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rental
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Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (1994) 74 (3): 541–542.
Published: 01 August 1994
...Susan Berglund In Search of a Home: Rental and Shared Housing in Latin America . By Gilbert Alan . Tucson : University of Arizona Press , 1993 . Maps. Tables. Figures. Notes. Bibliography. Index . xii , 177 pp. Cloth . $45.00 . Copyright 1994 by Duke University Press 1994...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (1987) 67 (2): 203–231.
Published: 01 May 1987
... notaries recorded most of the internal business of the Indian world in Nahuatl until the late eighteenth century. Literally thousands of these documents survive in the form of petitions, cabildo minutes, land rental and land sale documents, wills, and many others. Taken together, they provide the most...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (1986) 66 (2): 374–375.
Published: 01 May 1986
... observed for other localities, while others are unique to Morelos. Spaniards pieced together their rural estates with units of land acquired through direct grant, proxy, purchase, and rental. There was little conflict over natural resources until the late colonial period. In fact, the Indian communities...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (2002) 82 (2): 393–394.
Published: 01 May 2002
... and their managerial proxies. Rather, Peloso shows that over time labor encompassed many forms, from indentured servitude for Chinese workers, to wage labor, to mixed sharecropping and rental arrangements, and finally to a more restrictive type of sharecropping known in Peru as yanaconaje . Moreover, many...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (1981) 61 (1): 129–130.
Published: 01 February 1981
... of the two countries. Hirst suggests that reliance on land rental rather than ownership had a negative impact on the development of Argentine agriculture, but in a commentary, Ezequiel Gallo challenges the “black legend” of renting (p. 100) and argues that Argentina’s characteristic system of land tenure had...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (1984) 64 (2): 399–401.
Published: 01 May 1984
... of social structure have been made on the basis of occupational figures of the 1908 census. Researchers have been unable to disaggregate those occupations they consider middle-class from those they consider upper-class. Barrán and Nahum solve this problem by using the Montevideo rental housing section...
Journal Article
Chiefdoms under Siege: Spain’s Rule and Native Adaptation in the Southern Colombian Andes, 1555–1700
Hispanic American Historical Review (1999) 79 (1): 135–137.
Published: 01 February 1999
... by the Audiencia, in the form of composición de tierras realengas , was substantial. Areas surrounding administrative centers were those hit first and hardest by Spanish encroachments. In the seventeenth century, indigenous rental of land to Spaniards, in part to supply the former with cash for tribute payments...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (1973) 53 (1): 50–70.
Published: 01 February 1973
... was convenient. Moreover, renters of freedmen were to be allowed to renew the rental agreements as often as necessary until the completion of the fourteen-year term, after which the freedmen were to be without further obligation. This period, said the decree of 1818, could be shortened by two or more years...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (2007) 87 (2): 353–362.
Published: 01 May 2007
... of the cost of living at any level of society between virtual strangers might be seen as the ultimate indignity. Interestingly, residential space was not advertised in newspapers, leaving the impression that rental agents relied upon word of mouth to find tenants. What few rental advertisements did appear...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (1998) 78 (3): 367–418.
Published: 01 August 1998
... in most years a few widows also held rentals. Women rarely appear in late colonial hacienda accounts—yet they were essential to the sustenance of their families. They kept gardens and raised small livestock, and they “helped” work estate fields, with their labor credited to their fathers’, husbands...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (1979) 59 (1): 34–63.
Published: 01 February 1979
... system. As demand rises for commodities and then for land and labor, the estates become economically unstable and evolve into different forms, usually through some sort of family-size rental scheme (including sharecropping) and toward wage labor. 32 In a broad global survey of rural class relations...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (1985) 65 (2): 255–277.
Published: 01 May 1985
... or astute enough to have preserved their capital. 11 With the opportunities in silver mining so limited, the Sucre elite turned its attention to the landed estates. Various efforts were made to extract larger profits from the haciendas, primarily by increasing rental payments and changing labor...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (1992) 72 (4): 599–600.
Published: 01 November 1992
... Venâncio and one by Katia de Quiros Mattoso. The first speculates that the Law of the Free Womb (1871) provoked increased abandonment of slave children and the rental of their mothers as wet nurses. The latter presents valuable demographic information on slave fertility, family formation, and the stages...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (1988) 68 (4): 827–828.
Published: 01 November 1988
... with selected purchases in an effective long-term plan which rationalized both urban and rural acquisitions. They combined rental properties in Mérida with diversified (cacao, sugar, cattle) and, whenever possible, contiguous holdings in the countryside. The goal was to maximize growth and income...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (1989) 69 (2): 259–281.
Published: 01 May 1989
..., exp. 129, AHMC and El Heraldo , July 1, 1901. The figure recorded in El Heraldo comes from an advertisement for the rental of said property, and was the base price at which the hacienda was being offered in rental. The base price reflected the amount received in the previous rental period. Other...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (1997) 77 (1): 110–111.
Published: 01 February 1997
.... Their methods ranged from the most blatant—outright violence, fraudulent manipulation of sales and rental agreements, theft of title documents, and the deliberate unleashing of livestock on lands they coveted—to somewhat more subtle maneuvers, including marriage to Indian women. Authorities declared “vacant...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (1998) 78 (2): 335–336.
Published: 01 May 1998
... frequently. Constructed primarily from wood, upper-class Panamanian homes typically rose to two or three stories, but shops and stores usually occupied much of the first floor. Real estate investment for rental purposes was commonplace, accounting for a fair number of prominent fortunes...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (2000) 80 (2): 350–351.
Published: 01 May 2000
... and livestock belonging to the missions, the haciendas Tabaloapa and Dolores, the Colegio’s physical plant and library, and a few urban rental properties and liens, along with three haciendas owned by the Colegio de San Pedro y San Pablo in Mexico City. Apache attacks, political upheavals, outstanding debts...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (1968) 48 (2): 326–328.
Published: 01 May 1968
..., individual family farming, and farming on the sharecropper and rental system. All are being developed in Central Chile by the Instituto de Promoción Agraria (INPROA) established in June 1963 to conduct reform projects on lands set aside for that purpose by the Bishop of Talca and the Archbishop of Santiago...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (1981) 61 (4): 742–743.
Published: 01 November 1981
... efficient business enterprise that differed from other successful colonial Mexican estates only in its long stability of ownership and in certain features of social organization due in part to Jesuit celibacy. With regard to administrative and management patterns, rental and production strategies...
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