Mocama people

E422833

The Mocama people were a Timucua-speaking Indigenous group who inhabited the coastal regions of what is now northeastern Florida and southeastern Georgia prior to and during early Spanish colonization.

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
Mocama people canonical 1

How this entity was disambiguated

Statements (35)

Predicate Object
instanceOf Indigenous people
Timucua-speaking group
affectedBy Old World diseases
Spanish missionization
slave raids
borderedBy Guale people (to the north) NERFINISHED
other Timucua groups (to the west and south)
continent North America
country United States (present-day) NERFINISHED
culture Mississippian-influenced Southeastern culture
demographicTrend severe population decline after European contact
economy fishing
hunting
maize agriculture
shellfish gathering
encounteredBy Spanish colonizers
ethnicGroupOf Timucua people NERFINISHED
hasSettlementType villages
historicalStatus largely dispersed and assimilated by 18th century
knownFor coastal settlements
participation in Spanish mission system
language Timucua language NERFINISHED
laterInfluencedBy Roman Catholicism NERFINISHED
locatedIn Atlantic coast
northeastern Florida
southeastern Georgia
nameLanguage Timucua NERFINISHED
nameMeaning people of the sea (approximate interpretation)
partOf Spanish Florida (colonial) NERFINISHED
region Sea Islands region (present-day Georgia and Florida) NERFINISHED
religion Indigenous religion of the Timucua
subgroupOf Timucua NERFINISHED
successorPopulation descendants among modern Native peoples of the Southeast
timePeriod early Spanish colonial period
pre-Columbian era

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Spanish conquest of Florida opponent Mocama people