San Buenaventura de Guadalquini
{{short description|Spanish mission in Georgia, US, moved to Florida}}
San Buenaventura de Guadalquini or San Buenaventura de Boadalquivi was a Spanish mission located on St. Simon's Island, Georgia, United States from between 1597 and 1609 until 1684, when pirates burned the mission and its town. The mission moved to the north side of the St. Johns River near its mouth, in present day Duval County, Florida under the name of Santa Cruz de Guadalquini or Santa Cruz y San Buenaventura de Guadalquini for a few years before merging with the mission San Juan del Puerto.
Location and ethnicity
Guadalquini was the Timucua language name for St. Simon's Island, which the Spanish called Isla de Ballenas (Isle of Whales).{{sfn|Ashley|Rolland|Thunen|2013|p=397}} The name also appeared in several Spanish documents as {{em|Boadalquivi}}.{{sfn|Hann|1996|p=175}} For most of the 20th century historians thought the mission of San Buenaventura de Guadalquini had been located on Jekyll Island, but examination of previously known and newly discovered documentary evidence has identified Gualdalquini with St. Simons.{{sfn|Ashley|Rolland|Thunen|2013|p=397}}{{sfn|Milanich|1995|p=172}}
Many scholars in the early 20th century identified the people of San Buenaventura de Guadalquini as Guale. Hann cites evidence that the people of Guadalquini at least as early as 1580 were part of the Mocama people.{{sfn|Hann|1996|pp=70, 176}} Ashley, et al. suggest that Gualdalquini may have been occupied by the Guale people when Europeans arrived in southeastern Georgia in the 16th century, and that the original Guale population on Guadalquini was displaced from at least the southern part of the island after the Guale rebellion of 1597, and replaced by Timucua speaking Mocama people.{{sfn|Ashley|Rolland|Thunen|2013|pp=397–400}}
Santa Cruz
In 1683, St. Augustine was attacked by a pirate fleet. Together with the attacks on the missions along what is now the Georgia coast from Native American allies of the English, the pirate raid led Governor Juan Márquez Cabrera to order those missions to move closer to St. Augustine. As part of the plan, the mission of San Buenaventura was to be merged with the mission San Juan del Puerto. Before the mission could be moved, pirates returned to the area in the second half of 1684. On hearing of the presence of the pirates, Lorenzo de Santiago, chief of San Buenaventura, moved the people of his village, along with most of their property and stored maize, to the mainland. When the pirates landed at San Buenaventura, they found only ten men under a sub-chief who had been left to guard the village. The San Buenaventura men withdrew to the woods, and the pirates burned the village and mission.{{sfn|Hann|1996|pp=270–71}}{{sfn|Milanich|2006|p=174}}
After the pirates burned the mission, the people of Guadalquini moved to a site on the north side of the St. Johns River about one league west of San Juan del Puerto, where a new mission named Santa Cruz de Guadalquini was established.{{sfn|Hann|1996|p=271}}{{efn|Some historians have written that the new location was only three leagues from St. Augustine, primarily due to a comment in Jonathan Dickinson's Journal. Worth presents evidence that Santa Cruz de Guadalquini was established on the north shore of the St. Johns River near the mission San Juan del Puerto, and that the site near St. Augustine mistakenly identified as the Santa Cruz mission by Dickinson was actually the site of the Nuestra Señora de Guadalupe de Tolomato mission.{{sfn|Worth|2007|p=198}}}} The mission was probably placed on a site known as Vera Cruz to the Spanish, the site of a {{lang|es|visita}} (outlying mission site of the San Juan mission) that had been abandoned fifty years earlier, which may account for the adoption of the name Santa Cruz.{{sfn|Ashley|Rolland|Thunen|2013|p=404}}
In 1685 residents of Santa Cruz asked that Guales, people from Colon, and other Yamassees be allowed to join the village. There were 60 families in Santa Cruz in 1689, twice as many as at San Juan. In 1695, residents of Santa Cruz included chiefs from San Simon and Colon, who were not Mocama.{{sfn|Ashley|Rolland|Thunen|2013|p=403}}
San Juan
The mission of Santa Cruz was merged into the mission of San Juan del Puerto by 1697. Lorenzo de Santiago, who had been chief of the town of San Buenaventura on Guadalquini before it moved in 1684, had become the chief of San Juan by 1701. It appears that most of the residents of San Juan in 1701 had come from the Guadalquini mission. Some of the residents there had come from the village of Colon that had been to the north of the San Buenaventura mission on Guadalquini. Lorenzo de Santiago, who had been chief of Guadalquini for many years, became the principal chief in Mocama Province.{{sfn|Hann|1996|pp=288–90}}
The people at San Juan in 1701 wanted to move to a location south of the St. Johns River called Piritirica, but the Governor in St. Augustine required a town be kept at San Juan for early detection of attacks by the English or their native allies. Some of the inhabitants of Santa Cruz were allowed to move to Piritihica, which was three leagues from Santa Cruz across the St.Johns River, and residents who remained at Santa Cruz were allowed to cultivate fields at Piritihica.{{sfn|Hann|1996|p=290}}
The mission at San Juan del Puerto, the new settlement at Piritihica, and the other remaining Spanish missions along the coast north of the St. Johns River, were destroyed in 1702 by soldiers from the Province of Carolina and their native allies. The residents of the missions fled to St. Augustine shortly before the attacks.{{sfn|Ashley|Rolland|Thunen|2013|p=403}}
Piritihica
Shortly after the English and their native allies abandoned their siege of St. Augustine and withdrew north, the Spanish and Guale and Mocama natives returned to Piritihica. The Spanish built a stockade, and settled the natives in villages to the north and south of the stockade. One village was for the Guale, who had fled the missions on Amelia Island. The other village held the Mocama refugees from San Juan del Puerto, who included the people who had once lived at San Buenaventura de Guadalquini. One-and-a-half years later, natives allied with the English attacked Piritihica, killing or carrying off many of the inhabitants. The survivors from the Mocama village, some of whom had once lived on Guadalquini Island, were resettled in Palica, a village five leagues from St. Augustine, the fourth time they had moved in twenty years.{{sfn|Hann|1996|pp=158, 297}}
Black Hammock Island
Archaeologists have excavated a site on Black Hammock Island in the Timucuan Ecological and Historic Preserve that may be the site of the Santa Cruz mission. The Cedar Point archaeological site (8Du81) is at the south end of Black Hammock Island, and has been occupied off and on for over 4,000 years, from the Archaic period until the 20th century.{{sfn|Ashley|Rolland|Thunen|2013|pp=404-06, 421}}
See also
Notes
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Citations
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References
- {{Cite book |chapter-url=http://digitallibrary.amnh.org/handle/2246/6435 |title=Life among the tides: recent archaeology on the Georgia Bight: proceedings of the Sixth Caldwell Conference, St. Catherines Island, Georgia, May 20-22, 2011. (Downloadable PDF) |chapter=Chapter Fifteen: Mission San Buenaventura and Santa Cruz de Gualdalquini: Retreat from the Georgia Coast |last1=Ashley |first1=Keith H. |last2=Rolland |first2=Vicky L. |last3=Thunen |first3=Robert L. |publisher=American Museum of Natural History |year=2013 |editor-last=Thomas |editor-first=David Hurst |editor2-link=Victor D. Thompson |editor-last2=Thompson |editor-first2=Victor D. |editor-last3=Alexander |editor-first3=Clark R. |editor-last4=Ashley |editor-first4=Keith H. |editor-last5=Blair |editor-first5=Elliot |editor-last6=Cordell |editor-first6=Ann S. |editor-last7=Deagan |editor-first7=Kathleen A. |editor-last8=DePratter |editor-first8=Chester B. |editor-last9=Fitzpatrick |editor-first9=Scott M. |location=New York |doi=10.5531/sp.anth.0098 |series=Anthropological Papers of the American Museum of Natural History |pages=395–422 |hdl=2246/6435 |isbn=9780985201616 |issn=0065-9452}}
- {{cite book |last=Hann |first=John H. |title=A History of the Timucua Indians and Missions |year=1996 |publisher=University Press of Florida |location=Gainesville, Florida |isbn=978-0-8130-1424-1 |pages=70, 175–177, 270–271}}
- {{cite book |last=Milanich |first=Jerald T. |title=Florida Indians and the Invasion of Europe |year=1995 |publisher=University Press of Florida |location=Gainesville, Florida |isbn=978-0-8130-1636-8}}
- {{cite book |last=Milanich |first=Jerald T. |title=Laboring in the Fields of the Lord |date=2006 |publisher=University Press of Florida |location=Gainesville, Florida |isbn=978-0-8130-2966-5 |edition=Paperback}}
- {{Cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=U5gWyZbNRaoC |title=The Struggle for the Georgia Coast |last=Worth |first=John E. |date=2007 |publisher=University of Alabama Press |isbn=9780817354114 |language=en}}
External links
- {{cite web|title=Santa Cruz y San Buenaventura de Guadalquini|url=https://www.nps.gov/timu/learn/historyculture/santa-cruz.htm|publisher=National Park Service|date=April 14, 2015|access-date=November 22, 2018}}
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Category:Spanish missions in Georgia (U.S. state)
Category:Spanish missions in Florida
Category:Archaeological sites in Florida