Utinahica

Archaeological sites identified with all other known Timucuan-speakers, with the possible exception of Guadalquini, do not have affinities with the Square Ground Lamar culture.

[3] In 1597, Fray Pedro de Chozas led an expedition of three Spaniards and 30 Guales into interior Georgia, visiting several provinces or chiefdoms, including Tama, Ocute, Talufa, Usatipa, and a populous area near the fork where the Oconee and Ocmulgee rivers form the Altamaha River, which Worth interprets as Utinahica.

The town sent two men to St, Augustine in 1636 as part of the annual labor draft from Guale Province.

Sometime in the 1630s or 1640s (Worth says between 1636 and 1655), the people of Utinahica moved down the Altamaha River to join the mission of San Buenaventura de Guadalquini on St. Simon's Island.

Clara, identified as a cacica (female chief) of Utinahica, was listed as living at the mission in 1685, shortly after Gualdalquini had moved to a site near the St. Johns River.

A map of the Timucua chiefdoms of mainland southeast Georgia, including the Utinahica (peach).