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Saturiwa : ウィキペディア英語版
Saturiwa

The Saturiwa were a Timucua chiefdom centered on the mouth of the St. Johns River in what is now Jacksonville, Florida. They were the largest and best attested chiefdom of the Timucua subgroup known as the Mocama, who spoke the Mocama dialect of Timucuan and lived in the coastal areas of present-day northern Florida and southeastern Georgia. They were a prominent political force in the early days of European settlement in Florida, forging friendly relations with the French Huguenot settlers at Fort Caroline in 1564 and later becoming heavily involved in the Spanish mission system.
The Saturiwa are so called after their chief at the time of contact with the Europeans, ''Saturiwa''. At that time the chief's main village was located on the south bank of the St. Johns River, and he was sovereign over thirty other chiefs and their villages. Chief Saturiwa allied with the French, who built Fort Caroline in Saturiwa territory, and later aided them against the Spanish of St. Augustine. After the French were dislodged from Florida, the Saturiwa made peace with the Spanish, who established Mission San Juan del Puerto near their main village. Like other Florida native peoples, the Saturiwa were decimated by new infectious diseases and warfare through the 17th century. They disappear from the historical record by the start of the 18th century; surviving Saturiwa likely merged with other Timucua and lost their independent identity.〔Swanton, pp. 138–139.〕
==Area==
The main village of the Saturiwa was located in present-day Jacksonville, Florida, on the south bank of the St. Johns River, near its mouth. According to the French records, Chief Saturiwa was the sovereign over thirty other village chiefs, ten of whom were his "brothers".〔Milanich, p. 48.〕 The villages of Saturiwa's alliance were concentrated around the mouth of the St. Johns River, and were dispersed upriver and along the adjacent Atlantic coast from St. Augustine north to the St. Marys River, at the border of present-day Georgia.〔Deagan 1978〕 Up the St. Johns to the west, toward present-day downtown Jacksonville, were the villages of ''Omoloa'', ''Casti'', and ''Malica''. The northern extent of Saturiwa's authority was the village of ''Caravay'' or Sarabay, possibly on Little Talbot Island. Another village, ''Alimacani'', was located on Fort George Island across the river from the main village.〔Milanich, p. 49.〕 There were additional villages located along the coast to the south, including ''Seloy'', which later became the site of the Spanish colony of St. Augustine.〔Hann, p. 38–39.〕
To the north of the Saturiwa were other Mocama-speaking peoples, including the Tacatacuru. The Tacatacuru's main village was on Cumberland Island in what is now Georgia, and they evidently controlled other villages on the coast.〔 Farther up the river to the southwest, in an area extending from roughly Palatka to Lake George, were the Utina, another Timucua group who were often at war with the Saturiwa.〔Milanich, p. 53.〕 The area between Jacksonville and Palatka was relatively less populated; it is possible that this region served as a buffer between the Saturiwa and the Utina.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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