Reviews the book Lost Shores, Forgotten Peoples: Spanish Explorations of the South East Mayan Lowlands, edited and translated by Lawrence H. Feldman.This book is a collection of Spanish documents in translation, mostly from the seventeenth century, regarding the Spanish conquest of the southeast Maya lowlands, and in particular the Manchu Chol people
Includes bibliographical references and index.This volume offers a materialist perspective on coloni...
This report on the northern provinces of New Spain was written in 1799 by Jose Maria Cortes, a lieut...
This substantial two-volume work, incorporating the most current archaeological and historical inves...
The sixteenth-century Spanish conquest in the Americas has significantly altered world history. Unfo...
During the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, most of Mesoamerica was invaded and colonized by the...
The flat, dry reaches of the northern Yucatán Peninsula have been largely ignored by archaeologists ...
This study of an indigenous community combines the use of archival documents with evidence from ar...
At the center of the historic and contemporary Maya homeland in Central America lies the largest tro...
Review of the well-crafted, 11-chapter Pre-Columbian World examining “the Americas” through the rese...
This English translation of two seventeenth- century manuscripts concerning the exploration and sett...
Believing that Maya studies today are suffering from imbalance, J. Eric S. Thompson here approache...
The remarkable descriptions of places and people produced by Francisco Vázquez de Coronado\u27s expe...
Travix W. Stanton and Aline Magnoni, editors.Includes bibliographical references and index.From the ...
Shorter WorksThe Spaniards watched with bated breath. The dust, having been kicked up by hundreds of...
Traditionally history has been na...
Includes bibliographical references and index.This volume offers a materialist perspective on coloni...
This report on the northern provinces of New Spain was written in 1799 by Jose Maria Cortes, a lieut...
This substantial two-volume work, incorporating the most current archaeological and historical inves...
The sixteenth-century Spanish conquest in the Americas has significantly altered world history. Unfo...
During the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, most of Mesoamerica was invaded and colonized by the...
The flat, dry reaches of the northern Yucatán Peninsula have been largely ignored by archaeologists ...
This study of an indigenous community combines the use of archival documents with evidence from ar...
At the center of the historic and contemporary Maya homeland in Central America lies the largest tro...
Review of the well-crafted, 11-chapter Pre-Columbian World examining “the Americas” through the rese...
This English translation of two seventeenth- century manuscripts concerning the exploration and sett...
Believing that Maya studies today are suffering from imbalance, J. Eric S. Thompson here approache...
The remarkable descriptions of places and people produced by Francisco Vázquez de Coronado\u27s expe...
Travix W. Stanton and Aline Magnoni, editors.Includes bibliographical references and index.From the ...
Shorter WorksThe Spaniards watched with bated breath. The dust, having been kicked up by hundreds of...
Traditionally history has been na...
Includes bibliographical references and index.This volume offers a materialist perspective on coloni...
This report on the northern provinces of New Spain was written in 1799 by Jose Maria Cortes, a lieut...
This substantial two-volume work, incorporating the most current archaeological and historical inves...