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・ Edward Hutchinson (mercer)
・ Edward Hutson
・ Edward Hutton
・ Edward Hutton (British Army officer)
・ Edward Hutton (writer)
・ Edward Hyams
・ Edward Hyde
・ Edward Hyde (c. 1650–1712)
・ Edward Hyde (cricketer)
・ Edward Hyde (priest)
・ Edward Hyde Clarendon
・ Edward Hyde, 1st Earl of Clarendon
・ Edward Hyde, 3rd Earl of Clarendon
・ Edward Hymes
・ Edward I (disambiguation)
Edward I (Moskito)
・ Edward I of England
・ Edward I'Anson
・ Edward I, Count of Bar
・ Edward I. Burhans
・ Edward I. Edwards
・ Edward I. Kelly, Sr.
・ Edward I. Nickerson
・ Edward I. Schalon
・ Edward I. Solomon
・ Edward Ignacy Hartwich
・ Edward Ihnatowicz
・ Edward II (ballet)
・ Edward II (band)
・ Edward II (disambiguation)


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Edward I (Moskito) : ウィキペディア英語版
Edward I (Moskito)

Edward I was king of the Miskito on the Mosquito Coast of Central America, bordering on the Caribbean Sea, from about 1739 until 1755. He was the eldest son of Jeremy II, and was young when he took office.
In 1740 the Anglo-Spanish "War of Jenkins' Ear" broke out, and Great Britain was anxious to enlist the Miskito on their side. They wanted to take advantage of the people's enmity to Spain as a means to conduct raids against Spanish possessions in Central America. To that end, Governor Trelawny of Jamaica created an office of "Superindendent of the Mosquito Shore" and entrusted it to Robert Hodgson. Hodgson arrived in 1740 and met with Edward and Governor John Briton, the other officials being either sick (Admiral Dilly) or too far away (General Hobby).
According to Hodgson's report,
"I proceeded to acquaint them that, as they had long acknowledged themselves subjects of Great Britain, the governor of Jamaica had sent me to take possession of their country in his Majesty's name; then asked if they had anything to object. They answered, they had nothing to say against it, but were very glad I was come for that purpose. So I immediately set up the standard, and, reducing the sum of what I had said into articles, I asked them, both jointly and separately, if they approved and would abide by them. They unanimously declared they would."〔Letter from Robert Hodgson, Sandy Bay, 8 April 1740 in http://scholarship.rice.edu/jsp/xml/1911/26930/1/aa00339.tei.html〕
"Taking possession of the country" did not result in any effective change in sovereignty, and Hodgson soon discovered that he could not conduct military operations without respecting Miskito political alignments. Moreover, Hodgson had to give gifts that amounted to a sort of tribute to the Miskito. Hodgson resided at Black River, a station more or less at the extreme northwestern end of the kingdom, where English had settled since the 1730s.
According to Hodgson's report, filed in 1740, the kingdom was ruled by three chiefs or "guards." These included governor Briton to the south of the king's domain, controlling lands of unmixed Miskito; the lands of the king himself around Sandy Bay; and general Hobby, who controlled the Zambo or mixed-race African-Miskito to the north and west. Each of these rulers was said to be a hereditary position.〔Ollien, "The Miskito Kings and the Line of Succession," ''Journal of Anthropological Research'' 39 (1983): 209.〕
==References==



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