Soldiers, Indians and silver
Author: Philip Wayne Powell
Publisher: Univ of California Press
Published: 1969
Total Pages: 336
ISBN-13:
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Author: Philip Wayne Powell
Publisher: Univ of California Press
Published: 1969
Total Pages: 336
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Alan Knight
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Published: 2002-10-07
Total Pages: 380
ISBN-13: 9780521891967
DOWNLOAD EBOOKThis 2002 book, the second in a three-volume history of Mexico, covers the period 1521 to 1821.
Author: Philip W. Powell
Publisher:
Published: 1975
Total Pages: 0
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Peter Rhoads Silver
Publisher: W. W. Norton & Company
Published: 2008
Total Pages: 436
ISBN-13: 9780393334906
DOWNLOAD EBOOKIn potent, graceful prose that sensitively unearths the social complexity and tangled history of colonial relations, Silver presents an astonishingly vivid picture of 18th-century America. 13 illustrations; 2 maps.
Author: Travis Jeffres
Publisher: U of Nebraska Press
Published: 2023-06
Total Pages: 268
ISBN-13: 1496236432
DOWNLOAD EBOOKIn The Forgotten Diaspora Travis Jeffres explores how Native Mexicans involved in the conquest of the Greater Southwest pursued hidden agendas, deploying a covert agency that enabled them to reconstruct Indigenous communities and retain key components of their identities even as they were technically allied with and subordinate to Spaniards. Resisting, modifying, and even flatly ignoring Spanish directives, Indigenous Mexicans in diaspora co-created the U.S.-Mexico borderlands and laid enduring claims to the region. Jeffres contends that tens of thousands—perhaps hundreds of thousands—of central Mexican Natives were indispensable to Spanish colonial expansion in the Greater Southwest in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. These vital allies populated frontier settlements, assisted in converting local Indians to Christianity, and provided essential labor in the mining industry that drove frontier expansion and catapulted Spain to global hegemony. However, Nahuatl records reveal that Indigenous migrants were no mere auxiliaries to European colonial causes; they also subverted imperial aims and pursued their own agendas, wresting lands, privileges, and even rights to self-rule from the Spanish Crown. Via Nahuatl-language “hidden transcripts” of Native allies’ motivations and agendas, The Forgotten Diaspora reimagines this critical yet neglected component of the hemispheric colonial-era scattering of the Americas’ Indigenous peoples.
Author: Benjamin Lieberman
Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Published: 2013-03-22
Total Pages: 319
ISBN-13: 1442213957
DOWNLOAD EBOOKFor centuries conquerors, missionaries, and political movements acting in the name of a single god, nation, or race have sought to remake human identities. Tracing the rise of exclusive forms of identity over the past 1500 years, this innovative book explores both the creation and destruction of exclusive identities, including those based on nationalism and monotheistic religion. Benjamin Lieberman focuses on two critical phases of world history: the age of holy war and conversion, and the age of nationalism and racism. His cases include the rise of Islam, the expansion of medieval Christianity, Spanish conquests in the Americas, Muslim expansion in India, settler expansion in North America, nationalist cleansing in modern Europe and Asia, and Nazi Germany’s efforts to build a racial empire. He convincingly shows that efforts to transplant and expand new identities have paradoxically generated long periods of both stability and explosive violence that remade the human landscape around the world.
Author: Robert H. Jackson
Publisher: Cambridge Scholars Publishing
Published: 2018-10-09
Total Pages: 255
ISBN-13: 1527518280
DOWNLOAD EBOOKIn his historical satirical novel Candide, Voltaire (François-Marie Arouet) presented a fanciful vision of the Jesuit missions established among the Guaraní in parts of what today are Argentina, Paraguay, and Brazil. Some scholars have characterized the missions as having been a socialist utopia, or an independent republic located on the fringes of Spanish territory in South America. What was the reality? This study presents a detailed analysis of one of the Jesuit missions, Los Santos Mártires del Japón, and the story of the creation of mission communities on a frontier contested by Spain and Portugal during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. It documents the historical realities of the Jesuit missions, their patterns of development, and the demographic consequences for the mission populations of military conflict.
Author: United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Agriculture and Forestry
Publisher:
Published: 1934
Total Pages: 806
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Andrew L. Toth
Publisher: iUniverse
Published: 2012-10-15
Total Pages: 356
ISBN-13: 9781475947458
DOWNLOAD EBOOKThe work and ministries of the Roman Catholic friars who gave their lives, both as martyrs for the cause of their church and in years of hard and often thankless labor, are the inspiration and basis for Missionary Practices and Spanish Steel, a theological and practical narrative that seeks to remember and understand their accomplishments in Christian mission. Missionary and theologian Andrew L. Toth investigates the roots of Christian mission as it developed into the field of Christian missiology in the chaotic, terrible, and incredibly diverse three-hundred-year Spanish conquest of North America indigenous nations. Through his research Toth shows that, in the great majority of the cases studied, the friars accomplished their goals to transform these native cultures into their own Spanish culture to account them as Roman Catholic Christians. This study us more than just a history of the friars missionary movement. Toth not only explores how Spanish Catholic missionaries approached their work, but also asks to what extent their approach conformed to a particular theological perspective. Toth rounds out his argument by speculating on what the friars can teach us about the role of missionaries today. Comprehensive and thought-provoking, Missionary Practices and Spanish Steel offers a new perspective on the current missionary movement by looking through the lens of the past.
Author: Roberto Mario Salmón
Publisher: University Press of America
Published: 1991
Total Pages: 164
ISBN-13: 9780819179838
DOWNLOAD EBOOKThis book surveys and evaluates Indian revolts in northern New Spain during the years 1680-1786 in terms of specific Indian revolts, Spanish Indian policy over time, and relations between Spaniards, mestizo frontiersmen, and Indians. In this study, northern New Spain refers to what is now the Mexican North and the southwestern United States.