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The Juan Pardo Expeditions: Exploration of the Carolinas and Tennessee, 1566-1568 PDF

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The Juan PardoExpeditions With Documents Relating to the Pardo Expeditions Transcribed, Translated, and Annotated by Paul E. Hoffman The Juan Pardo Expeditions Explorations of the Carolinas and Tennessee, 1566-1568 Charles Hudson Afterword by David G. Moore, RobinA. Beck Jr., and Christopher B. Rodning The UniversityofAlabama Press Tuscaloosa Copyright© 1990CharlesHudson PrefaceandAfterwordcopyright©2005TheUniversityofAlabamaPress Tuscaloosa,Alabama35487-0380 All rightsreserved ManufacturedintheUnitedStatesofAmerica OriginallypublishedbySmithsonianInstitutionPress CoverdesignbyErinBradleyDangar TimesNewRoman 00 Thepaperonwhichthisbookisprintedmeetstheminimumrequirementsof AmericanNationalStandardforInformationScience-PermanenceofPaperfor PrintedLibraryMaterials,ANSIZ39.48-1984. LibraryofCongressCataloging-in-PublicationData Hudson,CharlesM. TheJuanPardoexpeditions: explorationoftheCarolinasandTennessee, 1566-1568,/CharlesHudson;withdocumentsrelatingtothePardoexpeditions transcribed,translated,andannotatedbyPaulE. Hoffman;prefacetotherevised editionbyCharlesHudson;afterwordbyDavidG. Moore,RobinA. BeckJr.,and ChristopherB. Rodning.- Rev. ed. p.cm. Includesbibliographicalreferencesandindex. ISBN0-8173-5190-6(pbk. :alk.paper) 1. CatawbaIndians-History-16thcentury.2. Pardo,Juan, 16thcent. 3. Explorers-SouthernStates-Biography.4. America-Discoveryand exploration-Spanish.5. SouthernStates-History. I.Hoffman,PaulE., 1943 II.Title. E99.C24.P3742005 975'.01-dc22 2004020693 iv Contents Illustrations vii Prefaceto2005Edition ix PrefacetoFirstEdition xi PartI TheJuanPardoExpeditions 1 EarlySpanish Exploration 3 2 Juan Pardo'sTwo Expeditions 23 Pardo'sFirstExpedition: December1,1566toMarch7,1567 Moyano'sForay:April 1567 Pardo'sSecondExpedition: September1,1567toMarch2,1568 3 The Indians 51 TheMississippianTransformation SocialStructureofChiefdomsintheCarolinasandTennessee Polities,Cultures,Languages Cofitachequi Joara Guatari TheCherokees Coosa EconomicPatterns 4 The FoundationsofGreaterFlorida 125 OutfittingtheSecondExpedition v TheRoadtoZacatecas DugoutCanoes PacifyingtheIndians TheHousestheIndiansBuilt TheFortstheSpaniardsBuilt TheMissionaries ProspectingforPreciousMetalsandGems 5 The Failure ofGreaterFlorida 169 MisconceptionsabouttheLandandtheIndians TheFailureoftheForts TheShrinkingofFlorida TheDeclineandCoalescenceoftheIndians LosDiamantesandLaGranCopala PartII ThePardoDocuments The "Long" BanderaRelation:AGI, SantoDomingo224 205 The "Short" BanderaRelation:AGI, Patronato19,R. 20 297 The PardoRelation:AGI, Patronato19,R.22(document1) 305 TheMartinezRelation:AGI, Patronato19,R. 22(document2) 317 ThreeNewDocumentsfromthePardoExpeditions:AGI, Contrataci6n 2929No.2, R. 7 323 PartIII Afterword Pardo, Joara, andFortSanJuanRevisited 343 DavidG. Moore,RobinA. BeckJr.,andChristopherB.Rodning Index 351 Errata 363 AbouttheAuthors 365 vi Illustrations I. Early European explorationofNorth America. 7 2. EasternportionoftherouteoftheHernandodeSotoexpedition(1539-40)and the route ofthe Tristan de Lunaexpedition (1559-6I). 9 3. JuanPardo'sfirstexpedition(December1566toMarch7, 1567)andHernando Moyano's foray (Spring 1567). 24 4. Page one ofJuan de la Bandera's "long relation." 30 5. The signature page ofJuan de la Bandera's "short relation." 31 6. TownsandlocationsofJuanPardo'ssecondexpedition(September I, 1567,to March 2, 1568). 33 7· Zimmennan's Island. 37 8. Social honor accorded a sixteenth-century Timucuan chief. 54 9. FormalorderofmarchassumedbytheTimucuanchiefHolataOutinaembark- ing on a military expedition. 56 10. The mound at the Town Creek site near Mt. Gilead, North Carolina. 57 1I. Defensive palisade around the Town Creek site. 57 12. The bride ofa Timucuan chiefcarried on a litter. 64 13. Some late prehistoric/early historic archaeological phases and sites, with se- lected historic Indian towns. 69 14· SociogramofCofitachequi and its hinterland. 75 15. SociogramofSanta Elena and its hinterland. 80 16. A four-sided Pisgah phase house floor. 85 17. SociogramofJoara and its hinterland. 89 18. Acircular house floor at the UpperSauratown site (3ISkla). 92 19. Timucuan male transvestites carrying packbaskets offood. 99 20. Sociogram ofCoosa and its hinterland. 104 21. Timucuan Indians transporting food in a dugout canoe. 133 vii 22. The murder of the Frenchman Pierre Gambie by Timucuan Indians. 136 23. Wedge and chisel from Santa Elena. 137 24. Knives from SantaElena. 138 25. Spherical turquoise blue glass beads from the Hampton site, Rhea County, Tennessee. 139 26. Gilded metal ball button from Santa Elena. 140 27. Conch shell drinking cup from the Hixon site, Hamilton County, Ten- nessee. 141 28. Indians dressed in matchcoats. 142 29. Senkaitschi, the Yuchi "king." 143 30. Forts built by Pardo and houses built by the Indians on the "road to Zacatecas." 144 31. WattleanddaubconstructioninareconstructedhouseattheTownCreeksite, N.orth Carolina. 145 32. Reconstructed house at the Town Creek site, North Carolina. 145 33. Reconstructed corncrib at the Chucalissa site, Memphis, Tennessee. 146 34. A harquebusier with a lighted matchcord. 147 35. Devils carrying away a naked Indian. 154 36. Freshwater pearls from the Hixon site, Hamilton County, Tennessee. 157 37. How the Indians were reputed to have extracted gold from streams in the "Apalatcy Mountains." 158 38. Quartzcrystals from the Toqua site, Monroe County, Tennessee. 161 39. Cut micadiscs from Cofitachequi. 162 40. Native copperax from Long Island, Roane County, Tennessee. 163 41. Sixteenth-century Spanish misconceptions about the geography of North America. 171 42. Timucuan warriors desecrating theirenemy dead. 178 43. Locations and movements of certain Southeastern Indians ca. 1700. 186 viii Illustrations Preface to 2005 Edition Themainbodyofthetextofthis revisededitionis unaltered.Alistof erratafrom thehardcovereditionisappended. New tothiseditionis anafterwordbyDavidMoore,RobinBeck,andChristopherRodning brieflysummarizingresearchonthe Berry siteanditsidentificationasthe probablesiteofJoara.Alsonew isanindex, regrettablyomittedinthe hardcoveredition. ResearchontheBerrysitehaslocatedthesiteofJoarasome20 milesorsonortheastofwheremycolleaguesandIinitially locatedit. AsRobinBeckrealizedinhis 1997articleinSoutheasternArchaeology 6(2):162-69,this new locationforJoaramakesforalterationsin boththe SotoandPardoroutesas weinitiallyunderstoodthem. ItmeansthatSototravelednotwestfrom Joara, butnorthwest, crossingthe mountains toreachthe upperNolichucky River. Hence, Guasili andCanasogaonthe mapatfig. 2, p. 9ofthis presentbookshould bemovedtothe Nolichucky River. Iargueinthis bookthatMoyanotravelednorthwestfrom Joara viatheToeRivertotheupperNolichuckyRivertoattackthe Chiscas, whereas Beckargues thatMoyanotraveled moretothenorthand encounteredtheChiscasatthesalinesatornearpresentSaltville,Virginia. Thisdirectionoftravel is plausible,thoughwhatis proposedisalong distancefor Moyanotohavetraveled. Moreover,theChiscasaresopoorly describedinthedocuments-isChiscaatownoraclusteroftowns,oris it anativelinguistic,cultural,orsocialcategory?- thatIthinkitprudent ix

Description:
An early Spanish explorer’s account of American Indians. This volume mines the Pardo documents to reveal a wealth of information pertaining to Pardo’s routes, his encounters and interactions with native peoples, the social, hierarchical, and political structures of the Indians, and clues to the
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