SwANTON] INDIANS OP THE SOUTHEASTERN UNITED STATES 179 



Indians at Fort Christanna, including the remnants of the Saponi, 

 Manahoac, and Tutelo. In 1765 the northern Saponi among the 

 Cayuga had 30 warriors, and the figures given for the southern band 

 in 1755 are 14 men and 14 women, children not being separately 

 enumerated. (See Tutelo.) 



SATUKIWA 



A Timucua tribe located about the mouth of St. Johns Kiver in 

 1564-65 when the French Huguenot colony was established. The deal- 

 ings of the colonists with them were very intimate and, after the 

 destruction of the colony, they assisted Dominique de Gourgues in his 

 punitive expedition of 1567. Later they became warm friends of the 

 Spaniards and were served by the missions of San Juan del Puerto, 

 at the mouth of the St. Johns ; Nombre de Dios, close to St. Augustine ; 

 and San Diego de Salamototo, near the site of Picolata. Subject to the 

 Mission of Nombre de Dios in 1602 were the towns of Soloy, Capuaca, 

 and Paliaca, and to San Juan del Puerto, Vera Cruz, Arratobo, Niojo, 

 Potaya, San Matheo, San Pablo, Hicachirico, Chinisca, and Carabay. 

 The Mission of Nuestra Senora de Guadalupe, 3 leagues from St. 

 Augustine, was also perhaps in their country. This appears only in the 

 mission list of 1655 along with Nombre de Dios, San Juan del Puerto 

 and Salamototo, the last mentioned under the name San Diego de 

 Laca. The chief of San Juan del Puerto was among those concerned 

 in the rising of 1656. The names of the three principal missions appear, 

 however, in the report of Calderon and in the list of 1680, though at the 

 latter date Nombre de Dios seems to have changed the character of its 

 population. They are afterward lost in the rapid disintegration of all 

 the Timucua peoples. The chief who appears so prominently in French 

 and Spanish narratives is shown in plate 42, from a drawing by Le 

 Moyne, rediscovered and reproduced by Bushnell. 



Saturiwa population. — ^This province was evidently not as populous 

 as those of Utina or Potano, but 14 towns are mentioned in which 

 were 500 Christians. In 1675 San Juan del Puerto contained "about 

 thirty persons" and Salamototo "about forty." 



SAWOKLI ^ 



When we first hear of this tribe, it was located on Apalachicola 

 River 12 leagues (about 31 miles) from San Luis Mission (modern 

 Tallahassee). A mission called Santa Cruz de Sabacola el Menor 

 was established here and dedicated by Bishop Calderon February 28, 

 1675, under the name La Encarnacion a la Santa Cruz de Sabacola. 

 The bishop also claimed to have converted Sabacola el Grande, but 

 no mission was begun there. Native tradition would place this tribe 



• Called Sabacola by the Spaniards. 



