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Journal Article
Ethnohistory (2019) 66 (1): 201–202.
Published: 01 January 2019
...Sheri Shuck-Hall Bending Their Way Onward: Creek Indian Removal in Documents . Edited and annotated by Christopher D. Haveman . ( Lincoln : University of Nebraska Press , 2018 . xvii+843 pp., illustrations, maps, acknowledgments, notes, bibliography, index. $85.00 hardcover...
Journal Article
Ethnohistory (2004) 51 (2): 257–291.
Published: 01 April 2004
...Alan Passes The article focuses on the process of naoné —nationhood—of the Palikur, a Native American people of northern Brazil and southern French Guiana, from 1500 onward. It is described how, in counteraction to colonial expansion, a corpus of preexisting clans combined with diverse other...
Journal Article
Ethnohistory (2018) 65 (1): 183–184.
Published: 01 January 2018
.... This was important from the mid-1940s onward, as peasants intensified their fight against land dispossession, labor exploitation, and other abuses by hacendados . Heilman perceptively emphasizes that Llamojha found meaning and motivation in his advocacy. Beginning in the 1950s, as his prominence as an activist...
Journal Article
Ethnohistory (2018) 65 (4): 694–695.
Published: 01 October 2018
... much of the fourth chapter describes the evolution of slave control policies from the conquest onward. Finally, his secondary sources are dated and lack relevant works published in English such as María Elena Martínez’s excellent study of the supposed Mexico City uprisings of 1608 and 1612 and Matthew...
Journal Article
Ethnohistory (2018) 65 (2): 338–339.
Published: 01 April 2018
... has our attention, Gary Van Valen uses it well. The Mojos lived in savannas along the Mamoré River as it flows toward Brazil. From 1682 onward, they congregated onto Jesuit missions in what later became the Department of Beni. Van Valen traces their trajectory through the eighteenth and nineteenth...
Journal Article
Ethnohistory (2019) 66 (4): 745–747.
Published: 01 October 2019
... peoples to New Spain’s northern frontiers from the sixteenth century onward? To date, the two most documented patterns of this migration involve indios conquistadores , who accompanied early Spanish expeditions and homogenous Tlaxcalan “colonies,” financed by the crown to assist Spaniards...
Journal Article
Ethnohistory (2019) 66 (3): 613–615.
Published: 01 July 2019
... produced from the seventeenth century onward. Restall has also read the voluminous scholarly literature on the “Aztecs” and their military defeat by Spaniards, though he greatly complicates narratives of their identity and that defeat. While he divides this vast source base into archival, printed primary...
Journal Article
Ethnohistory (2018) 65 (4): 597–620.
Published: 01 October 2018
... dwelling sites, each hosting one group and its allies, has been represented as a Yao-Carib rivalry in the first half of the seventeenth century, and as Palikur-Galibi confrontation from then onward. Although ethnogenesis changed these ethnic groups, and despite the centrality of the Palikur-Galibi...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Ethnohistory (2010) 57 (1): 165–173.
Published: 01 January 2010
..., they burned him alive. And thus, from this time onwards, they used strings and khipus . . . and boys were taught the method of counting by khipus, adding different colors, which served as letters, with which their tiny republic was ennobled. (Montesinos 2007 [1644]: 130...
Journal Article
Ethnohistory (2019) 66 (1): 189–193.
Published: 01 January 2019
..., contacts, movements, numbers, and cultural activities of primitive peoples from the earliest written records concerning them, onward in point of time.” In this definition, Wheeler-Voegelin lays out a research agenda mostly derived from the research for the Indians Claims Commission. Today, however...
Journal Article
Ethnohistory (2023) 70 (2): 153–165.
Published: 01 April 2023
... for the recovery of Indigenous lands and identity along with state policies that, especially from the 1980s onward, favored the reestablishment of resguardos and Indigenous semiautonomous government councils, known as cabildos (Houghton 2008 ). Since 1994, Colombian laws have required colonial resguardos...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Ethnohistory (2004) 51 (2): 429–433.
Published: 01 April 2004
... introduction onward. Unfortunately for Graham (perhaps the only living archaeologist who can rival Maudslay as an explorer), Maudslay did not leave behind the kind of personal materials that would give more insight into his character and make for a page-turning biography. As Graham notes, this dearth...
Journal Article
Ethnohistory (2010) 57 (3): 357–362.
Published: 01 July 2010
..., director of the popular NEH Summer Institutes on Native History and Literature in the 1980s and 1990s.16 From the 1980s onward Dobyns conducted extensive archival research as expert witness for the Gila River Pima in their litigation concerning water rights. As senior researcher...
Journal Article
Ethnohistory (2017) 64 (2): 271–296.
Published: 01 April 2017
... the canonical status of books published by European naturalists from the late 1810s onward. However, Marlière’s voice is evident in many of these narratives as he facilitated outsider access to Jê communities. My goals are twofold: to recover his vivid, humanizing observations about Jê peoples and to use...
Journal Article
Ethnohistory (2012) 59 (1): 163–169.
Published: 01 January 2012
... from 1800 onward. In the course of this study, Tiger underwent a deep professional trans- formation, which he eloquently described in his paper “From Skeptic to Believer: The Making of an Oral Historian” (1991a). He acknowledged the elders’ pivotal contribution to his new vision. His ‘rst...
Journal Article
Ethnohistory (2018) 65 (3): 417–440.
Published: 01 July 2018
... and the start of its operations in 1885. From 1890 onward, HBC’s supplies for the post at Osnaburgh House were brought in from Wabigoon, rather than by the traditional route up the Albany River from James Bay (Rogers 1994 : 320). Recall that Sam related that people at Slate Falls quit the run from James Bay...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Ethnohistory (2015) 62 (2): 195–216.
Published: 01 April 2015
... it as a commodity for exchange with Native Americans. The Emergence of Monetary Instability and the Struggle to Find a Solution From 1629 onward, however, the colony began to adopt an economic policy of liberalization due to political demands for democratization. As soon as this liberalization...
Journal Article
Ethnohistory (2012) 59 (3): 465–488.
Published: 01 July 2012
... machinery of English funds supporting local missionaries sprang into action New London minister Eliphalet Adams held “frequent lectures” among the Pequots from at least 1735 onward, including them in his occa- sional itinerant journeys into Indian country, and similarly, the North Gro- ton...
Journal Article
Ethnohistory (2010) 57 (2): 201–223.
Published: 01 April 2010
... onward. The authors of a text on women in early modern England pose the ques- tion: “Why did certain women manage to assert formal civil and political rights . . . and why did these rights deteriorate or disappear over the course of the seventeenth century?”7 Susan Amussen argued that declining...
Journal Article
Ethnohistory (2008) 55 (4): 673–674.
Published: 01 October 2008
... children suffered from intellectual inferiority. Fear-Segal also asserts that this notion did not develop in the twentieth century, as others have argued, but that it shaped the development of the Indian education system from its formative years onward. She concludes that the ultimate irony...