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The Simonis were a Native American group who originally lived in [[Nuevo Leon]]. In the late 1580s or maybe slightly earlier the pressure of the Spanish incursion caused the Simoni to migrate north of the [[Rio Grande]] and join forces with the [[Yojuane]] as part of the greater [[Jumano]] league.
The Simonos were a Native American group who originally lived in [[Nuevo Leon]]. In the late 1580s or maybe slightly earlier the pressure of the Spanish incursion caused the Simoni to migrate north of the [[Rio Grande]] and join forces with the [[Yojuane]] as part of the greater [[Jumano]] league.


By 1709 the Simoni were living in eastern Texas along the [[Rio Brazos]] in an area known as the Rancheria Grande. In that year a hunting party of Simoni as well as Yojuane and [[Tusonibi]] encountered the expedition of [[Isidro de Espinosa]] and tried unsuccessfully to get him and his associates to come to the Rancheria Grande and meet with the rest of their families. By the 1740s when most of the Yojuane moved to the San Gabriel River missions the Simoni seem to have lost their seperate identity and become subsumed within the Yojuane people.
By 1709 the Simono were living in eastern Texas along the [[Rio Brazos]] in an area known as the Rancheria Grande. In that year a hunting party of Simoni as well as Yojuane and [[Tusonibi]] encountered the expedition of [[Isidro de Espinosa]] and tried unsuccessfully to get him and his associates to come to the Rancheria Grande and meet with the rest of their families. By the 1740s when most of the Yojuane moved to the San Gabriel River missions the Simoni seem to have lost their seperate identity and become subsumed within the Yojuane people.


==Sources==
==Sources==

Revision as of 08:07, 10 December 2011

The Simonos were a Native American group who originally lived in Nuevo Leon. In the late 1580s or maybe slightly earlier the pressure of the Spanish incursion caused the Simoni to migrate north of the Rio Grande and join forces with the Yojuane as part of the greater Jumano league.

By 1709 the Simono were living in eastern Texas along the Rio Brazos in an area known as the Rancheria Grande. In that year a hunting party of Simoni as well as Yojuane and Tusonibi encountered the expedition of Isidro de Espinosa and tried unsuccessfully to get him and his associates to come to the Rancheria Grande and meet with the rest of their families. By the 1740s when most of the Yojuane moved to the San Gabriel River missions the Simoni seem to have lost their seperate identity and become subsumed within the Yojuane people.

Sources

  • Anderson, Gary Clayton. The Indian Southwest. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1999.
  • Barr, Juliana. Peace Came in the Form of a Woman. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2007.