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Jaega - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jaega

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Approximate territory of the Jaega tribe in the late 17th Century
Approximate territory of the Jaega tribe in the late 17th Century

The Jaegas (also Xega, Geigas, Jobe) were a tribe of Native Americans living along the coast of present-day Martin County and Palm Beach County, Florida at the time of initial European contact, and until sometime in the 18th Century. Little is known of the origins of the Jaegas, or of the affinities of their language, but they may have been a junior branch of the Ais tribe that occupied the coast to their north. The Ais and Jaega languages have been tentatively assigned by some authors to the Muskogean language family, and by others to the Arawakan language family.

Some information about the Jaegas of the town of Jobe (near present-day Jupiter Inlet, Florida) comes to us from the Journal of Jonathan Dickinson, who was part of a shipwrecked party detained by the Jaega of Jobe for several days in 1696. By Dickinson's account, Jobe was subject to the Ais chief who resided in Jece (near present-day Vero Beach, Florida).

The geographic name "Hobe Sound" comes from the name of the tribe. The Spanish pronounced the name "Ho-bay," which has evolved into the current name "Hobe" (which sounds like "robe").[1]

[edit] References

  • Andrews, Charles Mclean and Andrews, Evangeline Walker. (1945). Jonathan Dickinson's Journal or, God's Protecting Providence. Being the Narrative of a Journey from Port Royal in Jamaica to Philadelphia between August 23, 1696 to April 1, 1697. Yale University Press. Reprinted (1981) Florida Classics Library.
  • Austin, Daniel W. (1997). The Glades Indians and the Plants they Used. Ethnobotany of an Extinct Culture. The Palmetto, 17(2):7 -11. (14 September 2002). [1] - accessed November 27, 2005
  • Brech, Alan. (2004). Neither Ocean nor Continent: Correlating the Archeology and Geomorphology of the Barrier Islands of East Central Florida. Unpublished thesis, University of Florida. [2] - accessed November 27, 2005
  1. ^ Hobe Sound History, by Hobe Sound Chamber of Commerce
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