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cicero

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Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (1968) 48 (3): 402–420.
Published: 01 August 1968
..., 1914); and A sedição do Joazeiro (São Paulo, 1922). Important documents regarding the sedition are in Pinheiro, Efemérides . Also consult the pioneering effort of Abelardo Montenegro, História dos partidos políticos cearenses (Fortaleza, 1965). 56 For Father Cícero’s own explanation of his...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (1972) 52 (2): 318–319.
Published: 01 May 1972
...Rollie E. Poppino These, however, are minor flaws in an excellent history. Della Cava’s clarification of the role of Padre Cícero, his insights into the nature of municipal government after 1889, and his assessment of the importance of the national government as a source of funds and patronage...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (1942) 22 (3): 553–556.
Published: 01 August 1942
... Editora , 1940 . Pp. 164 .) Região e tradição . By Freyre Gilberto . Prefacio de Lins do Regó José . Illustrações de Dias Cicero . [ Coleçõo Documentos Brasileiros, Vol. 29 .] ( Rio de Janeiro : Livraria José Olympio Editora , 1941 . Pp. 264 .) Copyright 1942 by Duke...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (1973) 53 (4): 667–668.
Published: 01 November 1973
... perspectives, of phenomena that they have already discussed intelligently—Padre Cicero’s political trajectory, and the suffocation of the peasant leagues in the Zona da Mata. The “overviews” by Marvin Harris and Roger Bastide are lucid demythifications of ruling-class ideology—the former is especially shrewd...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (1979) 59 (4): 722–723.
Published: 01 November 1979
...Nancy M. Farriss Perspectiva religiosa en Yucatán, 1514-1571: Yucatán, los franciscanos y el primer obispo fray Francisco de Toral . By Cicero Stella María González . México , 1978 . El Colegio de México . Maps. Illustrations. Appendixes. Notes. Bibliography . Pp. vii , 254...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (2003) 83 (4): 747–748.
Published: 01 November 2003
..., Las Casas’s favorite historian, Cicero, argued that telling the truth about the past—history—sometimes has a higher calling than mere veracity. We are called to condemn and to affirm, to convict and to teach, and in Las Casas’s case, not simply convict the conquest but proselytize the Indians...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (2018) 98 (3): 553–554.
Published: 01 August 2018
... . Copyright © 2018 by Duke University Press 2018 The interconnectedness of the ideas of the city and the civil, the city and citizenship, has been around since classical antiquity, as the linguistic proximity between the terms indicates. Cicero was perhaps the first to articulate the concept...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (1998) 78 (3): 528–529.
Published: 01 August 1998
... of the alternatives (pp. 67-72). While it is no doubt true that the power of Pentecostalism resides partly in its ability to cure physical and social ills, it is also true that the miraculous healing powers of popular Catholic saints such as Aparecida, Anastacia, and Padre Cicero constitute a large part...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (2014) 94 (4): 707–709.
Published: 01 November 2014
... this Bahian region as it stood during the late nineteenth century. A major challenge is to establish the basic structure of landowning. Part of this involves the accumulation of wealth and power throughout the nineteenth century by the Dantas family, and most especially through the figure of Cícero Dantas...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (2022) 102 (3): 538–539.
Published: 01 August 2022
... by focusing especially on sermons of Jesuit missionaries operating in the Americas, as well as East and South Asia. The chapter's central character is the “Japanese Cicero” Hara Martinho, who was educated in the Jesuit college at Arima before working in the missions at Goa and Macao. Similarly, chapter 4...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (2017) 97 (2): 375–377.
Published: 01 May 2017
... this religious transformation in a strictly European context,” Ralph Bauer examines instead “how colonial ethnography participated in this [early modern] philosophical/theological debate and religious transformation” (pp. 48–49). Sandra Gustafson uses Cicero and Augustine as representatives of secular versus...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (2021) 101 (2): 309–310.
Published: 01 May 2021
... of the term's definition in many places and periods, from Cicero to Michel de Montaigne and from Europe to Sonora, is a standard set of values involving reciprocity, loyalty, sentiment, and intimacy. Friendship is a social system of connections via affection and mutual caring established voluntarily outside...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (1988) 68 (3): 525–572.
Published: 01 August 1988
... children, who walked with him, and Conselheiro Francisco, a “jovial cabra” (mulatto) who helped build a church in Cumbe near Canudos, and who went to Canudos every two weeks to say mass. An even better-known example is Padre Cícero Romão Batista, who had exercised a perfectly conventional chaplaincy...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (1965) 45 (3): 477–480.
Published: 01 August 1965
..., such as the worship of the saints and the adoration of images, they were far apart. The fiercely intolerant Zumárraga, burner of heretics, could hardly have approved Erasmus’ view that such pagans as Cicero and Socrates were more deserving of the title of saint than many a Christian canonized by the Pope! My...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (1989) 69 (2): 381–388.
Published: 01 May 1989
... by Cicero in Rome? Or to compare the military ties under a nineteenth-century caudillo with those of medieval vassalage? Why is this dubbed mere “rhetoric”? Analogical does not mean identical. An analogy is a proportionality or a basis for comparing relationships. It enables one to see precisely what things...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (2001) 81 (3-4): 786–789.
Published: 01 August 2001
... that in colonial Peru the texts of authors such as Ovid, Terence, Cicero, and Aristotle seemed to have been as ubiquitous as the vultures and open sewers that greeted travelers upon arrival in Callao. In sixteenth-century Huamanga, Huncavelica, and Potosí, for example, a visitor could have found along mitayos...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (1969) 49 (1): 94–99.
Published: 01 February 1969
..., which in O’Gorman’s opinion is the fundamental premise upon which the Apologética historic rests. Las Casas’ ontology went back to Greco-Roman antiquity and in particular to Cicero: “All the peoples of the world are men, and there is only one definition for all men and for each man...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (1967) 47 (2): 314–319.
Published: 01 May 1967
...—classified by recent scholarship as “messianic.” They arose in the Brazilian Northeast during the last two decades of the Empire and continued to evolve under the “Old Republic” (1889-1930). The first was led by Antonio Conselheiro in Canudos and the second by the suspended priest, Padre Cicero Romão Batista...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (1972) 52 (3): 359–394.
Published: 01 August 1972
... not only as geographical and statutory (Cicero) or national and worldwide (Philo) but also as transitory and eternal (Seneca). Eventually, the tyranny of imperial Rome, its depredations against the municipalities, and the collapse of civic spirit opened paths for Christianity and vitalized...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (1976) 56 (1): 81–109.
Published: 01 February 1976
... contested by recent scholars. Della Cava saw the Canudos rebels not as “isolated” in the backcountry, but as reacting to pressures from state and federal authorities—financial, political and religious. Much of his argument was based on his research into the career of Padre Cícero, the Cearense priest who...