The remarkable descriptions of places and people produced by Francisco Vázquez de Coronado\u27s expedition constitute the verbal baseline for measuring historical change in southwestern America. Those descriptions are most useful, however, when linked to modern locations. Many of the writers in this essential volume have set themselves to that task
Four hundred and forty-nine years ago this summer, the Kansas prairies were visited for the first ti...
Earlier expeditions made incidental collections of plants and animals in Louisiana Territory, but th...
The history of the Sante Fe Trail has been repeated many times, often with the same material told in...
The remarkable descriptions of places and people produced by Francisco Vázquez de Coronado\u27s expe...
Click on the DOI link to access the article (may not be free).This is likely to be the last work we ...
THE SPANISH FRONTIER IN NORTH AMERICA, by David J. Weber, reviewed by Jerald T. Milanich; THE PEOPLE...
It is unusual to review a book that is a decade old, as Contours of Discovery is, but this is an unu...
This report on the northern provinces of New Spain was written in 1799 by Jose Maria Cortes, a lieut...
Review of: Jefferson and Southwestern Exploration: The Freeman and Custis Accounts of the Red River ...
Stephen Long and American Frontier Exploration is an excellent narrative of early nineteenth- centur...
Some twenty years ago, while preparing a course on the frontier in literature, I first began to rese...
Well written and persuasive, Jason Ruiz gives readers a beautiful book on Americans’ literal and fig...
Although this book promises to examine the Indians who lived in West Texas between the late sixteent...
The subjects addressed in this book are familiar ones: Spanish exploration of the American Southwest...
In the introduction to Finding Lewis and Clark, co-editor James Rhonda articulates four questions th...
Four hundred and forty-nine years ago this summer, the Kansas prairies were visited for the first ti...
Earlier expeditions made incidental collections of plants and animals in Louisiana Territory, but th...
The history of the Sante Fe Trail has been repeated many times, often with the same material told in...
The remarkable descriptions of places and people produced by Francisco Vázquez de Coronado\u27s expe...
Click on the DOI link to access the article (may not be free).This is likely to be the last work we ...
THE SPANISH FRONTIER IN NORTH AMERICA, by David J. Weber, reviewed by Jerald T. Milanich; THE PEOPLE...
It is unusual to review a book that is a decade old, as Contours of Discovery is, but this is an unu...
This report on the northern provinces of New Spain was written in 1799 by Jose Maria Cortes, a lieut...
Review of: Jefferson and Southwestern Exploration: The Freeman and Custis Accounts of the Red River ...
Stephen Long and American Frontier Exploration is an excellent narrative of early nineteenth- centur...
Some twenty years ago, while preparing a course on the frontier in literature, I first began to rese...
Well written and persuasive, Jason Ruiz gives readers a beautiful book on Americans’ literal and fig...
Although this book promises to examine the Indians who lived in West Texas between the late sixteent...
The subjects addressed in this book are familiar ones: Spanish exploration of the American Southwest...
In the introduction to Finding Lewis and Clark, co-editor James Rhonda articulates four questions th...
Four hundred and forty-nine years ago this summer, the Kansas prairies were visited for the first ti...
Earlier expeditions made incidental collections of plants and animals in Louisiana Territory, but th...
The history of the Sante Fe Trail has been repeated many times, often with the same material told in...