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NOTES 307Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques & Discoveries of the English Nation,Volume Five (London: J.M. Dent & Sons, Ltd., 1907), pp. 144-45.14. Richard Collinson, The Three Voyages of Martin Frobisher (London: HakluytSociety, 1867), pp. 144-45.15. Ibid., p. 145.16. "Postmortem Report of Dr. Edward Dodding," in Collinson, Three Voyages,pp. 189-91.17. Henry F. Dobyns, Their Number Become Thinned: Native American PopulationDynamics in Eastern North America (Knoxville: University of TennesseePress, 1983), p. 292.18. Paul E. Hoffman, A New Andalucia and a Way to the Orient: The AmericanSoutheast During the Sixteenth Century (Baton Rouge: Louisiana State UniversityPress, 1990), pp. 10-17. For a higher estimate of the number of slavesseized during this raid, see Garcilaso de Ia Vega, The Florida of the Inca, translatedby John G. Varner and Jeannette J. Varner (Austin: University of Texas Press,1951), p. 10.19. Hoffman, A New Andalucia, p. 91. Among the dogs the Spanish broughtwith them was a greyhound named Bruto, the favorite of de Soto, and a dogcelebrated among the Spanish for his ability to track down Indians and tear themto pieces. See the discussion in John Grier Varner and Jeannette Johnson Varner,Dogs of the Conquest (Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1983), pp. 104-110.20. Letter of Juan Rogel to Francis Borgia (28 August 1572) in Clifford M.Lewis and Albert J. Loomie, eds., The Spanish Jesuit Mission in Virginia, 1570-1572 (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press for the Virginia HistoricalSociety, 1953), p. 111.21. Sir Walter Cope to Lord Salisbury (12 August 1607) in Philip L. Barbour,ed., The Jamestown Voyages Under the First Charter, 1606-1609 (Cambridge:Hakluyt Society, 1969), Volume One, p. 108; Anonymous [Gabriel Archer?] descriptionof Virginia and her people (May-June 1607) in ibid., p. 104.22. Dobyns, Their Number Become Thinned, pp. 275-76.23. Letter of Lufs de Quiros and Jean Baptista de Segura to Juan de Hinistrosa(12 September 1570), in Lewis and Loomie, eds., The Spanish Jesuit Mission inVirginia, pp. 89-90.24. John Smith, et a!., A Map of Virginia, With a Description of the Countrey,the Commodities, People, Government and Religion (Oxford, 1612), reprinted inBarbour, ed., Jamestown Voyages, Volume Two, p. 426.25. Karen Ordahl Kupperman, Settling with the Indians: The Meeting of Englishand American Cultures in America, 1580-1640 (Totowa, New Jersey: Rowmanand Littlefield, 1980), p. 51.26. Quoted in James Axtell, The Invasion Within: The Contest of Cultures inColonial North America (New York: Oxford University Press, 1985), p. 303. Onfavorable early British attitudes toward the Indians, and the reality of those perceptions,see Kupperman, Settling With the Indians, esp. pp. 141-58. See also,Richard Drinnon, White Savage: The Case of John Dunn Hunter (New York:Schocken Books, 1972).27. Axtell, Invasion Within, p. 303.28. Ibid., p. 327.

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