- the
Alachua band of the
Seminole tribe. European-Americans
called him
Cowkeeper, as he held a very
large herd of cattle.
Ahaya was the
chief of a town...
- He was the
younger brother of King Payne, who
succeeded their father Cowkeeper (known to the
Seminole as Ahaya) as
leading or prin****l
chief in Florida...
- King
Payne (died 1812) was a son of the
Seminole high
chief Cowkeeper and
succeeded him as
leading chief of the
Seminoles upon his
death in 1783. He led...
- the
Alachua chiefdom,
founded in
eastern Florida in the 18th
century by
Cowkeeper.
Beginning in 1825,
Micanopy was the prin****l
chief of the
unified Seminole...
-
known as the "Alatchaway" (Alachua), a Muscogee-speaking
group led by
Cowkeeper (Ahaya) that was a
precursor of the
modern Florida Seminoles, rejected...
- Chattahoochee,
where they had fled
after the
Yamasee War. Led by
Chief Secoffee (
Cowkeeper), they
became the
center of a new
tribal confederacy, the Seminole, which...
-
identity as today's Miccosukee.)
Another group of
Hitchiti speakers, led by
Cowkeeper,
settled in what is now
Alachua County, an area
where the
Spanish had...
- Bowlegs.
Bowlegs was born into a
family of
hereditary chiefs descended from
Cowkeeper of the
Oconee tribe of the
Seminole in the
village of
Cuscowilla on the...
- English.
Around 1740, a band of
Oconee people led by Ahaya, who was
called "
Cowkeeper" by the English,
settled on what is now Payne's Prairie. Ahaya's band...
- with
either Oconee or Apalachicola.
About 1750, Ahaya,
later called "
Cowkeeper" by the British, led a
faction of
Oconees into
Florida in
search of a...