location

Milanich and Hudson, based on distances between towns reported by the Spanish, locate the town of Acuera near Lake Weir and Lake Griffin, near the headwaters of the Oklawaha River, a tributary of the St. Johns River. A map produced by Jacques le Moyne, who was part of the French attempt to colonize Florida at Fort Caroline, shows a town called Aquouena (Acuera?) east of Eloquale (Ocale), on a tributary of the St. Johns River. The French also recorded that a chief named Acquera was a vassal of Chief Utina. The 17th century missions of San Luis de Acuera and Santa Lucia de Acuera were reported to be at distances from St. Augustine that are consistent with the missions being located near the Oklawaha River and Lake Weir. In 1836 Lake Weir appeared on a map as "Lake Ware", and Milanich and Hudson speculate that "Ware" was derived from "Acuera". Boyer has identified an archaeological site a little to the north of Lake Weir as likely being the site of the town of Acuera. The territory occupied by the Acuera people in historical times was part of the St. Johns culture, which is characterized by the presence of shell middens, burial mounds, and "chalky" pottery made with freshwater sponge spicules as a temper, sometimes decorated with check-stamping.[1][2][3][4][5]

Language

"Santa Lucia de Acuera" was one of nine or ten dialects of the Timucua language named by the Franciscan missionary Francisco Pareja in the early 17th century. Pareja regarded the Santa Lucia de Acuera and Tucururu (which have may have adjoined Acuera) dialects as the most divergent from what he considered the standard dialect, that of Mocama.[6][7]

Political organization

The province of Acuera may have consisted of several small chiefdoms, including Avino, Eloquale, and Acuera. Utiaca may have been under the chief of Avino, while Piliuco, and possibly Mocoso, were towns under the chief of Acuera. Tucuru may have been under Avino, or may have been independent. The caciques (chiefs) of Tucuru and Eloquale visited St.Augustine earlier than the cacica (female chief) of Acuera did. Eloquale, a town on the Oklawaha River, may have been a new location for the town of Ocale, which was near the Withlacoochee River when the de Soto expedition stopped there for two weeks in 1539. Ocale was also called Cale and Etocale by chroniclers of the de Soto expedition. The town of Mocoso may also have been relocated to the province of Acuera from Tampa Bay after the de Soto expedition stayed there in 1539.[8][9]

European contact

Route of the de Soto Expedition.

In 1539 Hernando de Soto landed in Tampa Bay with more than 600 men and 200 horses. The expedition intended to live off the land, taking food stored in the towns along their path. De Soto received a report of a large town named Acuera, said to have abundant maize. De Soto's main forces moved north from Tampa Bay to Ocale, where they stopped for two weeks. While at Ocale, de Soto twice sent soldiers to seize maize from Acuera. The Acuera strongly resisted the Spanish incursions. Garcilaso de la Vega, known as El Inca, in his romanticized and somewhat less than reliable history of the de Soto expedition, portrayed the Acuera as proud and fierce warriors.[10][11][12][13]

With the establishment of Fort Caroline in 1564 by French Huguenots near the mouth of the St. Johns River, the Acuera, along with most other Timucua speakers, came into continuing contact with Europeans. The Spanish drove the French out of Florida the next year and established St. Augustine. During this period the Acuera chiefdom was subject to or associated with the Utina chiefdom, but became independent of Utina as that chiefdom declined in power. The cacica (female chief) of Acuera went to St. Augustine in 1597 to render obedience to Spain. Most of the other Timucua chiefdoms had also done so by this time, and had requested missionaries be sent to their provinces. However, a rebellion in Guale that occurred shortly before the Acuera submission to Spain resulted in almost all missionaries being withdrawn from Spanish Florida. Acuera did send laborers to St. Augustine during the period from 1597 to 1602. People from Acuera also went to St. Augustine to trade deer skins, chestnuts, and pots.[14][15][16]

Missions

Red dots mark archaeological sites on the Oklawaha River that may have been Acuera missions.

The mission of San Blas de Habino had been established by 1612 to serve the towns of Avino, Tucuru and Utiaca, which were on the lower to middle Oklawaha River, at intervals of one-and-a-half to two leaques apart. The Spanish may have regarded this area as part of the Acuera province, or Avino may have been an alternate name for Acuera. The mission of San Blas de Habino probably was abandoned by the late 1620s. The mission of Santa Lucia de Acuera was established by 1627, when Father Pareja named one of the dialects of the Timucua language for the mission. The mission of San Luis de Eloquale[Footnote 1] appeared in a Spanish report in 1630. Both missions may have been established by 1616. No missions in Acuera province appear in Spanish records after 1655. In the late 1620s the Spanish resettled the people of Utiaca at the mission of San Diego de Helaca (or Laca) on the east side of the St. Johns River, where the route from St. Augustine to the western Timucuan missions crossed the river.[Footnote 2] They were probably needed there to service the river crossing, as the original inhabitants, the Agua Dulce people, were greatly reduced in numbers. Epidemics severely affected Timucua mission communities in the 1650s, and the Timucua rebellion of 1656 led the Spanish to consolidate missions closer to the road connecting St. Augustine to the Apalachee Province. Attempts to maintain missions in Acuera province probably stopped after 1656. Non-Christian Acuera communities are mentioned in Spanish records into the 1690s. A non-Christian Acuera man was tried by the Governor of Florida in 1678 for multiple murders (he was accused of six, and admitted in court to three). The Acuera last appeared in Spanish records in 1697, in a report that (non-Christian) Acueras living in a village with Ayapajas under a single chief had left the village to "live in the woods".[17][18][19][20]

People living in mission villages along the road between St. Augustine and the western Timucuan provinces, and later, Apalachee Province, were subject to labor drafts, both to carry produce from the western Timucuam provinces and Apalachee to St. Augustine, and to work in St. Augustine. Residents of those villages, escaping those labor duties, fled southward into the Acuera, Agua Dulce and Mayaca provinces (by the 1640s the Spanish referred to those provinces as a group as the Diminiyuti or Ibiniyuti Province [ibiniuti was Timucuan for "water land"]). In 1648, the cacique of the Utiaca fled with part of his people from San Diege de Helaca and returned to Acuera Province.[21][22]

Footnotes

  1. "Eloquale" may be an alternate form of "Ocale" or "Etocale". The town of Ocale was located near the Withlacoochee River when it was visited by Hernando de Soto in 1539, but may have been moved to the Oklawaha River by the early 17th century. It was located about two leagues from the mission of Santa Lucia de Acuera. The town of Mocoso, located on Tampa Bay when it was visited by de Soto in 1539, may have also been relocated to Acuera Territory.(Hann: 135. Worth 1: 71, 95.)
  2. The mission village of San Diego was apparently moved sometime before 1689 to the nearby site of Salamototo. The mission village of San Diego, both at Helaca and at Salamototo, was populated with people moved from abandoned missions in Acuera, Agua Dulce and Mayaca provinces.(Worth 2: 100)

References

  1. Boyer 2009: 47
  2. Hann 1996: 12, 13
  3. Milanich and Hudson: 94, 96, 131
  4. Milanich 1995: 82, 170, 176
  5. Oppermann: 2
  6. Hann 1996: 6, 12
  7. Milanich 1995: 82
  8. Hann 2003: 135
  9. Worth 1: 65, 66, 95
  10. Boyer 2009: 46
  11. Hann 1996: 12
  12. Milanich and Hudson: 71-73, 81-87, 96, 133
  13. Milanich 1995: 132
  14. Hann 1996: 147, 163
  15. Milanich 1995: 89
  16. Worth 1: 22, 25, 50, 52, 54
  17. Boyer 2009: 46, 47, 49
  18. Hann 1996: 13, 174, 178, 190-91, 240-41, 244
  19. Worth 1: 63, 65, 69, 71
  20. Worth 2: 31-32
  21. Milanich 1995: 170
  22. Worth 2: 25, 31, 32, 100

Works cited

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 1/16/2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.