Notes and Queries, Number 27, May 4, 1850
The subject of the Mosquito country has lately acquired a general interest. I am anxious to insert the following Notes and Queries in your useful periodical, hoping thus to elicit additional information, or to assist other inquirers.
1. As to the origin of the name. I believe it to be probably derived from an native name of a tribe of Indians in that part of America. The Spanish Central Americans speak of Moscos . Juarros, A Spanish Central American author, in his History of Guatemala , names the Moscos among other Indians inhabiting the north-eastern corner of that tract of country now called Mosquito : and in the Mosquito Correspondence laid before Parliament in 1848, the inhabitants of Mosquito are called Moscos in the Spanish state-papers.
How and when would Mosco have become Mosquito ? Was it a Spanish elongation of the name, or an English corruption? In the former case, it would probably have been another name of the people: in the latter, probably a name given to the part of the coast near which the Moscos lived.
The form Mosquito , or Moskito , or Muskito , (as the word is variously spelt in our old books), is doubtless as old as the earliest English intercourse with the Indians of the Mosquito coast; and that may be as far back as about 1630: it is certainly as far back as 1650.
If the name came from the synonymous insect, would it have been given by the Spaniards or the English? Mosquito is the Spanish diminutive name of a fly: but what we call a mosquito, the Spaniards in Central America call by another name, sanchujo . The Spaniards had very little connexion at any time with the Mosquito Indians; and as mosquitoes are not more abundant on their parts of the coast than on other parts, or in the interior, where the Spaniards settled, there would have been no reason for their giving the name on account of insects. Nor, indeed, would the English, who went to the coast from Jamaica, or other West India Islands, where mosquitoes are quite as abundant, have had any such reason either. At Bluefields where the writer has resided, which was one of the first places on the Mosquito coast frequented by English, and which derives its name from an old English buccaneer, there are no mosquitoes at all. At Grey Town, at the mouth of the river San Juan, there are plenty; but not more than in Jamaica, or in the towns of the interior state of Nicaragua. However names are not always given so as to be argument-proof.
Various
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NOTES AND QUERIES:
A MEDIUM OF INTER-COMMUNICATION FOR LITERARY MEN, ARTISTS, ANTIQUARIES, GENEALOGISTS, ETC.
CONTENTS
THE MOSQUITO COUNTRY.—ORIGIN OF THE NAME.—EARLY CONNECTION OF THE MOSQUITO INDIANS WITH THE ENGLISH.
NOTES ON BACON AND JEREMY TAYLOR.
DUKE OF MONMOUTH'S CORRESPONDENCE.
PARNELL.
EARLY ENGLISH AND EARLY GERMAN LITERATURE.—"NEWS" AND "NOISE."
FOLK LORE.
THE ANGLO-SAXON WORD "UNLAED."
BP. COSIN'S MSS.—INDEX TO BAKER'S MSS.
ARABIC NUMERALS AND CIPHER.
ROMAN NUMERALS.
ERROR IN HALLAM'S HISTORY OF LITERATURE.
NOTES FROM CUNNINGHAM'S HANDBOOK FOR LONDON.
ANECDOTE OF CHARLES I.
QUERIES.
THE MAUDELEYNE GRACE.
"ESQUIRE" AND "GENTLEMAN."
FIVE QUERIES.
QUERIES PROPOSED, NO. I.
MINOR QUERIES.
REPLIES.
EARLY STATISTICS.—CHART, KENT.
PARISH REGISTER STATISTICS.—CHART, KENT.
EARLY STATISTICS.—PARISH REGISTERS.
BYRON'S LARA.
REPLIES TO MINOR QUERIES.
IRON RAILINGS ROUND ST. PAUL'S.
MISCELLANEOUS.
NOTES ON BOOKS, CATALOGUES, SALES, ETC.
BOOKS AND ODD VOLUMES
NOTICES TO CORRESPONDENTS.