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A05182 A notable historie containing foure voyages made by certayne French captaynes vnto Florida vvherein the great riches and fruitefulnes of the countrey with the maners of the people hitherto concealed are brought to light, written all, sauing the last, by Monsieur Laudonniere, who remained there himselfe as the French Kings lieuetenant a yere and a quarter: newly translated out of French into English by R.H. In the end is added a large table for the better finding out the principall matters contayned in this worke.; Histoire notable de la Floride. English. Selections Laudonnière, René Goulaine de.; Hakluyt, Richard, 1552?-1616.; Basanier, Martin. 1587 (1587) STC 15316; ESTC S109391 132,389 145

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drūmer of the Frenchbands which as it was told me was very cruelly handged by his owne Captaine and for a small fault which Captaine also vsing to threaten the rest of his souldiers which staied behind vnder his obedience and peraduenture as it is to be presumed were not so obediēt vnto him as they should haue bin was the cause that they fell into a mutiny because that many times hee put his threatnings in execution whervpon they so chased him that at the last they put him to death And the principall occasion that moued them therevnto was because hee degraded another souldier named La chere which he had banished and because he had not performed his promise for he had promised to send him victuals from eight dayes to eight daies which thing he did not but saide on the contrarie that he would be glad to heare of his death He said moreouer that hee woulde chastice others also and vsed so euill sounding speeches that honesty forbiddeth me to repeate them The souldiers seeing his madnes to increase from day to day and fearing to fall into the dangers of the other resolued to kil him Hauing executed their purpose they went to seeke the Souldier that was banished which was in a small Iland distant from Charlesfort about three leagues where they found him almost halfe dead for hunger When they were come home againe they assembled themselues together to choose one to be gouernour ouer them whose name was Nicolas Barré a man worthy of commendation and one which knew so well to quite himselfe of his charge that all rancour and dissention ceassed among them and they liued peaceably one with another During this time they beganne to builde a small Pinnesse with hope to returne into Fraunce if no succours came vnto them as they expected from day to day And though there were not a man among them that had any skill notwithstanding necessitie which is the maistresse of all sciences taught them the wayes to builde it After that it was finished they thought of nothing else sauing how to furnish it with all thinges necessary to vndertake the voyage But they wanted those thinges that of all other were most needfull as cordage and sailes without which the enterprise could not come to effect Hauing no meanes to recouer these thinges they were in worse case then at the first and almost ready to fall into despayre But that good God which neuer forsaketh the afflicted did succour them in this necessity As they were in these perplerities king Audusta and Maccou came to them accompanied with two hundred Indians at the least whom our Frenchmen went foorth to meete withal and shewed the king in what neeede of cordage they stood who promised them to returne within two dayes and to bring so much as should suffice to furnish the Pinnesse with tackling Our men being pleased with these good newes and promises bestowed vpon them certaine cutting hookes and shirtes After their departure our men sought all meanes to recouer rosen in the woodes wherein they cut the Pine trees round about out of which they drew sufficirut reasonable quantitie to bray the vessel Also they gathered a kind of mosse which groweth on the trees of this countrey to serue to calke the same withall There now wanted nothing but sayles which they made of their owne shirtes and of their sheetes Within few dayes after the Indian kinges returned to Charles-fort with so good store of cordage that there was found sufficient for tackling of the small Pinnesse Our men as glad as might bee vsed great liberality towards them and at their leauing of the coūtrey left them all their marchandise that remayned leauing them thereby so fully satisfied that they departed from them with all the contentation of the world They went forward therefore to finishe the Brigandine and vsed so speedie diligence that within a shorte time afterwarde they made it readie furnished with all thinges In the meane season the winde came so fit for their purpose that it seemed to inuite them to put to ehe Sea which they did without delay after they had set all their thinges in order But before they departed they embarked their artillarie their forge and other munitions of warre which Captaine Ribault had left them and then as much mill as they coulde gather together But being drunken with the too excessiue ioy which they had conceiued for their returning into Fraunce or rather depriued of all foresight and consideration without regarding the inconstancie of the winds which change in a moment they put themselues to sea and with so slender victualles that the end of their enterprise became vnlucky and vnfortunate For after they had sayled the third parte of their way they were surprised with calmes which did so much hinder them that in three weeks they sayled not aboue fiue and twentie leagues During this time their victuals cōsumed and became so short that euery man was constrained to eate not past twelue graines of mill by the day which may be in value as much as twelue peason Yea and this felicitie lasted not long for their victuals failed them altogether at once and they had nothing for their more assured refuge but their shoes and leather ierkins which they did eate Touching their beuerage some of them dranke the Sea water others did drinke their owne vrine and they remayned in such desperate necessitie a very long space during the which parte of them died for hunger besides this extreeme famine which did so grieuously oppresse them they fell euery minute of an houre out of all hope euer to see Fraunce againe in so much that they were constrayned to cast the water continually out that on all sides entred into their Barke And euery day they fared worse and worse for after they had eaten vp their sho●es and their letherne Ierkins there arose so boysterous a winde and so contrary to their course that in the turning of a hande the waues filled their vessell halfe full of water and brused it vpon the one side Being nowe more out of hope then euer to escape out of so extreame perill they cared not for casting out of the water which nowe was almost readie to drowne them And as men resolued to die euery one fell downe backeward and gaue themselues ouer altogether vnto the will of the waues When as one of them a little hauing taken hart vnto him declared vnto them how little way they had to sayle assuring them that if the winde held they should see land within three dayes This man did so incourage them that after they had throwne the water out of the Pinnesse they remayned three dayes without eating or drinking except it were of the Sea water When the time of his promise was expired they were more troubled then they were before seeing they could not discry any lande Wherefore in this extreme despaire certayne among them made this
Riuer and for this cause the Captayne sent for vs. Being come to our Shippes wee sayled three great leagues farther vp within the Riuer and there wee cast Anker A little while after Iohn Ribault accompanied with a good number of souldiers imbarked himselfe desirous to sayle further vp into the arme that runneth toward the west and to search the commodities of the place Hauing sayled twelue leagues at the least wee perceaued a troupe of Indians which as soone as euer they espied the Pinnisles were so afrayd that they fledde into the woods leauing behind them a young Lucerne which they were a turning vpon a spitte for which cause the place was called Lucerne Cape proceeding foorthon our way we found an other arme of the riuer which ranne toward the East vp which the Captain determined to sayle to leaue the great currant A little while after they began to espie diuerse other Indians both men womē half hiddē within y ● woods whoknowing not y ● wee were such as desired their friendship were dismayed at the first but soone after were embouldned for the Captayne caused store of marchandise to be shewed thē openly wherby they knew y ● we ment nothing but wel vnto thē then they made a signe y ● we should come on land which we would not refuse At our comming on shore diuerse of thē came to salute our Generall according to their barbarouse fashion Some of them gaue him skins of Chamoys others little baskets made of Palme leaues some presented him with perles but no great number Afterwards they went about to make an arbour to defend vs in y ● place from the parching heate of the sunne But we would not stay as then Wherefore the Captayn thanked them much for their good wil gaue presents to eche of them where with he pleased them so well before hee went thence that his suddaine departure was nothing pleasaunt vnto them For knowing him to be so liberall they would haue wished him to haue stayed a little longer seking by all meanes to giue him occasion to stay shewing him by signes that he should stay but that day onely and that they desired to aduertise a great Indian Lord which had perles in great aboundance and siluer also all which things should be giuen vnto him at y ● kings ariual saying far ther y ● in the meane while y ● this great Lord came thether they wold lead him to their houses shew him there a thousand pleasures in shooting seeing the Stag killed therfore they prayed him not to deny thē their request Notwithstanding we returned to our ships wher after we had been but one night the captayne in the morning cōmaunded to put into y ● Pinnisse a pillour of hard stone fashioned like a columne wherin y ● armes of the king of Fraunce were grauē to plant the same in the fayrest place that he could finde This done we imbarked our selues and sayled three leagues towards the west where we discouered a litle riuer vp which we sayled so long that in the ende we found it returned into the great currant and in his returne to make a litle Iland separated from the firme land where we went on shore and by commaundement of the Captayne because it was exceeding fayre and plea●●●●t there we planted the Pillour vppon a hillocke open round about to the vew and enuironed with a lake halfe a fathom deepe of very good and sweete water In which Ilande wee sawe two Stagges of exceeding bignesse in respect of those which we had seene before which wee might easily haue killed with our harguebuses if the Captayne had not forbidden vs. moued with the singular fayrenes and bignesse of them But before our departure we named the little Riuer which enuironed this Ile the Riuer of Liborne Afterward we imbarked our selues to search another Ile not farre distant from the former wherein after we had gon a land we found nothing but tall Ceders the fayrest that were seene i● this Countrey For this cause we called it the Ile of Ceders so we returned into our Pinnisse to goe towards our Shippes A fewe dayes afterward Iohn Ribault determined to returne once againe toward the Indians which inhabited that arme of the Riuer which runneth toward the West and to carry with him good store of souldiers For his meaning was to take two Indians of this place to bring them into Fraunce as the Queene had commaunded him With this deliberation againe we tooke our former course so farre foorth that at the last we came to the selfesame place where at the first we found the Indians from thence we tooke two Indians by the permission of the king which thinking that they were more fauoured then the rest thought themselues very happie to stay with vs. But these two Indians seeing we made no shew at all that we would goe on land but rather that we followed the middest of the courrant began to be somewhat offended and would by force haue lepte into the water for they are so good swimmers that immediately they woulde haue gotten into the forrestes Neuerthelesse being acquainted with their humour wee watched them narrowly and sought by all meanes to appease them which wee could not by any meanes doe for that time though wee offered them thinges which they much esteemed which thinges they disdayned to take and gaue backe againe whatsoeuer was giuen them thinking that such giftes should haue altogether bound them and that in restoring them they shoulde bee restored vnto their libertie In fine perceiuing that all that they did auayled them nothing they ●●●yed vs to giue them those thinges which they had restored which wee did incontinent then they approched one toward the other and beganne to singe agreeing so sweetly together that in hearing their songe it seemed that they lamented for the absence of their friendes They continued their songes all night without ceassing al which time we were constrained to lie at anker by reason of the tide which was against vs but wee hoysed sayle the next day very early in the morning and returned to our ships Assoone as we were come to our shippes euery one sought to gratifie these two Indians to shew thē the best countenaunce that was possible to the intent that by such curtesies they might perceiue the good desire and affectiō which we had to remain their friends in time to come Then we offered them meate to eate but they refused it and made vs vnderstande that they were accustomed to wash their face and to staye vntill the sunne were set before they did eate which is a ceremonie common to al the Indians of new Fraunce Neuerthelesse in the ende they were constrayned to forget their superstitions and to apply thēselues to our nature which was somewhat strange vnto them at the first They became therefore more ioconde and euery houre made vs a thousande
purposed to goe on land where I suffered him to depart after I had giuen him a shirte and certain small trifles wherewith he departed very well content with vs. The place where we went on shore was hard by a very hie Rocke out of which there ran a litle riuer of sweet and excellent good water by which riuer we stayed certayne dayes to discouer the things which were worthy to bee seen traficked dayly with the Indians which aboue all thinges besought vs that none of our men should come neere their lodgings nor their Gardens otherwise that we should giue them great cause of ielosie and that in so doing wee should not want of their fruit which they call Ananas whereof they offered vs very liberally receiuing in recompence certaine things of small value This notwithstanding it hapned on a day that certaine of my men desirous to see some new things in these strange countries walked through the woods and following still the little riuers side they espied two Serpents of exceeding bignesse which went side by side ouerthwarte the way my soldiers went before them thinking to let them from going into the woods but the serpents nothing at all astonished with these gestures glaunced into the bushes with fearefull hissings for all which my men drewe their swordes and killed them and found them afterward nine great foote long and as bigge as a mans legge During this combate certaine others more vndiscreete went and gathered their Ananas in the Indians Gardens trampling through them without any discretion and n●t therewithall contented they went toward their dwellings whereat the Indians were so much offended that without regarding any thing they rushed vpon them and discharged their shot so that they hit one of my men named Martin Chaueau which remayned behinde Wee coulde not knowe whether hee were killed on the place or whether he were taken prisoner for those of his company had inough to doe to saue themselues without thinking of their companion Whereof Monsur de Ottigni my Lieuetenant being aduertised sent vnto me to know whether I thought good that he shuld lay an ambush for the Indians which had either taken or killed our man or whether hee should goe directly to their dwellinges to knowe the truth I sent vnto him after good delebration hereupon that hee should not attempt any thing and that for diuers occasions but contrariwise that he should embarke himself with all diligence and consequently all they that were on land which hee did with speede But as he sayled toward our shippes he perceiued a long the shore a great number of Indians which beganne to charge them with their Arrowes he for his part discharged store of shotte against them yet was not able to hurte them or by any meanes to surprise them for which cause he quite forsooke them came vnto our ship Where staying vntill the next day morning we sette sayle following our wonted course and keeping the same we discouered diuerse Iles conquered by the Spaniards as the Iles of S. Christopher of y e Saintes of Monserrada and la Rotonda Afterward we passed betweene Languilla aad la Negada sayling toward New Fraunce where we ariued fifteene dayes afterward to witte on a Thurseday the two and twenteth of Iune about three or foure of the clock in the morning and landed neere vnto a little Riuer which is thirtie degrees distant from the Equator and ten leagues aboue Cape François drawing toward the South and about thirtie leagues aboue the Riuer of May. After we had strooken sayle and cast Anker a thwart the Riuer I determined to goe on shore to discouer y ● same Therefore beiug accompanied with Monsur de Ottigny with Monsur de Arlac mine Ensigne a certaine number of Gentlemen and souldiers I embarked my selfe about three or foure of the clocke in the euening And being ariued at the mouth of the Riuer I caused the Chanell to be sounded which was found to be very shallow although that farther within the same y ● water was there found reasonable deepe which separateth it selfe into two great armes whereof one runneth toward the South and the other toward the North. Hauing thus searched the Riuer I went on lande to speake with the Indians which wayted for vs vpon the shore which at our comming on land came before vs crying with a loud voyce in their Indian language Antipola Bonassou which is as much to say as brother friend or some such like thing After they had made very much of vs they shewed vs their Paracoussy that is to say their king and gouernour to whom I presented certaine toyes wherewith he was wel pleased And for mine own part I praise God continually for the great loue which I haue found in these Sauages which were sory for nothing but that the night approched and made vs retire vnto our shippes For though they endeuoured by all meanes to make vs tarry with them and that they shewed by signes the desire they had to present vs with some rare things yet neuerthelesse for many iust and reasonable occasions I would not stay on shore all night but excusing my selfe for al their offers I embarked my selfe againe and returned toward my ships Howbeit before my departure I named this riuer the riuer of Dolphines because that at mine arriuall I sawe there a greate number of dolphines which were playing in the mouth thereof The next day the three and twentieth of this moneth because that toward the South I had not found any cōmodious place for vs to inhabite and to build a fort I gaue commaundement to weigh anker and to hoyse our sayles to sayle towarde the riuer of Maye where we arriued two dayes after and cast anker afterwarde going on land with some number of Gentlemen and Souldiers to knowe for a certaintie the singularities of this place wee espyed the Paracoussy of the countrey which came towards vs this was y ● very same y we saw in the voiage of Captaine Iohu Ribault which hauing espied vs cried very farre of Antipola Antipola and being so ioyful that he could not containe himselfe he came to meet vs accompanied then with two of his sonnes as faire mighty persons as might be found in all the world which had nothing in their mouthes but this word Amy Amy that is to say friend friend yea and knowing those which were there in the first voyage they went principally to them to vse this speech vnto them There was in their trayne a great number of men and women which still made very much of vs and by euident signes made vs to vnderstand how glad they were of our ariual This good entertainment past y e Paracoussy prayed me to go to see the piller which we had erected in the voyage of Iohn Ribault as we haue declared heretofore as a thing which they made great account of Hauing yeelded vnto him and being come to the place where it
to light In the meane season I humbly commende my selfe and this my translation vnto you and your selfe and all those which vnder you haue taken this enterprise in hand to the grace good blessing of the Almightie which is able to build further and to finish the good worke which in these our dayes he hath begunne by your most Christian and charitable endeuour Your L. humble at commandement R. H. The preface THere are two thinges which according to mine opinio●● haue been the principall causes in consideration whereof aswell they of auncient times as those of our age haue been enduced to trauell into farre and remote regions The first hath beene the naturall desire which we haue to serch out the commodities to liue happely plentifully and at ease be it whether one abandon his naturall cuntrie altogether to dwell in a better or bee it that men make voiages thither there to serch out and bring from thence such thinges as are there to bee found and are in greatest estimation and in most request in our cuntries The second cause hath beene the multitude of people too frutefull in generation which being no longer able to dwell in their natiue soyles haue entred vppon their neighbours limites and oftentimes passing further haue pearced euen vnto the vttermost regions After this sorte the north climate a frutefull father of so many nations hath oftentimes sent foorth this way and that way his valiant people and by this meane hath peopled infinite countries so that most of the nations of Europe drawe their original from these partes Contrariwise the more southern regions because they be too barraine by reason of their insupportable heate which raigneth in them neede not any such sending foorth of their in habitances and haue beene oftentimes constrained to receaue other people more often by force ofarmes then willingly All Africke Spaine and Italie can also testifie the same which neuer so abounded with people that they had neede to send them abroode to inhabite else where as on the contrary Scythia Norway Gotland and France haue done The posterite of which nations remaineth yet not only in Italie Spaine and Affricke but also in frutefull and faire Asia Neuerthelesse I find that the Romains proceding farther or rather adding vnto these two chiefe causes aforesayd as being most curious to plant not only their ensignes and victories but also their lawes customes and religion in those provinces which they had conquered by force ofarmes haue oftentimes by the decree of their soueraine Senate sent forth inhabitantes which they called colonies thinking by this way to make their name immotall euen to the vnfurnishing of their owne countrye of the forces which should haue perserued the same in her perfection a thing which hindred them much more then advanced them to the possession of the vniversall monarchie where vnto their intention did aspyre For it came to passe that their colonies here and there being miserably sacked by strang people did vtterly ruine and ouerthrowe their empire The brinkes of the riuer of Rine are yet red those of Danubius are noe lesse bloodie and our France be came fatte with their blood which they lost These are the effectes and rewardes of al such as being pricked forward with this Romaine and tirannicall ambition will goe aboute thus to subdue strange people effectes I say contrarie to the profitte which those shall receaue which only are affectioned to the common benefitte that is to say to the generall pollicie of all men and endeuour to vnite them one with another as well by trasicke and forraine conuersations as also by militarie vertues and force of armes whenas the sauages wil not yeeld vnto their endeuours so much tending vnto their profite For this cause princes haue sent foorth out of their dominions certaine men of good actiuitie to plante themselues in strang countries there to make their profite to bring the countrie to ciuilitie and if it might be to reduce the inhabitantes to the true knowledg of our God an end so much more commédable as it is farre from all tiranicall and cruell gouernement and so they haue alwayes thriued in their enterprises and by lyttle and little gained the hartes of them which they haue conquered or wonne vnto them by any meanes Here of we may gather that sometimes it is good yea very expedient to send foorth men to discouer the pleasure and commoditie of strang countries But so that the country out of which these companies are to passe remayne not weakned nor depriued of her forces And againe in such sorte that the companie sent forth be of so iuste and sufficient number that it may not bee defeited by strangers which euery foote endeuour nothing else but to surprise the same vpon the suddaine As within these fewe dayes past the french haue proued to my great greife being able by no meanes possible to withstand the same considering that the elementes men and al the fauours which might be hoped for of a faithful and Christian alliance fought against vs which thing I purpose to discouer in this presēt historie with so euident truth that the kings maiestie my souerainge prince shall in parte be satisfied of the diligence which I haue vsed in his seruice and myne aduersaries shall find themselues so discouered in their false reportes that they shall haue no place of refuge But before I beginne I wil brefely set downe the situation and description of the land where vnto we haue failed and where we haue inhabited from the yeare 1561 vnto sixtie fiue to the ende that those thinges may the more easily be borne a way which I meane to describe in this discourse ¶ The description of the West Indies in generall but chiefly and particularly of Florida THat part of the earth which at this day wee call the fourth part of the world or America or the West India was unknowen vnto our auncestors by reason of the great distance thereof In like manner all the Westerne Ilandes and fortunate Isles were not discouered but by those of our age Howbeit there haue beene some which haue said that they were discouered in the time of Augustus Caesar and that Virgil hath made mention thereof in the sixt booke of his Aeneidos when he saith That there is a lande beyond the starres and the course of the yeere and of the sunne where Atlas the Porter of heauen sustaineth the pole vpon his shoulders neuerthelesse it is easie to iudge that he meaneth not to speake of this land whereof no man is founde to haue written before his time neither yet aboue a thousand yeeres after Christopher Colon did first light vpon this lande in the yeere 1492. And fiue yeeres after Americus went thither by the commaundement of the king of Castile and gaue vnto it his owne name wherevpon afterward it was called America This man was very well seene in the Arte of Nauigation and in Astronomie whereby be discouered
albeit that from my tender yeeres I my self haue applied al my industry to follow them haue hazarded my life in so many dangers for the seruice of my Prince yet could I neuer attaine thervnto not that I did not deserue this title and degree of gouernment as I haue seen it happen to many others only bicause they descended of a noble race since more regarde is had of their birth than of their vertue For well I knowe that if vertue were regarded there would more be found better to deserue the title and by good right to be named noble and valiant I will therfore make sufficient answeare to such propositions and suche thinges as you maye obiect against mee laying before you the infinite examples which we haue of the Romaines which concerning the point of honour were the first that triūphed ouer the world For how many find we among them which for their so valiant enterprises not for the greatnesse of their parentage haue obtayned the honour to triumph If we haue recourse vnto their auncesters wee shall finde that their parentes were of so meane condition that by labouring with their handes they liued verie basely As the father of Aelius Pertinax which was a poore artisant his Grandfather likewise was a bond man as the historiographers do wituesse and neuerthelesse being moued with a valiant courage he was nothing dismayed for al this but rather desirous to aspire vnto high things he began with a braue stomacke to learne feates of armes and profited so well therein that from steppe to step he became at length to be Emperour of the Romaines For all this dignitie he despised not his parentes but contrariwise and in remembrance of them hee caused his fathers shoppe to bee couered with a fine wrought marble to serue for an example to men descended of base poore linages and to giue them occasion to aspire vnto high things not withstanding the meannes of their auncesters I will not passe ouer in silence the excellencie and prowes of the valiant and renoumed Agathocles the sonne of a simple potter and yet forgeting the cōtemptible estate of his father he so applied himselfe to vertue in his tender yeeres that by the fauour of armes he came to be king of Sicilie and for all this title he refused not to be counted the sonne of a Potter But the more to eternise the memorie of his parents and to make his name renowmed he commaunded that he should be serued at the Table in Vessels of gold and siluer and others of earth declaring thereby that the dignitie wherein he was placed came not vnto him by his parents but by his owne vertue onely If I shal speak of our time I will lay before you onely Rusten Bassha which may be a sufficient example to all men which though he were the sonne of a poore heardman did so apply his youth in all vertue that being brought vp in the seruice of the great Turke he seemed so to aspire to great high matters in such sorte that growing in yeeres he increased also in courage so farre foorth that in fine for his excellent vertues he married the daughter of the great Turke his Prince How much then ought so many worthy examples to moue you to plant here Considering also that hereby you shalbe registred for euer as the first that inhabited this strange countrey I pray you therefore all to aduise your selues therof and to declare your minds freely vnto me protesting that I will so well imprint your names in the kings eares and the other princes that your renowme shall hereafter shyne vnquenchable through our Realme of Fraunce He had scarcely ended his Oration but the greatest part of our souldiers replyed that a greater pleasure could neuer betide them perceiuing well the acceptable seruice which by this meane they should doe vnto their prince besides that this thing should be for the increase of their honors therefore they besought the Captayne before he departed out of the place to beginne to build them a Fort which they hoped afterward to finish and to leaue them munition necessary for their defence shewing as it seemed that they were displeased that it was so long in doing Whereupon Iohn Ribault being as glad as might be to see his men so well willing determined the nextday to search the most fit and conuenient place to be inhabited Wherefore he embarked himselfe very early in the morning and commaunded them to follow him that were desirous to inhabite there to the intent that they might like the better of the place Hauing sayled vp the great riuer on the north side in costing an Ile which endeth with a sharpe point toward the mouth of the riuer and hauing sayled a while he discouered a small riuer which entred into the Ilande which hee would not fayle to search out Which done and finding the same deepe inough to harbour therein Gallies and Galliots in good number proceeding further hee found a very open place ioyning vpon the brinke thereof where he went on land and seeing the place fit to builde a fortresse in and commodious for them that were willing to plant there he resolued incontinent to cause the bignes of the fortification to be measured out And considering that there stayed but sixe and twentie there hee caused the Forte to bee made in length but sixteene fathome and thirteene in breadth with flankes according to the proportion thereof The measure being taken by me and Captaine Salles we sent vnto the Shippes for men and to bring Shouels Pickaxes and other instruments necessary to make the fortification We traueiled so diligently that in a shorte space the Fort was made in some sorte defensible In which meane time Iohn Ribault caused victualles and warrelike munition to be brought for the defence of the place After he had furnished them with all such thinges as they had neede of he determined to take his leaue of them But before his departure he vsed this speach vnto Captayne Albert which hee lefte in this place Captayne Albert I haue to request you in the presence of all men that you would quite your selfe so wisely in your charge and gouerne so modestly your small company which I leaue you which with so good cheere remayneth vnder your obedience that I neuer haue occasion but to commend you and to recount vnto the king as I am desirous the faithfull seruice which before vs all you vndertake to doe him in his new Frauuce And you companions quoth hee to the the Souldiers I beseech you also to esteeme of Captayne Albert as if it were my selfe that stayed here with you yeelding him that obedience which a souldier oweth vnto his Generall and Captayne liuing as brethren one with another without all dissention and in so doing God will assist you and blesse your enterprises Hauing cnded his exhortation wee tooke our leaues of eche of them and sayled towarde our Sippcs
motion that it was better that one man onely should dye then that so many men should perish they agreed therefore that one should dye to sustaine the others Which thinge was executed in the person of La Chere of whom we haue spoken heretofore whose fleshe was deuided equally amongst his fellowes a thing so pitifull to recite that my pen is loth to write it After so long time and tedious trauels God of his goodnesse vsing his accustomed fauour changed their sorrow into ioy and shewed vnto them the sight of lande Whereof they were so exceeding glad y ● the pleasure caused thē to remayne a long time as men without sense whereby they let the Pinnesse flote this and that way without holding any right way or course But a smal English barke boarded y ● vessel in which there was a Frenchman which had been in the first voyage into Florida who easily knewe them and spake vnto them afterward gaue them meat and drink Incontinently they recouered their naturall courages declared vnto him at large al their nauigation The English men consulted a long while what were best to be done and in fine they resolued to put on land those that were most feeble and to carry the rest vnto the Queene of Englande which purposed at that time to sende into Florida Thus you see in briefe that which happened vnto them which Captaine Iohn Ribault had left in Florida And nowe will I goe forwarde with the discourse of mine owne voyage The ende of the first voyage of Iohn Ribault into Florida ¶ The second voyage vnto Florida made and written by Captaine Laudonniere which fortified and inhabited there two Sommers and one whole VVinter AFter our arriuall at Diepe at our comming home from our first voyage which was the twentieth of Iuly a thousand fiue hundred sixtie and one wee found the ciuill warres begun which was in parte the cause why our men were not succoured as Captaine Iohn Ribault had promised them whereof it followed that Captaine Albert was killed by his souldiers the coūtrey abādoned as heretofore we haue sufficiētly discoursed as it may more at large bee vnderstood by those men which were there in person After the peace was made in Fraunce my Lord Admiral de Chastillon shewed vnto the king that he heard no newes at all of y ● men which Captaine Iohn Ribault had left in Florida that it were pity to suffer them to perish In which respect the king was content he should cause three ships to be furnished y ● one of sixe score tuns the other of a 100. and the third of 60. to seeke them out and to succour them My Lorde Admirall therefore being well informed of the faithful seruice which I had done aswel vnto his maiesty as to his predecessors kings of Fraūce aduertised the king how able I was to do him seruice in this voyage which was the cause that he made me chief captain ouer these 3 ships charged me to depart w t diligence to perform his cōmandement which for mine own part I would not gainsay but rather thinking my self happy to haue beene chosē out amōg such an infinit number of others which in my iudgment were very wel able to haue quited thēselues in this charge I embarked my self at new hauē the 22. of April 1564. sayled so y ● we fel neere vnto the coast of England And then I turned towards the South to sayle directly to the fortunate Ilands at this present called the Canaries one of which called the Ile Sauage because as I thinke it is altogether without inhabitantes was the first that our shippes passed Sayling therefore on forwarde wee landed the next day in the Isle of Teneriffe otherwise called the Pike because that in the middest thereof there is an exceeding high moūtaine neere as high as that of Etna which riseth vp right like a pike into the top wherof no man can go vp but from the middest of May vntill the middest of August by reason of the ouer great colde which is there all the rest of the yeere which is a woonderfull strange thing considering that it is not past seuen and twentie degrees and a halfe distaunt from the Equator We sawe it all couered ouer with snowe although it were then but the fifte of May. The inhabitantes in this Isle being heretofore pursued by the Spaniardes retired themselues into this mountaine where for a space they made warre with them and woulde not submit themselues vnto their obedience neither by foule nor faire meanes they disdayned so much y ● losse of their Iland For those which went thither on the Spaniards behalfe left their carkases there so that not so much as one of them returned home to bring newes Notwithstāding in the end the inhabitants not able to liue in that place according to their nature or for want of suche thinges as were necessarie for the commoditie of their liuelihoode did all die there After I had furnished my selfe with some freshe water very good and excellent which sprang out of a rocke at the fo●t of this mountayne I continued my course towarde the West wherein the windes fauoured me so well that fifteene dayes after our shippes arriued safe and sounde at the Antilles and going on land at the Isle of Martinica one of the first of them the next day wee arriued at Dominica twelue leagues distant from the former Dominica is one of the fairest Ilandes of the West full of hilles and of very good smell Whose singularities desiring to know as we passed by seeking also to refresh our selues w t fresh water I made y ● mariners cast anker after we had sayled about half along y ● cost therof As soone as wee had cast Anker two Indians inhabitantes of that place sayled toward vs in two Canoaes full of a fruit of great excellencie which they call Ananas As they approched vnto our barke there was one of them which being in some misdoubt of vs went backe againe on land and fled his way with as much speede as he could possibly Which our men perceiued and entred with diligence into the other Canoa wherein they caught the poore Indian brought him vnto me But the poore fellow became so astonied in beholding vs that he knew not which way to behaue himselfe because that as afterward I vnderstood hee feared that he was fallen into the Spaniard hands of whom he had beene taken once before and which as he shewed vs had cut of his stones At length this poore Indian was assured of vs and discoursed vnto vs of many things wherof we receaued very smal pleasure because we vnderderstood not his mind but by his signes Thē he desired me to giue him leaue to depart promised me y ● he would bring me a thousād presents whereunto I agreed on condition that hee would haue patience vntill the next day when I
lake of freshwater named Sarrope about fiue leagues in bignesse abounding with many sortes of fruites specially in Dates which growe on the palme trées whereof they make a wonderfull traficke yet not so great as a kinde of roote whereof they make a kinde of meale so good to make bread of that it is vnpossible to eate better and that for fifteene leagues about all the countrie is fed therewith Which is the cause that the inhabitantes of the Isle gaine of their neighbours great wealth and profite for they will not depart with this roote without they he well payed for it besides that they are taken for the most warrelike men of all that countrie as they made good proofe when the king of Calos hauing made alliance with Oathcaqua was depriued of Oathcaquaes daughter which hee had promised to him in marriage Hee tolde mee the whole matter in this sorte As Oathcaqua well accompanied with his people carried one of his daughters excéeding beawtifull according to the coulour of the countrey vnto king Calos to giue her vnto him for his wife the inhabitantes of his Isle aduertised of the matter layde an ambush for him in a place where hee should passe and so behaued themselues that Oathcaqua was discomfited the betrothed young spouse taken and all the Damoselles that accompanied her which they carried vnto their Isle which thing in all the Indians countrey they esteeme to be the greatest victorie for afterwarde they marrie these virgins and loue them aboue all measure The Spaniarde that made this relation tolde me that after this defeite he went to dwell with Oathcaqua and had béene with him full eight yeares euen vntil the time that hee was sent vnto mee The place of Calos is situate vppon a riuer which is beyond the Cape of Florida fortie or fiftie leagues towardes the Southwest and the dwelling of Oathcaqua is on this side the Cape towarde the North in a place which we call in the Carte Caignaueral which is in eight and twentie degrées About the fiue and twenteth of Ianuarie Paracoussy Satourioüa my neighbour sent me certayne presentes by two of his subiectes to perswade me to ioyne with him and to make warre vppon Ouae Vtina which was my friende and farther besought mee to retyre certayne of my men which were with Vtina for whome if it had not béene hee had oftentimes set vppon him and defeited him he besought me herein by diuers other kinges his allies which for thrée weekes or a monethes space sent messengers vnto mee to this ende and purpose But I woulde not graunt vnto them that they should make warre vppon him yea rather contrariwise I endeuoured to make them friendes wherein they condiscended vnto mee so farre foorth that they were content to allowe of any thing that I would set downe whereupon the two Spaniardes which of long time knew well the nature of the Indians warned me that in any case I should not trust vnto them because that when they shewed good countenance and the best chéere vnto men then was the time that they woulde surprise and betraye them and that of their nature they were the greatest traitours and most deepe dissemblers of the worlde Besides I neuer trusted them but vpon good ground as one that had discouered a thousand of their craftes and subtilties aswel by experience as by reading of the histories of late yeares Our two barkes were not so soone finished but I sent Captayne Vasseur to disconer a long the coste lying towarde the Northe and commaunded him to saile vnto a riuer the king wherof was called Audusta which was lord of that place where those of the yeare 1562. inhabites I sent him twoe sutes of apparel with certaine hachats kniues and other smale trifles the better to insinuate my selfe into his friendshippe And the better to win him I sent in the barke with captaine Vasseur a soldier called Aimon which was one of them which returned home in the firste voyage hoping that king Audusta might remember him But before they were embarked I commanded them to make inquirie what was become of another called Rouffi which remained alone in those parts when Nicolas Masson and those of the firste voyage embarked themselues to returne into France They vnderstood at their arriual there that a barke passing that waye had caried awaye the same soldier And afterward I knew for a certaintie that they were Spaniardes which had carried him to Hauana The kinge Audusta sent mee backe my barke ful of mill with a certaine quantitie of beanes twoe stages some skins painted after theire maner and certaine pearles of small value because they were burnt and sent me worde that if I woulde dwel in his quarters he woulde geue me a greate countrye and that after hee had gathered his mil he would spare me as much as I would haue In the meane while there came vnto our forte a flocke of stocke voues in so greate nomber and that for the space of seuen weekes together that euery daye wee killed with hargubuse shot twoe hundred in the woods aboute our forte After that captaine Vasseur was returned I caused the two barkes to be furnished againe with soldiers and mariners and sent them to carrie a present from mee vnto the widow of king Hioacaia whose dwelling was distante from our forte about twelue leages northward Shee curteously receaued our men sent me backe my barks full of mil and acorns with certaine baskets full of the leaues of Cassine where with they make their drinke And the place where this widowe dwelleth is the most plentiful of mil that is in all the coaste and the moste pleasant It is thought that the queene is the most beautiful of al the Indians and of whome they make most accompt yea and her subiects honour her so much that almost continualy they beare her on their shoulders and wil not suffer her to go on foote With in a few daies after the return of my barks she sent to visit me by her Hiatiqui which is as much to saye as her interpreter Nowe while I thought I was furnished with victuals vntill the time that our shippes might come out of France for feare of keeping my people idle I sent my two barkes to discouer along the riuer and vp toward the head thereof which went so farre vp that they were thirtie leagues good beyonde a place named Mathiaqua and there they discouered the entrance of a lake vpō the oneside whereof no land can bee seene according to the reporte of the Indians which had oftentimes climed on the hiest trees in the country to see land and notwithstanding could not discerne any which was the cause that my men went no further but returned backe and in comminge home went to see the Ilande of Edelano situated in the midst of the riuer as faire a place as any that may be seene through the world For in the
and that in case they woulde helpe me to some I woulde finde meanes to set him agayne at libertie that in the meane space I woulde retire my selfe into my Barkes for I feared least they woulde there assemble themselues together and that some mischief might thereof insue where I would stay for him two dayes to receaue his aunswere notwithstanding that my meaning was not to haue any thing without exchaunge of marchaundise Thys they promised they woulde doe And in verye deéde the verye same euening hys wyfe accompanyed withall the women of the village came vnto the Ryuers brincke and cryed vnto meé to enter into the barke to seé her husband and her sonne which I helde both prisoners I discouered the next daye fiue or sixe hundred Indyans Archers which drewe neére vnto the Ryuers side and came to meé to signyfie vnto meé howe that duryng the absence of their kyng their enemye Potanou beéyng thereof aduertised was entred into their vyllage and had set al on fire They prayed meé that I woulde succour them neuerthelesse in the meane while they had one parte of their troupe in ambush wyth intent to sette vpon meé if I had come on lande which was easie for meé to discerne For seéyng that I refused so to doe they greatly doubted that they were discouered and sought by all meanes to remooue out of my mynde that euill opinion whych I had conceaued of them They brought meé therefore fish in their little boates and of their meale of Mast they made also of their drinke which they call cassine which they sent to Vtina and meé Nowe albeit I had gotten thys poynt of them that I helde their king prysoner yet neuerthelesse I could not gette any greate quantitye of victuals for the present the reason was because they thought that after I had drawne victuals from them I woulde put their Kynge to death For they measured my will accordyng to their custome whereby they put to death all the men prysoners that they take in Warre And thus beéing out of all hope of hys libertye they assembled themselues in the great house and hauing called all the people together they proposed the election of a newe Kyng at which time the Father in lawe of Vtina set one of the Kynges young Sonnes vpon the royal throne and tooke such paynes that euerye man dyd hym homage by the Maior parte of the voyces This election had lyke to haue beéne the cause of great troubles amonge them For there was a kinsman of a Kyng neére adioyning which pretended a tytle to the Kyngdome and in deéde heé had gotten one parte of the Subiectes notwithstandyng thys enterpryse coulde not take effecte for asmuch as by a common consent of the chiefe it was consulted and concluded that the Sonne was more meéte to succeéde the Father then anye other Nowe all thys whyle I kepte Vtina with meé to whome I had giuen some of myne apparell to cloath hym as I had lykewise done vnto hys Sonne But his Subiectes which before had an opinion that I woulde haue killed hym beeing aduertysed of the good entertaynement which I vsed towardes him sent two men which walked alonge the Ryuer and came to visite hym and brought vs some victuals These two men at their comming were receaued by me with all curtesie and entertained according to the victuals which I had Whyle these thinges thus passed there arriued from all quarters many sauages of the countries adioyning which came to seé Vtina and sought by all meanes to perswade me to put him to death offering that if I would doe so they woulde take order that I shoulde want no victuals There was also a king my neighbour whose name was Saturioüa a subtile and craftie man and one that shewed by proofe that heé was greatly practised in affaires This king sent ordinarily messengers vnto mee to pray me to deliuer Vtina vnto him and to win me the more easily hee sent twise seuen or eight baskets of Maze or of mast thinking by this way to allure me and to make me come to composition with him In the ende notwithstanding when he sawe he lost his time he ceased to visite me with ambassages and victuals and in the meane whyle I was not able with the small store of victuals which I had so well to proportion out the trauaile vppon the shippes which wee built to returne into France but that in the ende wee were constrayned to endure extreame famine which continued amonge vs all the moneth of Maye for in this latter season neither Maiz nor Beanes nor Mast was to beé founde in the villages because they had employed all for to sowe their fieldes insomuch that weé were constrayned to eate rootes which the most part of our men punned in the morters which I had brought with meé to beate gunnepowder in and the grayne which came to vs from other places some tooke the wood of Esquine beate it and made meale thereof which they boyled with water and eate it others went with their harquebusies to seéke to kill some Foule Yea this miserie was so great that one was founde that gathered vp amonge the filth of my house all the Fish bones that heé coulde find which heé dryed and beate into powder to make bread thereof The effectes of this hidious famine appeared incontinently among vs for our bones eftsoones began to cleane so néere vnto the skinne that the most part of the souldyers had their skinnes pearced thorough with them in manye partes of their bodyes in such sorte that my greatest feare was least the Indyans woulde ryse vp agaynst vs considering that it would haue béene verye harde for vs to haue defended our selues in such extreame decaye of all our forces besides the scarsitye of all victuals which fayled vs all at once For the verye Ryuer had not such plenty of fish as it was wont and it séemed that the lande and water dyd fight agaynst vs. Now as we were thus vpon termes of dispayre about the ende of the moneth of Maye and the beginning of Iune I was aduertised by certayne Indyans that were my neighbours that in the high countrie vp aboue the ryuer there was newe maiz and that that countrye was most forward of all This caused me to take vpon me to goe thither with a certayne number of my men and I went vp the ryuer to a place called Enecaque where I met the sister of Vtina in a village where shee made vs verye good cheare and sent vs fish We found that which was tolde vs to bee true for the maiz was now rype but by this good lucke one shrewde turne happened vnto me For the most part of my souldyers fell sicke wyth eating more of it then their weakened stomackes coulde digest We had also béene the space of foure dayes since wee departed from our fort without eating anye thyng sauyng little pinockes and a little fish
which wee had sunke because it wanted ballast and coulde not be saued Thus I encreased the furniture of the ship wherein I was my selfe embarked and made one which had beéne Masters-mate in the foresaid small shippe Master of mine And because I lacked a Pilot I praied Iames Ribault that heé would graunt me one of the foure men that he had in his shippe which I should name vnto him to serue me for a Pilot he promised to giue me them which neuerthelesse he did not at the instant when we were readie to depart notwithstanding all the speéch I vsed to him in declaring that it was for the Kinges seruice I was constrained to leaue the ship behinde me which I had bought of the English Captaine because I wanted men to bring her away For Captain Iames Ribault had taken away her furniture I tooke away her ordinance onely which was all dismounted whereof I gaue nine pieces to Iames Ribault to carrye into France the other fiue I put into my shippe The fiue and twentieth of September wee sette sayles to returne into France and Captaine Iohn Ribault and I kept companye all that daye and the next vntill threé or foure a clocke in the after noone but because his shippe was better at bowling then ours he kept him to the wind and left vs the same day Thus we continued our voyage wherein we had maruelous flawes of winde And about the eight and twentieth of October in the morning at the breake of daye wee discried the Isle of Flores one of the Assores where immediatly vpon our approching to the lande we had a mighty gust of winde which came from the Northeast which caused vs to beare against it foure daies afterwarde the winde came South Southeast was alwaies variable In all the time of our passage wee had none other foode sauing Biscuit and water About the tenth or eleuenth of Nouember after wee had sailed a longe time and supposing wee were not farre from lande I caused my men to sound where they found threéscore fifteéne fathoms water whereat we all reioysed praised God because we had sailed so prosperously Immediately after I caused them to set sayle againe so we continued our way but for asmuch as we had borne to much toward the Northeast we entered into Saint Georges chanel a place much feared of all Sailers and where as many ships are cast away But it was a faire gift of God that we entred into it when the weather was cleare We sailed al the night supposing we had beéne shot into the narrow Sea betweene England and France by the next day to reach Diepe but wee were deceaued of our longing for about two or three of the clocke after midnight as I walked vpon the hatches I discried land rounde about me whereat we were astonied Immediatly I caused them to strike saile and sound we found we had not vnder vs past eight fathoms of water whereupon I commaunded them to staye till breake of day which being come and seéing my Mariners tolde me that they knew not this land I commanded them to approch vnto it Being neére thereunto I made them cast anker and sent the boat on shoare to vnderstand in what country we were Word was brought me that we were in Wales a prouince of England I went incontinently on land where after I had taken the ayre a sickenesse tooke mee whereof I thought I shoulde haue dyed In the meane while I caused the shippe to bee brought into the bay of a small towne called Swansey where I found Marchants of saint Malo which lent me money wherewith I made certaine apparell for my selfe and part of my company that was with me and because there were no victuals in the shippe I bought two Oxen and salted them and a tonne of Beere which I deliuered into his handes which had charge of the shippe praying him to carrie it into France which he promised me to doe for mine own part I purposed with my men to passe by land after I had taken leaue of my Mariners I departed from Swansey and came that night with my company to a place called Morgan where the Lord of the place vnderstanding what I was stayd me with him for the space of sixe or seuen daies and at my departure mooued with pittie to see me goe on foote especially being so weake as I was gaue me a little Hackenye Thus I passed on my iourney first to Bristo then to London where I went to do my duety to Monsieur de Foix which for the present was the kings Ambassadour holpe me w t money in my necessitie From thence I passed to Calis afterward to Paris where I was infourmed that y e king was gone to Moulins to sotourne there incontinently with all the hast I could possibly make I gate me thither with part of my company Thus briefly you see the discourse of all that happened in new France since the time it pleased y ● kings Maiestie to send his subiects thither to discouer those parts The indifferent vnpassionate readers may easily weigh the truth of my doings be vpright iudges of y ● endeuour which I there vsed For mine owne part I will not accuse nor excuse any it sufficeth me to haue folowed the truth of the history whereof many are able to beare witnes which were there present I will plainly say one thing That the long delay that Captaine Iohn Ribault vsed in his embarking the fifteen daies that he spēt in rouing along the coast of Florida before he came to our fort Caroline were the cause of the losse that we sustained For he discouered the coast the fourteénth of August spent the time in going from riuer to riuer which had beén sufficiēt for him to haue discharged his ships in for me to haue embarked my selfe to returne into France I wote well that all that hee did was vpon a good intent yet in mine opinion he should haue had more regard vnto his charge then to the deuises of his owne braine which sometimes he printed in his head so deépely that it was very hard to put them out which also turned to his vtter vndoing for hee was no sooner departed from vs but a tempest tooke him which in fine wrackt him vppon the coast where all his ships were cast away he with much adooe escaped drowning to fall into their hands which cruelly massacred him and all his company The end of the historie written by Laudonniere THE FOVRTH VOYAGE of the French men into Florida vnder the conduct of Captaine GOVRGVES in the yeare 1567. CAptaine Gourgues a Gentleman borne in the country neére vnto Bordeaux incited with a desire of reuenge to repaire the honour of his nation borrowed of his friendes and soulde part of his owne goods to set foorth furnish three ships of indifferent burthen with all things
and 42 Fier very dangerous in Florida 24. b Fight and the manner thereof among the Floridians 48 Fish parcks made of reedes in the forme of a labarinth 5 Fish in great aboundance 6. b Fish to fiftie cart loade kild in the mouth of the Ryuer of May with extreame heate 31 Florida and the description thereof 1. b the trees beasts fowle gold siluer dyes coulours and other commodities of Florida 2. b their manners wearing of their hayre exercises running for games shooting playing at bal hunting fishing forme of warre triumphs worshippe of sunne and Moone 2. b their treasons 39. their deepe dissembling 44. b their subtilties 47. their chiete feare 48. b their league with the French 61 Fort beaten downe by the Frenchmen themselues before their departure 49 Francis Iean a Traytour to his owne countrymen 33. b and 57. b. and ●8 Frenchmen mistrusted that the English would plant in Florida 50. b they hidde the siluer which they found in Florida from the English least the Queene of England shoulde bee encouraged to inhabite there after their departure ●1 G Gieure and his message to Laudonniere in the souldiers name 32. b Gold and siluer founde in the Ryuer of May. 23. b Gold in the mountaines of Apallassy and the manner howe the sauages resine it 40. b Gourgues his voiage 60. his confederacie with the sauages 61. his taking of the two small spanish forts 62. his taking of the third fort 63. b his returne to Rochell 64. his death and commendation 64. b Gouernour of Iamaica taken by the French 35. his escape 36 Groles or Cornish choughes great deuourers of the corne in Florida 22 H Halmacanir a king 60. b Harpaha a king 60. b Hauana a towne in Cuba 35. b Heede to be taken of the Floridians 47 Helicopile a king 60 b Helmacape a king 60. b Herinaphrodites common in Florida 3 their trauaile and paines in carrying of burthens ibidem their 〈◊〉 of ●●●ture 23. b Hiatiqui an interpretour 40 High buildings not good in Florida 24. b Houstaqua a great king 26. ●●le ●●●●ing three or foure thousand to the 〈◊〉 40 Houstaqua or Hostaqua a village ●● b Hoya a king 12 I Iames Ribault 58. his bad dealing with Laudonniere 58. b Iawa the Priest or Magician among the Floridians 3. b. and 41. his counsaile as●ed before they goe to battaile ibid. his aunsweres are found true ibid. Indians two taken with consent of their king 7. b. their dolefull songs ● they eate not before the sunne lette ibidein their escape 9 Indians of Florida vse to trimme themselues with rich feathers 12. b Instruments to till the ground like broad mattocks 3. b Inuocations of the Iawas or Priestes vnto Toya 13 Iohn Hawkins the English Generalis arriuall in Florida 50. his great humanitie and liberalitie to the starued Frenchmen 51. his departure 51. b Iohn Ribaults first voyage to florida 4. b his pithy oration to his company 9. his building of a fort in port Royal. 10. b. his returne and arriuall in France 11. b. his second voyage to Florida 52. howe he was receaued by Laudonniere 53. an aduertisement vnto him to beware of the spaniardes 56. his embarkement to followe the spaniardes 56. his shipwracke and death 59 b Iracana a Riuer called by the French the Riuer of somme 49 Isle of Cedars 7. b K Kings of Florida at hatred one with another 45 The king of Edelano caused Peter Gamby to be murthered for his riches 40. b L La Chere a French souldyer eaten of his companions for hunger 16 b A Lake discouered in Florida from the one side whereof the land cannot be seen to the other 40 A Lake three leagues distant from the village of Potanou 41 Letters of Admiral Chastillon to Iohn Ribault 56 Letters of Admiral Chastillon to Laudonniere 53. b Laudonniere was in the first voyage of Ribault vnto Florida 4 b. he putteth downe in writing the words and phrases of the Floridians speach 8. Laudonnieres seconde voyage to Florida 18. his arriual there 19. conspiracie against hun in his sicknes 32. his danger of beeing empoysoned 32. b. his fifteene daies unprisonment by his owne company 34. b. his oration to his mutinous souidiers 36. his intention to remooue his seate more Northward to be neerer the rich mountains of Apalassy 40 b. hee is hardly vsed by Iohn Ribault 56. b. he had but ●5 men left in his fort when the spaniardes surprised it 57. his escape out of their hands 57. b his arriual in swansey Bay in Glamorganshiere in south Wales 59. his curteous entertainement by one M. Morgan ibidem his passing by Bristow to London 59. b. his visiting of Monsieur de Foix the French Ambassador there his passing ouer into Fraunce to the Court at Moulins ibidem Liberality and curtesie are the best means to deale with sauages 49 Lightinng exceeding straunge 30. it is thought by the sauages to bee y e discharging of the Christians ordinaunce 30. b Loue and curtesie of the Floridians 20 M Maccou a king 13. b Malica a king 27. b. and 53. b Malgualire a kind of vessel that can saile forward and backward 3● b Mariages the slate thereof in Florida 3 Maracou a southerne king 37. b Martinica an Iland 18. b Martyres certaine dangerous flats neere the Cape of Florida 38 Mathiaca a king 37. b. a village of the same name 40 Mattes very artificial 49 Mayarqua a place fourescore leagues vp the riuer of May. 3 Mayou a king 12 Mayrta a rich king 25. b Medlers excellent good 2 Molloua a king 25. b Molona a king 26. b Moneths reckoned by Moones in Florida 51. b. and 64 Moquoso a king 26 Mosse vsed by the french to calke ships 16 Mosse vsed in s●eede of napkins 27. b. and in steede of apparel 61 Mulbury trees 2 Mulburies white and redde 5 Mutiny against Captaine Albert and the causes thereof 15 N Newe Conquests subiect to rebellion and mutinies 37 Newe Corne ripe by the ende of Maye in Florida 45. b Nicolas Barre chosen in Captaine Alberts roome his good gouernment 15. b O Oathcaqua a king 38. b Olata O●ae Vtina a great king 25. b. forty other Kings his vassals 26 Olocotara a King 62. his valure ibidem Omittaqua a King 26 Omoloa a King 29 Onathaqua a King 37. b Onatheaqua a great King and his rich dwelling 26 Ottigni Laudonnieres Lieutenaunt 21. commendation of his valure 48 Ouade a King 13. his rich tapistry made of feathers and couerlets finely wrote with redde fringe 13. b. his great liberalitie ibidem Oile and the vse thereof in Florida 4 P Palmes 22. their leaues serue to thatch houses in Florida 24 Paracoussy signifieth a King and Gouernour 20 Partridges grey and redde 6 Passage by the Riuer of port Royall into the south sea 6. b Patica a King 36. a village also of that name 40. and 46. b Painting of faces with blacke and red 26 Pedro Melendes Captaine of the
Spaniards and brought them into Florida A savve mill necessary here The thirde sedition By Peru the French meane the coste of Carthagena and Nombre de Dios. The captaines charge at his setting forth Lan●o●niere kept 15. dayes prisoners by his ovvne soldiers Thenchant a skilfull pilot Leauguaue ouer of the Antiles December 8. Cassaua bread made of roots Baracou a village in the Isle of Iamaica The cape of Tiburon The gouerno● of Iamaica taken Malgualire a kinde of vessel that will saile forward backward The Cape of S. Antonie in Cuba Hauana The Chanel of Bahama King Patica The returne of part of Laudonieres seditious soldiers Laudonnieres oration to his mutinous soldiers The sentence of death Execution The continuation of the historie Nevve conquests subiect to rebellions and mutinies Laudonniere setteth things in order after his returne out of prison to the fort Reperation of the vvest side of the fort Carpenters Savviers Smithes Coleyers King Marracou King Onathaqua King Mathiaca Tvvo Spaniards brought vnto Laudonniere by the sauages Calos a place The Flattes called the Martyrs neere the Cape of Florida The King of Calos Great quantitie of gold syluer Plates of gold as broad as a savvcer One of these Spaniardes names was Martin Gomes King Oathcaqua or Houathcha Sarrope an Ilande Aboundance of Dates A roote of great price to make bread of The greatest victorie among the Floridians The situation of Calos Caiguaueral in 28. degrees The Floridians great traitors and disemblers Nicalas Masson King Audustas great humanitie Perles burned Peter Martyr vvrites cap. 1. decad 7. that the like flocks of Pigeons are in the Isles of the Lucayes The vvidovve of King Hioacaia or Hihouhacara This Quenes name vvas Nia-Cubacani The fift voiage vp the riuer of May. Mathiaqua The discouerie of a mighty lake on the one sid vvherof no land can be seene The Isle of Edelano An excellent vvorke of nature Eneguape Chilily Patica Coya The king of Hostaqua or Oustaca able to bring three or foure thousand sauages to the field The moūtaine of Apalassy There is a Mine of golde or rich copper in the mountaine of Apalassi Note Peter Gamby slaine The village of Edelano Golde and syluer Vtinasendeth to I audonniere for his helpe A good note A special note Thre hundred Indians A lake three leages distant from the village of Potanou Iávva signifieth their Priest or magician Potanou accompanied vvith tvvo thousand Indians The prediction of the magician found true Vtina hath eighteene or tvventie kings to his Vassals A custome of the Indians to leaue their houses for three or foure monthes and to liue in the vvoods They looke for succour out of France by the end of April at the vttermost Extreeme famine for sixe vveekes space● Promise broken Two hogsheads of rosen The vile nature of the Indians A cruell ansvvere of the sauages Pinocke a certaine kinde of fruite as big as cheries Astina a king Vtina taken prisoner in his village by Laudoniere and 50. of his souldyers Fiue or sixe hundred Indians The deepe dissembling of the Indians The Indians kil al the men prisoners that they take in warre The election of a new king The hatred among the sauage kings of Florida Note Note Roots Esquine Nevv corne by the ende of May in Florida The village of Enecaque A little green fruite that grovveth in the ryuers as bigge as cheries The Isle of Edelano Two Carpēters killed for gathering the Indians maiz The village Athore Nia-Cubacany a queene Patica a village Desire of reuenge rooted in the sauages A necessarie admonition The Floridians subtilties A certaine signe of vvarre An alley of three or foure hundred pases long A skirmish tvveene the Sauages the French A second fresh charge of Sauages The Floridians maner of fight The Floridians chiefe feare Tvvo slaine Tvvo tvventie vvounded Praier and thankes vnto God for their deliuerance The village Sarauhi The village Emoloa The riuer of Iaracana called by Ribault the riuer of Somme Curtesie and liberalitie the best meanes to deale vvith the sauages Most artificial mattes The beating dovvne of the houses vvithout the fort the palisade The cause vvhy the French lost Florida Eight kinges Laudonniers friendes and allies The principal scope of planters in strange countries Florida a rich countrie Aug. 3. 1565. Master Iohn Havvkins the English generall Sheepe and Poultrie carried into Florida An aduantage vvisely taken The French mistrusted that the Englishmen vvould plant in Florida Syluer found in Florida Note The great importance of this enterprise The great humanitie and bountie of Master Iohn Havvkins to the French The departure of the English Generall August 15. The Floridians measure their moneths by the reuolutions of the Moone The arriual of Captain Iohn Ribault at the fort the 28. of August 1565. Note False reportes of Laudonniere to the Admirall of France The daunger of backbiting Alcibiades banished by backebyters Laudonnieres receauing of Captayne Ribault Letters of the Lord Admiral vnto Laudonniere 1. Accusations against him 2. 3. 4. 5. 1. Laudonnieres aunswere thereunto 2. 3. 4. 5. Fiue Indian kings The montains of Apalassy wherein are mynes of perfect gold Sieroa Pira redde metell Perfect gold Good meanes to auoide the danger of fire September 4. The Spaniards vndermining and surprising of the French The riuer Seloy or the riuer of Dolphines but eight or ten leagues ouer land from the fort but it is thirtie dubling the cape by sea fol. 19. Dangerous flawes of wind on the cost of Florida in september King Emola A village and a riuer both of that name An aduertisment of my Lord Admiral to Captaine Ribault Captaine Ribaults embarkment Sept. 8. The tenth of September A mightie tempest the tenth of Sept. Laudonniere hardly vsed by Ribault Laudonniere his companie begin to fortifie themselues A muster of the men left in the fort by Ribault Fourescore fiue left in the fort with Laudonniere The Spaniards discryed the 20. of September The Spaniards enter the fort Francis Iean a traitour to his nation Don Pedro Melendes captaine of the Spaniards Laudonniers escape Iohn du Chemin a faithful seruant The diligence of the Mariners to saue them that escaped out of the fort Among those was Iaques Morgues painter yet liuing in the Blacke-Fryers in London Francis Iean cause of this enterprise The bad dealing of Iames Ribault Our returne into France the 25. of September 1565. October 28. Nouemb. 10. The chanel of Saint George Laudonnieres arriuall in Swansey Bay in Glamorgan sheer in South wales The curtesie of one Mastes Morgan Bristow London Monsieur de Foix Ambassadour for the French king in England The conclusion The causes why the French lost Florida The French fleete cast away on the coast of Florida The chanel of Bahama betweene Florida the Isles of Lucayes The French mens landing at the Riuer Tacata courou Eight sauage kings The kings seat Complaints of the sauages against the Spaniards Two chaines of siluer giuen to Gourgues Peter de Bré had liued aboue two yeares with Satourioua Three pledges deliuered to Gourgues by Satourioua The Riuer of Salinacani called Somme by the French The Riuer of Sarauahi The estate of the Spaniards in Florida The Ryuer of Saracary or Sarauahi The assault taking of the first Fort. The valure of Olotocara The assault taking of the second Fort. The sauages great swimmers The Spaniards of the second Fort all slaine Note A notable Spanish subtilty The cause why the Floridians bury their goods with them Note The slaughter of the Spaniards of the third Fort. The taking of the third Fort. The writings hanged ouer the French Spaniards slain in Florida The three Forts razed Great honour done by the Sauages to Gourgues Kniues in great estimation The third of May. The arriuall of Gourgues at Rochel the sixt of Iune Che-de Bay The birth life and death of Captaine Gourgues