Buy new:
$34.60$34.60
Delivery Friday, December 27
Ships from: Amazon Sold by: Newday Book Store
Save with Used - Very Good
$6.69$6.69
$8.24 delivery January 3 - 28
Ships from: ThriftBooks-Phoenix Sold by: ThriftBooks-Phoenix
Download the free Kindle app and start reading Kindle books instantly on your smartphone, tablet, or computer - no Kindle device required.
Read instantly on your browser with Kindle for Web.
Using your mobile phone camera - scan the code below and download the Kindle app.
Follow the authors
OK
Florida Indians and the Invasion from Europe Paperback – June 22, 1998
Purchase options and add-ons
- Print length304 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherUniversity Press of Florida
- Publication dateJune 22, 1998
- Dimensions6.5 x 1 x 9.5 inches
- ISBN-100813016363
- ISBN-13978-0813016368
Book recommendations, author interviews, editors' picks, and more. Read it now.
Customers who bought this item also bought
Editorial Reviews
Book Description
"An authoritative overview of the development of Florida's aboriginal peoples . . . blended with accounts of the European invasions and the dire consequences for the natives of their contacts with the newcomers. . . . Particularly valuable for its use of archaeological and historical data."--John H. Hann, San Luis Archaeological and Historic Site, Tallahassee
"An exciting book that brings together for all of Florida the earliest historic records of indigenous peoples and Old World invaders alike, combining archaeology and history to reconstruct events and lifeways of ethnic groups so quickly devastated by the European presence."--Nancy White, University of South Florida
When the conquistadors arrived in Florida in the early sixteenth century, as many as 350,000 native Americans lived in the territory. For more than twelve centuries their ancestors had resided here, fishing, hunting, gathering wild plants, and sometimes cultivating crops. Two and a half centuries later, Florida's Indians were gone.
Focusing on those native peoples and their interactions with Spanish and French explorers and colonists, Jerald Milanich delineates this massive cultural change. Using information gathered from archaeological excavations and from the interpretation of historical documents left behind by the colonial powers, he explains where the native groups came from, where they lived, and what happened to them. He closes with the tragic disappearance of the original inhabitants in the eighteenth century and the first appearance of the ancestors of Florida's present Native Americans.
With maps, photographs, drawings, and a vivid writing style, Milanich creates a sense of history and place--an opportunity to correlate modern towns to colonial events and sixteenth-century trails to twentieth-century highways--that will illuminate history for residents and tourists of Florida as well as for archaeologists and historians.
Jerald T. Milanich is curator of archaeology in the Department of Anthropology at the Florida Museum of Natural History, Gainesville. He is the author or editor of twelve books and monographs, including Tacachale: Essays on the Indians of Florida and Southeastern Georgia during the Historic Period (with Samuel Proctor, UPF, 1978, reprinted 1994), Archaeology of Precolumbian Florida (UPF, 1994), and Hernando de Soto and the Indians of Florida (with Charles Hudson, UPF, 1993), the last two of which received the Rembert Patrick Award from the Florida Historical Society.
Product details
- Publisher : University Press of Florida; First Edition (June 22, 1998)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 304 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0813016363
- ISBN-13 : 978-0813016368
- Item Weight : 1.1 pounds
- Dimensions : 6.5 x 1 x 9.5 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #3,612,710 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #12,388 in Native American History (Books)
- #72,591 in U.S. State & Local History
- Customer Reviews:
About the authors

Jerald T. Milanich is the author of more than twenty books about the histories of Indigenous Peoples of the Americas and their subsequent interactions with Europeans following the invasion that began in 1492. He also has been editor for more than 60 books for the University Press of Florida. In 1990 he was inducted into the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Presently he divides his time between New York City and the Catskills Mountains, where he has recently published a humorous fiction book "Tales from the Catskill Tribune--The Mountains' Premiers Source for Fake News."

Discover more of the author’s books, see similar authors, read book recommendations and more.
Customer reviews
- 5 star4 star3 star2 star1 star5 star85%10%5%0%0%85%
- 5 star4 star3 star2 star1 star4 star85%10%5%0%0%10%
- 5 star4 star3 star2 star1 star3 star85%10%5%0%0%5%
- 5 star4 star3 star2 star1 star2 star85%10%5%0%0%0%
- 5 star4 star3 star2 star1 star1 star85%10%5%0%0%0%
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzed reviews to verify trustworthiness.
Learn more how customers reviews work on Amazon-
Top reviews
Top reviews from the United States
There was a problem filtering reviews right now. Please try again later.
On a subsequent visit to Gainesville, a couple years ago, I bought Jerald Milanich's book, planning to get a more complete picture. I am very glad I did. This is a most excellent book, written for people who may not have professional backgrounds in archaeology, anthropology or history. The author hits just the right note. Everything is explained most clearly and readably. The twelve thousand year history that came to an end in the 18th century is traced through archeological discoveries. The great number of maps is a delight, while he includes some interesting photographs too. Milanich describes Florida as it must have been when the Spaniards arrived in the early 1500s. He tells of their efforts at exploration, colonization, at conversion, and their brutal repression of resistance, which coupled with wave upon wave of new diseases, almost completely wiped out Florida's native population. The French attempted briefly to colonize the area too. You will learn that "Florida" once extended up the Georgia coast into South Carolina. This area was known as Guale. For those of us reared on Anglo-centric American history, Milanich's book is an eyeopener. The life around the Spanish missions is depicted, the life that was destroyed finally by raids from the north by Carolina colonists, English forces, and allied Indians. These violent incursions, which brought thousands of Indian slaves to the Carolinas or sent them to be sold in the West Indies, finished the awful job of genocide. Florida is a land of ghosts. Today, amidst the urban sprawl and commercial mess of much of that state, nobody gives a thought to the Calusa, the Apalachee, the Timucua, the Jororo, the Tocobaga, the Mayaca, the Tequesta, and so many others, some whose very names may not survive. But when you paddle down one of those palmetto-lined rivers, past turtles and alligators, thrilled to see deer or otter, herons and ducks, or when you visit the former capital of Spanish Florida, St. Augustine, you might give a thought to the original Floridians. Florida is still dotted with archaeological reminders of them. Milanich has not neglected to tell us where. I suspect this is THE book on Florida Indian history.
This book is much weaker. Taking more of a bird's eye view, Milanich divides up the indigenous peoples of Florida by region and then offers a tale that has been told better elsewhere--including some of Milanich's other works--about the effects of Spanish and French settlement in Florida.
The chief flaw of the book is the tone. Milanich makes no bones about it--he's writing a prosecutor's brief against the Spanish. Milanich's narration is annoying. He is strangely informal in this work and often offers casual but strange asides--even offering scholars as the umpires between the Spanish and the Indians' view on invasion before smugly telling readers the Indians were right to consider it an invasion based on only two books. While I agree with his assessment, there have been scores of books on the subject. There is no need to trivialize his own point. The book came out in 1995, a few years after the controversy of the 400th anniversary of the Columbus expedition. Milanich's writing seems to reflect that moment--and seems a bit off almost 20 years after it. Granted I am writing this review on the ninth anniversary of 9/11 but I think it is fair to say that different cultures and peoples still have a hard time understanding one another despite the passage of centuries. That's a bit easier to understand in 2010 than it was in 1992 when the Soviet Union was dead or in 1995 when some scholars were even kicking over the idea of "the end of history." Sorry. History--and human tragedy and folly--continues and no people, country or faith have a monopoly on vice or virtue.
Despite these flaws, this is not a bad book. Milanich presents a decent if not particularly enthralling narrative which is helped out by a nice selection of pictures and--thankfully--maps. Milanich is, as always, excellent on archeology, anthropology and geography. This last part is most helpful as he shares where Indian sites and missions were located in concise but helpful modern terms.
Still, if the book is not bad, it is much worse than some of the author's other works. Reading it fifteen years after it was first printed, I kept thinking the book seemed to offer more insight into the time it was written than the time it was supposed to cover.


