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Transnational Racialisation on the Periphery: Europeans, Indians, and the Construction of Identity in the Colonial Floridas, 1513–1565
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 June 2011
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In 1565, an English sailor named John Sparke visited the colonial Floridas for the first, and probably, only time. Sparke, along with thousands of other Europeans, was in the midst of exploring, settling, and exploiting the Western Hemisphere's eastern coastline, an endeavour that escalated in intensity following the spectacular voyages of Christopher Columbus almost eighty years before. Encountering a variety of locales, objects, and peoples for the first time, the mariner made observations that reveal a great deal about the meeting of Old and New World cultures. Referring to the indigenous inhabitants of the region, Sparke wrote, ‘those people of the cape of Florida are of more savage and fierce nature, and more valiant than any of the rest [he had met in the Americas]’. Significantly, the sailor based his opinions, at least in part, on tales of native barbarity communicated to him by Spanish settlers who had begun colonising the peninsula at the dawn of the sixteenth century. According to these stories, Indians were uncivilised and ‘eaters of the flesh of men […] canibals’. Yet, Sparke remained unsure about how to evaluate the indigenous inhabitants. His confusion stemmed from conflicting assessments supplied by French colonisers who had also recently established a foothold in the Floridas.
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1 The plural term ‘Floridas’ is used throughout the text in order to take account of the varied geographies of ‘Florida’ during the colonial period. At different times during the sixteenth century, Europeans used derivations of ‘Florida’ to describe specific areas such as St Augustine, or broader geographic locales such as the entire present-day southeastern United States. Unless otherwise stated, ‘Floridas’ refers to the territory immediately south of the 32o 28’ latitude surrounded by the Atlantic Ocean, Mississippi River, and Gulf of Mexico.
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