Category
page 1Native American history of Florida
Indian Removal Act
law signed on May 28, 1830 by President Andrew Jackson
Seminole Wars
19th-century wars between the United States Army and the Seminole people of Florida

Timucua
The Timucua were a Native American people who lived in Northeast and North Central Florida and southeast Georgia. They were the largest indigenous group in that area and consisted of about 35 chiefdoms, many leading thousands of people. The various groups of Timucua spoke several dialects of the Timucua language. At the time of European contact, Timucuan speakers occupied about in the present-day states of Florida and Georgia, with an estimated population of 200,000. Milanich notes that the population density calculated from those figures, is close to the population densities calculated by oth
Timucua
language
Narváez expedition
16th-century Spanish journey of exploration in North America
Indigenous people of the Everglades region
Peoples of the Florida Everglades
State of Muskogee
Proclaimed nation in North America
Tocobaga
Tocobaga (occasionally Tocopaca) was the name of a chiefdom of Native Americans, its chief, and its principal town during the 16th century. The chiefdom was centered around the northern end of Old Tampa Bay, the arm of Tampa Bay that extends between the present-day city of Tampa and northern Pinellas County. The exact location of the principal town is believed to be the archeological Safety Harbor site. This is the namesake for the Safety Harbor culture, of which the Tocobaga are the most well-known group.
Chickee
thumb|Mother and children at a camp on the Brighton Seminole Indian Reservation, 1949
thumb|An Indian camp with a sleep chickee, cooking chickee, and eating chickee
Chikee or Chickee ("house" in the Creek and Mikasuki languages spoken by the Seminoles and Miccosukees) is a shelter supported by posts, with a raised floor, a thatched roof and open sides. Chickees are also known as chickee huts, stilt houses, or platform dwellings.
The chickee style of architecture—palmetto thatch over a bald cypress log frame—was adopted by Seminoles during the Second (1835–1842) and Third (1855–1858) Seminole W
Betty Mae Tiger Jumper
Chief of the Seminole Tribe of Florida, nurse and editor

Seminole Hard Rock Hotel and Casino Hollywood
hotel in Fort Lauderdale, United States
Jaega
right|thumb|Approximate territory of the Jaega chiefdom in the late 17th Century
Agua Dulce people
Timucua tribe in Spanish Florida
Pohoy
Pohoy was a chiefdom on the shores of Tampa Bay in present-day Florida in the late sixteenth century and all of the seventeenth century. Following slave-taking raids by people from the Lower Towns of the Muscogee Confederacy (called Uchise by the Spanish and "Lower Creeks" by the English) at the beginning of the eighteenth century, the surviving Pohoy people lived in several locations in peninsular Florida. The Pohoy disappeared from historical accounts after 1739.
Treaty of Moultrie Creek
1823 treaty between the United States and several Seminole leaders in Florida
Juan Ortiz
Spanish military personnel