218:, repeated unsubstantiated stories to the effect that Marin and some other chiefs were light-skinned, intelligent, and leaders because they were descendants of a Spaniard from a shipwrecked galleon. Goerke, who has recently brought together the factual and mythic details of Marin's life, states, "Assumptions that such a lineage made them qualified to be leaders were examples of nineteenth-century racism and ethnocentrism."
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an engagement ensued with Marin, in which he was made prisoner and conducted to the station at San
Francisco, from which he escaped, and again reaching Petaluma, he united his scattered forces, and thence- forward dedicated his most strenuous efforts to harass the troops in their hostile incursions
198:
This report is considered semi-historical. It puts the chief as a (prisoner) resident of the San
Francisco mission about 1816/17. Mission records show in those years, his second wife Dona died there, and he married his third wife, Juana.
185:", and the one the County of Marin is named after. Vallejo headed the committee that named the counties. He commented in a semi-historical report on the origins of County names to the first California State Legislature in 1850:
189:"Marin. This is the name of the great chief of the tribe Licatiut....In the year 1815 or 1816 a military expedition proceeded to explore the country north of the bay of San Francisco, and on returning by the
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at
Mission San Francisco de AsĂs, and also married on the same day to Marina Mottiqui. The recorder wrote in the baptismal register that he was about twenty years old ("como de 20"), that his native name was
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into that part of the country....but was again taken captive to San
Francisco in 1824; whence being set at liberty, he retired to the mission of San Rafael, and there died in 1834." -- General Vallejo, 1850
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In subsequent mission records, the Chief appeared as a godparent, a parent (once, a son died at birth), and a widower in the death records of his wives. His name was spelled variously
102:'s semi-historical report to the first California State Legislature in 1850. Historical records indicate that he was baptized as a young man at
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local tribe. The identities of his parents were not provided, typical of
Franciscan baptismal entries for adult Indians.
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The young man's new wife Marina died the next year on July 17, 1802. He subsequently remarried to a woman named
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Chief Marin, Leader, Rebel, and Legend: A History of Marin County's
Namesake and his People
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Report to the First
California State Legislature in 1850; as reprinted by H. M. Moreno,
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General
Vallejo gave Marin very early credence in 1850 as the "great chief of the tribe
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Marin first appears in the historical record on March 7, 1801, when he was baptized as
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Early
California Population Project Database: Baptism ID SFD:05463.
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Early
California Population Project Database: Baptism ID SFD:01603.
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Early California Population Project Database: Baptism ID SFD 02188
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Early California Population Project Database: Baptism ID SFD:02182
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Moreno's Dictionary of Spanish-Named California Cities and Towns.
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in the 1820s. Marin died on March 15, 1839, of natural causes.
86:(c. 1781 – March 15, 1839) was the "great chief of the tribe
349:. San Francisco, CA: Publisher Scottwall Associates, 1986.
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Several late nineteenth-century historians, such as
202:His death is recorded at the San Rafael Mission.
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324:Early California Population Project Database
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380:: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (
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77:(1) Marina Mottiqui, (2) Dona, (3) Juana
132:are believed to be named in his honor.
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23:Chief Marin (aka Huicmuse and Marino)
414:People from Marin County, California
361:Vallejo, Mariano Guadalupe (1914) ,
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110:) in 1801 and eventually moved to
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299:Vallejo 1850 (Mariano 1916:51).
327:, The Huntington Library, 2006
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104:Mission San Francisco de AsĂs
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112:Mission San Rafael Arcángel
58:Mission San Rafael Arcángel
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335:. Berkeley: Heyday Books.
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149:and that he came from the
108:San Francisco, California
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96:Marin County, California
36:Marin County, California
16:Amerindian tribal leader
409:Native American leaders
290:Goerke 2007:48-49, 150.
370:, San Luis Obispo, CA.
94:native to present-day
331:Goerke, Betty. 2007.
347:Place Names of Marin
216:Hubert Howe Bancroft
308:Goerke 2007:190-191
118:), where he was an
419:Coast Miwok people
60:, California, U.S.
345:Teather, Louise.
341:978-1-59714-053-9
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69:Chief of Licatiut
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90:" (a branch of
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126:Marin County
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404:1839 deaths
92:Coast Miwok
84:Chief Marin
393:Categories
316:References
116:San Rafael
66:Occupation
50:1839-03-15
136:Biography
74:Spouse(s)
376:citation
183:Licatiut
147:Huicmuse
128:and the
88:Licatiut
206:Legends
177:Marino.
121:alcalde
32:c. 1781
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151:Huimen
142:Marino
38:, U.S.
357:paper
222:Notes
173:Marin
166:Juana
382:link
351:ISBN
337:ISBN
214:and
162:Doda
160:(or
158:Dona
114:(of
106:(of
44:Died
29:Born
175:or
395::
378:}}
374:{{
230:^
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52:)
48:(
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