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The spiritual connection of the Yuwibara people with Cape Hillsborough continues to the present, and men's ceremonies are still performed along the mangrove boardwalk. Mount Jukes, too, was home to a men's ceremonial site, which is still visited each year by Yuwibara elders, who speak of a large spirit walking around the camping grounds. [6] [1]
Yuwibara (also known as Yuibera, Yuri, Juipera, Yuwiburra) is an Australian Aboriginal language spoken on Yuwibara country. It is closely related to the Biri languages/dialects . The Yuwibara language region includes the landscape within the local government boundaries of the Mackay Region.
Florida Mockingbird Clan [42] Florida Tribe of Cherokee Indians, Inc [25] Florida Tribe of Eastern Creeks. [26] Indian Creek Band, Chickamauga Creek & Cherokee Inc. [31] [76] Letter of Intent to Petition 02/19/2004. [27] Lower Chattahoochee Band of Yuchi Indians [79] Muscogee Nation of Florida [79] (formerly Florida Tribe of Eastern Creek Indians).
The only federally recognized tribes in Florida are: Miccosukee – One of the two tribes to emerge by ethnogenesis from the migrations into Florida and wars with the United States. They were part of the Seminole nation until the mid-20th century, when they organized as an independent tribe, receiving federal recognition in 1962.
Pages for logged out editors learn more. Contributions; Talk; Yuibera
Hernando de Soto and the Indians of Florida. Gainesville, Florida: University Press of Florida. ISBN 0-8130-1170-1. Milanich, Jerald (1999). The Timucua. Wiley-Blackwell. ISBN 0631218645; Swanton, John Reed (2003). The Indian tribes of North America. Genealogical Publishing. ISBN 0806317302
A burial mound, used by the Ais tribe for 500 to 1,000 years rises about twenty feet in Old Fort Park on Indian River Drive in Fort Pierce. This location later became an Army fort used during the Second Seminole War (1838–1842) and it may be the location of a Spanish settlement, mission and military outpost dating back to 1567.
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.