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3 result(s) for "Spaniards Hispaniola History."
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Surviving Spanish conquest : Indian fight, flight, and cultural transformation in Hispaniola and Puerto Rico
\"An ethnohistoric and archaeological study of the transformations that occurred in Indian communities during the Spanish conquest of Hispaniola and Puerto Rico from 1492 to 1550\"-- Provided by publisher.
Fray Antonio de Montesino y su tiempo
Antonio de Montesino fue el primer europeo que denunció los abusos y la explotación de los nativos en la colonización española de las Antillas. A pesar de su histórica relevancia para el pensamiento de Las Casas y el surgimiento de la Leyenda Negra, los estudios que se han ocupado del fraile son muy esporádicos. El presente volumen se acerca a la temática desde una perspectiva interdisciplinaria, con el fin de esbozar una imagen más nítida de la persona histórica de Montesino, así como esclarecer aspectos de su recepción y de la repercusión de sus sermones en el discurso histórico y en los debates sobre la cuestión indígena. [Texto de la editorial]
Taínos at La Isabela
The “Caribbean” that Columbus encountered was the domain of indigenous societies who had been there for centuries. The largest of these in the Greater Antilles were the Taínos, and neither the Taínos nor the Spaniards were completely ignorant of each other when La Isabela was established. Although we have little direct evidence of the Indian assessments of the Spaniards, there is a great deal of ethnohistorical and archaeological information available concerning the Taíno from a European perspective. We synthesize the archaeology and ethnohistory of Taíno society inColumbus’s Outpost,chapter 3, and other synthetic ethnographic portraits of the Taínos can