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sarreal

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Journal Article
Ethnohistory (2017) 64 (1): 152–153.
Published: 01 January 2017
...Thomas Whigham While the broader mission experiment in Paraguay witnessed more than one kind of measurable decline during the Bourbon era, Sarreal proves that there never occurred the sort of sudden collapse suggested in the vine-covered ruins one finds in Paraguay today. She offers the reader...
Journal Article
Ethnohistory (2013) 60 (1): 101–124.
Published: 01 January 2013
...Julia Sarreal Both the Crown and Catholic missionaries believed that frontier Indians needed to practice settled agriculture and animal husbandry in order to become civilized. For over a century Jesuit missionaries among the Guaraní Indians of South America tried to Europeanize mission inhabitants...
Journal Article
Ethnohistory (2022) 69 (4): 371–379.
Published: 01 October 2022
... isolation, these studies are most advanced with regards to the rural missions. See also Jackson 2017 ; Crewe 2019 ; Sarreal 2014 . 6 An early example of this kind of synthesis is Schroeder 2000 . 7 As examples, see the accounts of the seventeenth-century Jesuit Andrés Pérez de Ribas...
Journal Article
Ethnohistory (2013) 60 (4): 795–801.
Published: 01 October 2013
... of the Protector de Indios, San Cristóbal de las Casas, Chiapas, 1870–85  295 Rindfleisch, Bryan. “Our Lands Are Our Life and Breath”: Coweta, Cus- seta, and the Struggle for Creek Territory and Sovereignty during the American Revolution 581 Sarreal, Julia. Revisiting Cultivated...
Journal Article
Ethnohistory (2022) 69 (4): 429–449.
Published: 01 October 2022
... history of Indigenous elites in the missions, see Ganson 2003 ; Sarreal 2014 . 15 In his commentary on the typeface used by the mission printing press, Sepp writes, “A year ago, Father Juan Bautista Neumann, of the Province of Bohemia, introduced the much-needed and long-desired printing press...
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Journal Article
Ethnohistory (2019) 66 (2): 249–273.
Published: 01 April 2019
... of possession and tolderías’ sovereignty. Colonial writers began to narrate Indigenous resistance to new ranches or to cattle runs in their lands as “invasions” of imperial property that derived from what they perceived to be tolderías’ bad temperment (Erbig 2016 ; Sarreal 2014 : 93–114). 24 Similar...
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Journal Article
Ethnohistory (2023) 70 (1): 65–93.
Published: 01 January 2023
..., leading many Natives to rebel and flee (particularly to Brazil) (Wilde 2009 : 195–97, 265; Garcia 2009 : 137; Sarreal 2014 : 140). In these conditions, Madrid hesitated to provide financial support for new missions in Paraguay, but some governors were able to collect important donations from settlers...
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