From Ponce de León to Sir Walter Raleigh : early European arrivals in Southeastern North America / James F. Hancock.

Author/creator Hancock, James F. author.
Format Book
PublicationJefferson, North Carolina : McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers, [2025]
Descriptionv, 185 pages : illustrations ; 23 cm
Subjects

Contents Machine generated contents note: Table of Contents -- Preface -- Introduction: The Spanish Move into Eastern North America -- One-Ponce de León's Ill-Fated Conquest of Florida: 1513-1521 -- Two-A New Andalucía, Legend of Chicora: 1521-1525 -- Three-The Epic Voyage of Giovanni da Verrazzano: 1524 -- Four-The Fiasco of Pánfilo de Narváez: 1527-1535 -- Five-The Bloody Campaign of Hernando de Soto: 1539-1543 -- Six-The Luna Colony and the Coosa: 1559-1561 -- Seven-Jean Ribault and the French Attempt to Settle Florida: 1562-1565 -- Eight-Pedro Menéndez de Avilés Takes Charge of Florida: 1565-1566 -- Nine-Pedro Menéndez Struggles to Control Florida: 1566-1572 -- Ten-Spanish Florida Staggers Toward the Seventeenth Century: 1567-1586 -- Eleven-The First English Intrusion into the Southeast: 1584-1587 -- Epilogue: Southern Atlantic America in the Seventeenth Century -- Bibliography -- Index.
Abstract "The events that predate the Pilgrims' arrival at Plymouth Rock, particularly in the North American Southeast, are little known by most. By 1620, the coast of Atlantic America had been extensively explored and charted by dozens of European sailors. This history covers all the Spanish expeditions into Southern Atlantic America and the Gulf Coast, and the early French and English infringements into what the Spanish would ruthlessly defend as their territory. Throughout the discovery process, the unveiling of North America was often violent, as the Indigenous people valiantly fought to protect their cultures against the onslaught of Europeans. Interactions between the people of the two worlds generally started out friendly, but soon deteriorated as the Europeans took food and land from the local populations by force. European diseases would further decimate Indigenous populations, emptying their land for colonial farms and weakening their ability to resist the growing onslaught. Drawing extensively on eyewitness reports from the explorers themselves, this book reveals the full, complex story of the European discovery and settlement of Florida and the coastal Southeast."-- Provided by publisher.
Bibliography noteIncludes bibliographical references and index.
LCCN 2025017012
ISBN9781476695785
ISBN1476695784 paperback
ISBNelectronic book