Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, Volumen 14,Parte 1U.S. Government Printing Office, 1896 "List of publications of the Bureau of American Ethnology (comp. by Frederick Webb Hodge)": |
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Página lii
... things involves appeal to the unknown , and through habit the unknown itself has come to be formulated in terms of the mysterious . The explanation of the color bands of the raccoon , by saying that he painted his face and body with LII ...
... things involves appeal to the unknown , and through habit the unknown itself has come to be formulated in terms of the mysterious . The explanation of the color bands of the raccoon , by saying that he painted his face and body with LII ...
Página lix
... things ; habit- ual materialization of natural forces in strained imagination ; habitual peopling of the air , the earth , and the waters with shadowy images ; habitual indulgence in visionary revery , coupled ADMINISTRATIVE REPORT LIX.
... things ; habit- ual materialization of natural forces in strained imagination ; habitual peopling of the air , the earth , and the waters with shadowy images ; habitual indulgence in visionary revery , coupled ADMINISTRATIVE REPORT LIX.
Página 20
... things , and i in cevery respect , on the same footing upon which they stood before the late war , hhave agreed to the following articles : Att.11.1Every injurypomact of hostility , by one or either of the contracting parties , aagainst ...
... things , and i in cevery respect , on the same footing upon which they stood before the late war , hhave agreed to the following articles : Att.11.1Every injurypomact of hostility , by one or either of the contracting parties , aagainst ...
Página 24
... things , but she did not think he would deny his own mother . The matter was talked over by the tribe , and they did not hesitate to call him a liar . The peculiar ( ? ) Bourbon features of Eleazar were possessed by De Lorimier ...
... things , but she did not think he would deny his own mother . The matter was talked over by the tribe , and they did not hesitate to call him a liar . The peculiar ( ? ) Bourbon features of Eleazar were possessed by De Lorimier ...
Página 27
... things were extremely discouraging for the success of Williams ' plans and the views of the Ogden Company , until the year 1827 , when the following treaty was made , viz : Articles of a treaty made and concluded at the Butte des Morts ...
... things were extremely discouraging for the success of Williams ' plans and the views of the Ogden Company , until the year 1827 , when the following treaty was made , viz : Articles of a treaty made and concluded at the Butte des Morts ...
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Términos y frases comunes
Algonquian alli Alvarado army arrow auia auian aunque Ball Carrier bark beads Bear began brother buelta BUREAU OF ETHNOLOGY Cabeza campo capitan Capitulo Cardenas Carron Castañeda cauallos ceremonies chant chief Cibola Cicuye Coronado Culiacan dance dias dicho dieron drum españa expedition Francisco Vazquez Friar Marcos fueron Galicia gente Grand Green Bay Hist hombres hunter inches indios jornada Juan Juan de Padilla Juan Gallego Keshena killed lake leagues leguas Mä'näbush ma'nidos medicine medicine bag medicine men Melchior Diaz Mendoza Menomini Menomonees Mexico mitä mita'ta Mitä'wit mitä'wok Moose natives Nio'pet nueba Ojibwa Padilla personal name phratry Potawatomi province pueblo Quivira reached river says settlements Shu'nien side skin society Spain Spaniards tienen tierra Tiguex told totem treaty tribes Tusayan Vaca viceroy village wâ'beno wigwam Winnebago Wisconsin Wolf woman York Indians Zuñi
Pasajes populares
Página 142 - the Great Spirit has deigned to hold a Talk with his servant at my earnest request. He has not, indeed, told me when the persons we expect will be here, but to-morrow, soon after the sun has reached his highest point in the heavens, a canoe will arrive, and the people in that will inform us when the traders will come.
Página 483 - The next day they entered the settled country in good order, and when they saw the first village, which was Cibola, such were the curses that some hurled at Friar Marcos that I pray God may protect him from them.
Página 576 - ... march he found the cows, which are the most monstrous thing in the way of animals which has ever been seen or read about. He followed this river for 100 leagues, finding more cows every day. We provided ourselves with some of these, although at first, until we had had experience, at the risk of the horses. There is such a quantity of them that I do not know what to compare them with, except with the fish in the sea...
Página 523 - ... There are corridors going all around it at the first two stories, by which one can go around the whole village. These are like outside balconies, and they are able to protect themselves under these. The houses do not have doors below, but they use ladders which can be lifted up like a drawbridge, and so go up to the corridors which are on the inside of the village. As the doors of the houses open on the corridor of that story, the corridor serves as a street. The houses that open on the plain...
Página 477 - I had for saying that they had on this expedition the most brilliant company ever collected in the Indies to go in search of new lands.
Página 520 - They gather a great pile of twigs of thyme [sagebrush] and sedge grass and set it afire, and when it is half coals and ashes they throw a quantity of dirt and water on it and mix it all together. They make round balls of this, which they use instead of stones after they are dry, f1xing them with the same mixture, which comes to be like a stiff clay.
Página 559 - They make the best corn cakes I have ever seen anywhere, and this is what everybody ordinarily eats. They have the very best arrangement and machinery for grinding that was ever seen [plate LXIV]. One of these Indian women here will grind as much as four of the Mexicans.
Página 545 - Guachichules, keeping near the South Sea mountains all the time, for there are more settlements and a food supply, for it would be suicide to launch out on to the plains country, because it is so vast and is barren of anything to eat, although, it is true, there would not be much need of this after coming to the cows. This is only when one goes in search of Quivira, and of the villages which were described by the Indian called Turk, for the army of Francisco Vazquez Coronado went the very farthest...
Página 507 - ... large ravine where the army was. They did not let these guides speak with the Turk and did not receive the same statements from these as they had from the others. These said that Quivira was toward the north, and that we would not find any good road thither. After this they began to believe Ysopete. The ravine which the army had now reached was a league wide from one side to the other, with a little bit of a river at the bottom...
Página 143 - ... opinion to form of the prediction, but that I would readily attend him. On this we walked together to the place where the others were assembled. Every eye was again fixed by turns on me and on the lake; when just as the sun had reached his zenith, agreeable to what the priest had foretold, a canoe came round a point of land about a league distant. The Indians no sooner beheld it, than they sent up an universal shout, and by their looks seemed to triumph in the interest their priest thus evidently...