for the journal Ethnohistory journal Ethnohistory is the study of Ethnography ethnographic cultures and Indigenous ... of the history of various ethnic group s that may or may not exist today. Ethnohistory uses both ... cite journal last1 Axtell first1 J. year 1979 title Ethnohistory An Historian s Viewpoint url journal Ethnohistory volume 26 issue 1 pages 3 4 ref Overview As Harkin 2010 argues, ethnohistory was part ... century social science. ref Michael E. Harkin, Ethnohistory s Ethnohistory, Social Science History ... period directly and to address important theoretical questions. Ethnohistory grew organically thanks ... Lurie first1 N. year 1961 title Ethnohistory An Ethnological Point of View url journal Ethnohistory ... title These Have No Ears Narrative and the Ethnohistorical Method jstor 482586 journal Ethnohistory volume 40 issue 4 pages 515 538 ref Ethnohistory differs from other historically related Methodology ... of the past. The definition of the field has become more refined over the years. Early on, ethnohistory ..., Museum Studies, and Ethnohistorical Research url journal Ethnohistory volume 13 issue 1 2 page 75 ref Later, James Axtell Axtell described ethnohistory as the use of historical and ethnological methods ... historical actors. Edward L. Schieffelin Schieffelin asserted, for example, that ethnohistory must ... of culturally constructing the past. ref Schieffelin, E. and D. Gewertz 1985 , History and Ethnohistory in Papua New Guinea , 3 ref Finally, Simmons formulated his understanding of ethnohistory as a form ... period as the sources allow. He described ethnohistory as an endeavor based on a Holism holistic ... Ethnohistory url journal Ethnohistory volume 35 issue 1 page 10 ref Reflecting upon the history of ethnohistory as research field, Michael Harkin 2010 has situated it within 1 the broader context .... ref cite journal doi 10.1215 01455532 2009 022 last1 Harkin first1 Michael year 2010 title Ethnohistory s Ethnohistory Creating a Discipline from the Ground Up url journal Social Science History volume ... more details
italictitle Infobox journal title Ethnohistory cover editor Michael Harkin br Matthew Restall discipline Anthropology , history frequency Quarterly abbreviation impact impact year publisher Duke University Press country United States history 1954 present website http ethnohistory.dukejournals.org link1 link1 name JSTOR 00141801 ISSN 0014 1801 eISSN OCLC 51205286 LCCN 2002 227248 Ethnohistory is a Peer review peer reviewed academic journal established in 1954 and published quarterly by Duke University Press on behalf of the American Society for Ethnohistory . ref http ethnohistory.dukejournals.org , accessed July 22, 2010. ref ref http www.ethnohistory.org , accessed July 22, 2010. ref It publishes articles and reviews in the fields of ethnohistory, historical anthropology and social and cultural history. Like its sponsoring professional society, Ethnohistory has represented a meeting ground between scholars in the disciplines of history and anthropology. Geography and other disciplines have been increasingly represented in its pages over time. Founded by scholars focused primarily on studies of Native North America, the journal has, over its history, progressively become more global in scope. ref cite journal doi 10.1215 01455532 2009 022 last1 Harkin first1 Michael year 2010 title Ethnohistory s Ethnohistory Creating a Discipline from the Ground Up url journal Social Science History volume 34 issue 2 pages 113 128 ref References Official http ethnohistory.dukejournals.org Reflist Category Quarterly journals Category Publications established in 1954 Category English language journals Category History journals Category Anthropology journals Category Duke University press academic journals journal stub ... more details
Orphan date February 2009 In ethnohistory , a lienzo Spanish language Spanish for canvas is a sheet of cloth painted with indigenous Mesoamerican literature Mesoamerican pictorial writing . See also Mesoamerican writing systems mesoamerica stub Category Mesoamerican historical documents Category Mesoamerican writing Category Spanish words and phrases ... more details
Summary Information Description map of Nahuatl dialects in Mexico, based on information from the Ethnologue, from Yolanda Lastra de Su rez Areas dialectales del nahuatl moderno and john foughts article on the ethnohistory of the pipil nicarao. Source self made Date 7 2 2008 Location Denmark Author User Maunus Maunus User talk Maunus span class Unicode span Permission other versions Licensing PD self date February 2008 Copy to Wikimedia Commons bot Fbot priority true ... more details
Mitchigamea or Michigamea or Mitchigamie were a tribe in the Illiniwek Illinois Confederation. Not much is known about them and their origin is uncertain. Originally they were said to be from the Lake Michigan , perhaps the Chicago area. Mitchie Precinct, Monroe County, Illinois Monroe County in Southwestern Illinois takes its name from their transient presence nearby, north of the French Fort de Chartres in the American Bottom along the Mississippi. ref Combined History of Randolph, Monroe and Perry Counties, Illinois, J. L. McDonough & Co., Philadelphia, 1883, pg. 395 ref It is suggested that they later moved to Arkansas under pressure from the Iroquois . Their most well known leader was Chief Chicagou . References Reflist External links http virtual.parkland.edu lstelle1 len center for social research inoca ethnohistory project inoca ethnohistory.htm Lenville J. Stelle, Inoca Ethnohistory Project Eye Witness Descriptions of the Contact Generation, 1667 1700 NorthAm native stub Category Algonquian peoples Category Great Lakes tribes Category Native American history of Illinois Category Native American history of Michigan Category Native American tribes in Illinois Category Native American tribes in Michigan Category Algonquian ethnonyms hr Michigamea ... more details
Shamanism and Christianity Modern Day Tlingit Elders Look at the Past. Ethnohistory, vol. 38, no. 4 ..., 1840 1940. Ethnohistory, vol. 43, no. 4, pp. 613 641. Kan, Sergei 1999 Memory Eternal Tlingit ... more details
L opold Sabatier died c. 1929 was a France French French Indochina colonial administrator in the province of Darlac now k L k Province . He was province chief and later r sident of the province from 1914 to 1926, after serving temporarily in Kontum . ref Gerald Hickey, Sons of the Mountains Ethnohistory of the Vietnamese Central Highlands to 1954, New Haven YaleUniversity Press , 1982 pp. 297, 308 ref Sabatier died soon after his return to France in 1929. ref Boudet, L opold Sabatier, pp. iii iv, quoted in Gerald Hickey, Sons of the Mountains, p. 308 ref Personal life Sabatier had relationships with several E De women, which led some E De elders to complain that he slept with too many E De girls. His daughter H ni was born in 1923. She later followed him to France. ref name Gerald Hickey 1954, p. 308 Gerald Hickey, Sons of the Mountains Ethnohistory of the Vietnamese Central Highlands to 1954, p. 308 ref Policies During his time in Kontum at least , Sabatier had serious doubts about missionary influence and sometimes had disputes with missionaries who used coercion to enforce rules or convert locals to Catholicism. ref James Patrick Daughton, An empire divided religion, republicanism, and the making of French Colonialism, 1880 1914, Oxford Oxford University Press, 2006, pp. 114 116 ref Under Sabatier s rule of k L k Province k L k , the Franco Rhad School opened and there were efforts to create an alphabet for the E De People E De language. In 1923 an E De court was established, which incorporated elements of E De legal procedure ref Gerald Hickey, Sons of the Mountains Ethnohistory of the Vietnamese Central Highlands to 1954, pp. 297, 298 ref Sabatier tried to keep outsiders, especially French business groups and Vietnamese Vietnamese people Kinh migrants out of k L k Province k L k to protect the interests of the locals. At the same time, improvements in infrastructure made the province more accessible. ref Gerald Hickey, Sons of the Mountains Ethnohist ... more details
The Governor, in the Mosquito Coast Miskito Kingdom , was an official who ruled the southern regions, from the Cucalaya River to Pearl Key Lagoon . List of Governors ref Michael Olien, General, Governor and Admiral Three Miskito Lines of Succession, Ethnohistory 45 2 1998 285, figure 2. ref Piquirin 1711 John Hanibal 1719 1729 John Briton 1729 1757 William Briton 1757 1775 Timothy Briton c 1775 c 1776 Colvin Briton 1776 1791 Robin Lee Moskito Governor Robin Lee c. 1791 ? Clement Moskito Governor Clement c. 1791 1840 References Reflist Category Miskito ... more details
The Miskito Admiral was an official in the Mosquito Coast Miskito Kingdom . His domain was the southernmost of the kingdom s territories, extending from Peal Key Lagoon down to Bluefields, Nicaragua Bluefields . The title emerged later than other Miskito titles. List of Admirals Miskito Admiral Dilly Dilly c. 1740 Trelawney Alparis Dilson c 1760 1770 The King s Brother c. 1800 Miskito Admiral Earnee Earnee c. 1816 ref Michael Olien, General, Governor and Admiral Three Miskito Lines of Succession, Ethnohistory 45 2 1998 285, figure 2. ref References Reflist Category Miskito ... more details
New Philology is a school within ethnohistory that seeks to describe the history of colonization colonized people largely by using the colonized peoples own written sources to understand their perspective of their own history. The New Philology therefore focuses on the translation and interpretation of sources written in the colonized peoples own languages sources that have often been neglected due to their difficult accessibility. Important historians working in the New Philology tradition are James Lockhart historian James Lockhart , Susan Schroeder , Matthew Restall , Stephanie Wood and Robert Haskett . Development The school was developed from the 1970s and onwards, reaching maturity only recently. The leading figure in the early development of the New Philological historiographical approach was James Lockhart historian James Lockhart who, in the early 1970s, began studying sources in the Nahuatl language that had previously not been studied by historians. Rather than trying to reach knowledge about events in the colonial or pre colonial period from studying the sources, as was the usual approach, he attempted to achieve understanding about the indigenous societies that produced the sources. This approach made possible the use of sources that had earlier been deemed to be too difficult to understand or too problematic to interpret, e.g. the documents known as Primordial titles , colonial legal documents in the Nahuatl language, testaments and acts of the colonial administration. Important works A selection of important works written in the New Philology tradition The Book of Tributes Early Sixteenth Century nahuatl Censuses from Morelos . S. L. Cline, Ed. , 1993, Museo de Antropolog a e Historia, Archivo Hist rico Collecci n Antigua, vol. 549. UCLA Latin American Center Publications Indigenous Rulers An Ethnohistory of Indian Town Government in Colonial Cuernavaca ... of Postconquest Mesoamerican Ethnohistory , Provisional Version hosted by the Wired Humanities ... more details
Sahag n can refer to Sahag n, Spain , a town and monastery in L on, Spain. Cradle of the Mud jar architecture Sahag n, C rdoba , the second town in population in C rdoba Department, Colombia, also called The Cultural City of Cordoba People Agust n Rodr guez Sahag n 1932 1991 , Spanish politician. Mayor of Madrid from 1989 to 1991 Bernardino de Sahag n 1499 1590 , Franciscan scholar and chronicler of Aztec ethnohistory in the Florentine Codex Saint John of Sahagun Marta Sahag n , Mexican politician and First Lady 2001 2006 Events The Battle of Sahag n , a battle of the Peninsular War Treaty of Sahag n 1170 , a treaty signed at Sahag n in the 12th century, between Castile and Portugal disambig de Sahag n Begriffskl rung es Sahag n desambiguaci n fr Sahag n gl Sahag n it Sahag n nl Sahag n ja ... more details
Infobox Journal cover discipline History , American History , Ethnohistory abbreviation JOW website http journalofthewest.abc clio.com publisher ABC CLIO country United States USA history 1962 to present under same title ISSN 0022 5169 Journal of the West is an illustrated quarterly history journal devoted to the history and culture of the American West . Each issue of the Journal is highlighted by a series of articles on a theme central to the history and life of the region. The journal is published by ABC CLIO , in Santa Barbara, California, and the managing editor is Dr. Steven L. Danver 2004 . References http journalofthewest.abc clio.com Journal of the West website DEFAULTSORT Journal Of The West Category American history journals Category History of the American West Category Publications established in 1962 Category English language journals humanities journal stub ... more details
Paul A. W. Wallace 1891 1967 was a Canadian historian and anthropologist who specialized in colonial American history, focusing on Pennsylvania Germans and Native Americans. He was the father of the anthropologist Anthony F. C. Wallace . References Darnell, Regna. Keeping the Faith A Legacy of Native American Ethnography, Ethnohistory, and Psychology. In New Perspectives on Native North America Cultures, Histories, and Representations, ed. by Sergei A. Kan and Pauline Turner Strong, pp.  3 16. Lincoln University of Nebraska Press, 2006. External links http www.phmc.state.pa.us BAH dam mg mg192.htm Paul A. W. Wallace papers , Pennsylvania State Archives Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Wallace, Paul ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH 1891 PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH 1967 PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Wallace, Paul Category Canadian historians Category Canadian biographers Category 1891 births Category 1967 deaths Canada historian stub ... more details
Tukutnut also, Santa Teresa and Tucutnut is a former Costanoan settlement in Monterey County, California Monterey County , California . ref name gnis gnis 1765933 ref According to mission records, the village was located about convert 3 mi km upstream from the mouth of the Carmel River , and it was the largest village of the Rumsen group of Costanoans. ref Milliken, Randall. 1987. Ethnohistory of the Rumsen . Papers in Northern California Anthropology No. 2. Salinas, CA Coyote Press. ref References reflist Monterey County, California coord missing Monterey County, California Category Former settlements in Monterey County, California Category Former Native American populated places in California Category Costanoan populated places Category Lost cities and towns MontereyCountyCA geo stub ... more details
The Tawira Miskito are indigenous peoples of Nicaragua . They are a band of Miskito people and lives in the southern part of the Mosquito Coast . They are also known as Tauira and Tawira . They speak the Tawira language . ref http globalrecordings.net en language 14109 Miskito Tawira language. Global Recordings. retrieved 2 July 2011 ref The Tawira are related to the Miskito Sambu , who intermarried with Africans who had shipwrecked on the coast in the mid seventeenth century. The term is unattested before the early nineteenth century, though it may have come into existence before that time. ref Karl Offen, The Sambu and Tawira Miskito Origins and Geography of Intra Miskitu Differentiation in Eastern Nicaragua and Honduras, Ethnohistory 49 2 2002 319 72. ref References reflist DEFAULTSORT Tawira Miskito Category Miskito ... more details
Multiple issues cleanup May 2011 orphan August 2011 notability May 2011 null date May 2011 Amos Megged Chairperson HLCLAS Helena Lewin Chair in Latin American Studies , Doctor of Philosophy PhD University of Cambridge , 1988 , is a senior lecturer in general history at the University of Haifa , Israel . He was an editorial board member of the Colonial Latin American Historical Review . ref http www.unm.edu clahr english.html ref Recent publications Social Memory in Ancient and Colonial Mesoamerica . Publicaciones de la Casa Chata, CIESAS, University of Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2010 Comparative Studies in Mesoamerican Systems of Remembrance . University of Oklahoma Press. Ed. with Stephanie Wood 2009 Cambio y persistencia La religion indigena en Chiapas, 1521 1680 . Mexico, CIESAS 2008 http ethnohistory.dukejournals.org cgi content abstract 55 2 251 Communities of Memory in the Valley of Toluca The Town of Metepec. 1476 1643 . In Ethnohistory journal Ethnohistory 2008 55 2 251 285 The Religious Context of an Unholy Marriage Elite Alienation and Popular Unrest in the Indigenous Communities of Chiapa, 1570 1680 . In Ethnohistory journal Ethnohistory , V.46, N.1 Winter, 1999 , pp.  149 172 http jfh.sagepub.com content 24 4 420.abstract The social significance of benevolent and malevolent gifts among single cast women in mid seventeenth century New Spain . In Journal of Family History, V.24, N.4, pp.  420 440 1999 Exporting the Catholic Reformation Local Religion in Early Colonial Mexico . In Series Cultures, Beliefs, and Traditions , Medieval and Early Modern Peoples , V.2, New York, Brill 1996 Right from the Heart Indians Idolatry in Mendicant Preachings in Sixteenth Century Mesoamerica . In History of Religions , V.35, N.1. Mesoamerican Religions . In A Special Issue on the Occasion of the Seventeenth International Congress of the History of Religions , Mexico City Aug., 1995 , pp.  61 82 Magic, Popular Medicine and Gender in Seventeenth Centur ... more details
The Tamaroa were a Native Americans of the United States Native American tribe in the central Mississippi River valley of North America , and a member of the Illiniwek or Illinois Confederacy of twelve to thirteen tribes. An Algonquian languages Algonquian speaking group, like the rest of the Illiniwek, they lived on both sides of the Mississippi River in the area of the confluence with the Illinois River Illinois and Missouri River Missouri rivers. Two leaders of the Tamaroa were among those who signed the treaty of 1818, by which the various groups of the Illiniwek ceded about half of the present state of Illinois to the United States. Descendants of the Tamaroa later merged with other, larger tribes of the Illiniwek, such as the Peoria tribe Peoria . As a consequence of the forced Indian removal in the 1830s, their descendants are to be found mostly in Oklahoma , as the Peoria tribe Confederated Peoria Tribe . External links http www.usgennet.org usa mo county stlouis native 1stcontact.htm Tribes of the Illinois Missouri Region at First Contact 1673 , US GenNet http www.rootsweb.com itquapaw illinois illinois.html Linda Simpson, The Tribes of The Illinois Confederacy , Rootsweb http virtual.parkland.edu lstelle1 len center for social research inoca ethnohistory project inoca ethnohistory.htm Lenville J. Stelle, Inoca Ethnohistory Project Eye Witness Descriptions of the Contact Generation, 1667 1700 , Parkland College, 2005 Category Algonquian peoples Category Extinct languages of North America Category Native American history of Illinois Category Native American history of Oklahoma Category Native American tribes in Illinois Category Native American tribes in Oklahoma Category Algonquian ethnonyms NorthAm native stub hr Tamaroa ... more details
distinguish Culhua File AcolhuaMonroyDF.JPG thumb El sacrificio de una princesa acolhua by Petronilo Monroy The Acolhua are a Mesoamerica n people who arrived in the Valley of Mexico in or around the year 1200 Common Era CE . ref Smith 1984, p.171 , who arrives at this date by averaging six dates mentioned in early codices. ref The Acolhua were a sister culture of the Aztecs or Mexica as well as the Tepanec , Chalca , Xochimilca and others. It is likely that the ruling family of the Acolhua were descended from Otomi language Otomi speakers and did not speak Nahuatl until decreed by their ruler tlatoani Techotlalatzin . ref Davies 1980, p.129 Smith 1984, p.170 . ref Under Techotlalatzin s grandson, Nezahualcoyotl , the Acolhua allied with the Mexica Aztecs in the Aztec Triple Alliance . The Acolhua capital, Texcoco altepetl Texcoco , became a cultural center of the resultant Aztec Empire. Footnotes reflist References refbegin indent yes BEGIN biblio format. If indent param. is used, Pls use a colon instead of asterisk for bullet markers in the references list cite book author aut Davies, Nigel authorlink Nigel Davies historian year 1980 title The Toltec Heritage From the Fall of Tula to the Rise of Tenochtitlan series Civilization of the American Indian series, nowrap no. 153 location Norman publisher University of Oklahoma Press isbn 0 8061 1505 X oclc 5103377 cite journal author aut Smith, Michael E. authorlink Michael E. Smith year 1984 title The Aztlan Migrations of Nahuatl Chronicles Myth or History? url http www.public.asu.edu mesmith9 1 CompleteSet MES 84 Aztlan.pdf format PDF online reproduction journal Ethnohistory volume 31 issue 3 pages pp.153 186 location Durham, NC publisher Duke University Press , American Society for Ethnohistory issn 0014 1801 oclc 145142543 doi 10.2307 482619 jstor 482619 refend END biblio format style Category Mesoamerican cultures de Acolhua es Acolhuas fr Acolhuas hr Acolhua it Acolhua mr nl Acolhua s ru sh Acolhua ... more details
Ethnic group group Chu Ru image poptime 15,000 est. popplace Vietnam Lam Dong Province L m ng langs Chru, Vietnamese language Vietnamese related The Churu or Chru called Chu Ru or ng i Chu Ru in Vietnamese, ng i meaning people people live in L m ng province, in Vietnam s T y Nguy n Central Highlands . The group s population is approximately 15,000. ref http www.ethnologue.com show language.asp?code cje Chru at Ethnologue ref They speak a Malayo Polynesian languages Malayo Polynesian language . During the French colonial period the most influential highland leaders in the Da Lat area were Churu. They were said to be the most advanced among the highlanders because of their historical links to the Cham Asia Cham . ref Gerald Hickey, Sons of the Mountains Ethnohistory of the Vietnamese Central Highlands to 1954, New Haven YaleUniversity Press, pp. 313, 314 ref Encouraged by Touneh Han Dang , the Churu adpted some economic innovations from the Cham Asia Cham in the fields of weaving, pottery, and plowing in 1907. ref Gerald Hickey, Sons of the Mountains Ethnohistory of the Vietnamese Central Highlands to 1954, p. 316 ref References reflist http www.nanzan u.ac.jp SHUBUNKEN publications afs pdf a1586.pdf Review of a Churu folklore book http language.psy.auckland.ac.nz austronesian language.php?id 406 Chru Wordlist at the Austronesian Basic Vocabulary Database Ethnic groups in Vietnam ethnic stub vietnam stub Category Ethnic groups in Vietnam it Chu ru kk ru vi Ng i Chu Ru ... more details
Matthew Restall b. 17 March, 1964 is an Ethnohistory ethnohistorian and Edwin Erle Sparks Professor of Latin America n History, Anthropology, and Women s Studies, Director of Latin American Studies, and Director of LiLACS at the Pennsylvania State University . He is co editor of Ethnohistory journal, and series editor of Latin American Originals. Restall was born in a suburb of London, England, in 1964. He grew up in Spain, Venezuela, and East Asia, but was schooled in England, receiving a degree with first class honours in Modern History from Oxford University in 1986. He earned a PhD in Latin American History from UCLA in 1992, studying under James Lockhart historian James Lockhart , and has since held teaching positions at various universities in the United States. A prolific scholar, Restall s dozen books and forty articles and essays published since 1995 have made him one of the world s leading historians of Colonial Latin America. His books include The Maya World Yucatec Culture and Society, 1550 1850 1997 , Maya Conquistador 1998 , and Seven Myths of the Spanish Conquest 2003 . He is a prominent member of the New Philology school of colonial Mexican history, and a founder of a related school, the New Conquest History. Restall s sister is Emma Restall Orr , the neo Druid author. External links http history.psu.edu faculty restallMatthew.php Matthew Restall , Faculty webpage at Penn. State U. worldcat id lccn no95 46389 Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Restall, Matthew ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH 1964 PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Restall, Matthew Category 1964 births Category Living people Category Aztec scholars Category Mayanists Category Historians of Mesoamerica Category American Mesoamericanists Category 20th century Mesoamericanists Category 21st century Mesoamericanists Category Pennsylvania State University faculty ... more details
Susan D. Gillespie born 1952 ref cite LAF id n88 245831 ref is an American academic anthropologist and archaeologist , noted for her contributions to archaeological and ethnohistory ethnohistorical research on pre Columbian Mesoamerica n cultures, in particular the Aztec , Maya civilization Maya and Olmec . As of 2009 Gillespie holds a position as associate professor in the Department of Anthropology at University of Florida , Gainesville, Florida Gainesville , USA, having also been associate chair of the department from 2003 until 2009. Her first book published in 1989, The Aztec Kings The Construction of Rulership in Mexica History , received the American Society for Ethnohistory s Erminie Wheeler Voegelin Prize in 1990. Notes reflist External links worldcat id lccn n88 245831 http web.anthro.ufl.edu faculty Gillespie.shtml faculty profile , University of Florida Department of Anthropology http www.clas.ufl.edu users sgillesp Gillespie s university webpage , University of Florida College of Liberal Arts and Sciences Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Gillespie, Susan D. ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH 1952 PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Gillespie, Susan D. Category American archaeologists Category American Mesoamericanists Category Mesoamerican archaeologists Category 20th century Mesoamericanists Category 21st century Mesoamericanists Category University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign alumni Category University of Illinois faculty Category University of Florida faculty Category 1952 births Category Living people mesoamerica stub US archaeologist stub ... more details
The Cahokia not to be confused with the unnamed prehistoric inhabitants of the Cahokia Mounds were an Algonquian languages Algonquian speaking Native American tribe and member of the Illinois Confederation . They were originally located in Illinois , Iowa , Missouri , and Arkansas , later removed to Kansas , and finally to present day Oklahoma . The Tamaroa tribe Tamaroa were closely related to the Cahokia. The Cahokia, along with the Michigamea were eventually absorbed by the Kaskaskia and finally the Peoria tribe Peoria . Further reading http www.accessgenealogy.com native tribes illinois cahokiaindiantribe.htm Cahokia Indian Tribe History at Access Genealogy cite book last Malinowski first Sharon coauthors Sheets, Anna title Gale Encyclopedia of Native American Tribes, Volume 1 publisher Gale date 1998 loca tion url http books.google.com books?id 1IIZAQAAIAAJ isbn 0787610860 External links http digital.library.okstate.edu encyclopedia entries C CA008.html Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture Cahokia http virtual.parkland.edu lstelle1 len center for social research inoca ethnohistory project inoca ethnohistory.htm Lenville J. Stelle, Inoca Ethnohistory Project Eye Witness Descriptions of the Contact Generation, 1667 1700 Category Algonquian peoples Category Native American history of Illinois Category Native American history of Iowa Category Native American history of Missouri Category Native American history of Arkansas Category Native American history of Kansas Category Native American history of Oklahoma Category Native American tribes in Illinois Category Native American tribes in Oklahoma Category Algonquian ethnonyms NorthAm native stub ... more details
Reiner Tom Zuidema born 1927 is professor emeritus of Anthropology and Latin American and Caribbean Studies at University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign . ref http www.anthro.illinois.edu people rtzuidem. Retrieved July 5, 2011. ref He is well known for his seminal contributions on Inca civilization Inca social and political organization. His early work consisted of a structural analysis of the ceque system. He later extended this approach, based on French and Dutch structuralism , to other aspects of Andean civilization, notably kinship , the Inca calendar and Incaic understanding of astronomy . ref Morris, Craig. 2007. Andean Ethnohistory and the Agenda for Inka Archaeology. In Variations in the expression of Inka power a symposium at Dumbarton Oaks, 18 and 19 October 1997 , ed. Richard L. Burger, Craig Morris, and Ramiro Matos Mendieta, 1 10. Washington, D.C. Dumbarton Oaks. ref Publications selection 1964. The ceque system of Cuzco the social organization of the capital of the Inca . Trans. Eva M. Hooykaas. Archives Internationales d Ethnographie 50. Leiden Brill. 1977. The Inca Calendar. In Native American Astronomy , 1 221 259. Austin University of Texas Press. 1981. Inca Observations of the Solar and Lunar Passages Through Zenith and Anti Zenith at Cuzco. In Archaeoastronomy in the Americas , ed. Ray A. Williamson, 319 342. Los Altos Ballena Press. 1983. Hierarchy and Space in Incaic Social Organization. Ethnohistory 30 2 49 75. 1990. Inca Civilization in Cuzco . Trans. Jean Jacques Decoster. Austin University of Texas Press. References See http en.wikipedia.org wiki Wikipedia Footnotes on how to create references using ref ref tags which will then appear here automatically Reflist External links http www.anthro.illinois.edu people rtzuidem Categories Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Zuidema, R. Tom ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION Anthropologist DATE OF BIRTH 1927 PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Zuidema, R. Tom ... more details
Michael Eugene Harkin is an American anthropologist specializing in the ethnohistory of indigenous people of the western U.S. and Canada. From 1985 to 1987 he conducted fieldwork in the Heiltsuk community of Bella Bella , B.C. More recently he has worked with the Nuu chah nulth people Nuu chah nulth formerly Nootka people of Vancouver Island , and several groups of the northern Great Plains. He received his Ph.D. in 1988 from the University of Chicago , where he studied with Raymond D. Fogelson , Nancy Munn, and Marshall Sahlins . His early monograph on the Heiltsuks employed a dialogic perspective to understand issues of power and representation of both self and other. This was influenced by L vi Straussian structuralism and the historical structuralism of Sahlins. In more recent works, he has pursued a range of interests, primarily in the analysis of indigenous culture in a historical context. His work on revitalization movements revisits one of the classic ethnohistorical theories. He has also contributed to the literature on ethnoecology, arguing that traditional Northwest Coast ecological models expressed via ritual and myth non linear system dynamics. He is professor and chair of anthropology at the University of Wyoming . Previously he taught at Emory University and Montana State University Bozeman Montana State University . In 2007 he was a visiting professor at Shanghai University . He is editor of the journal Ethnohistory . He is theme editor for cultural anthropology of UNESCO s Encyclopedia of Life Support Systems . He has edited several important books on Native ... among the Heiltsuk. Ethnohistory 40 1 1 33. Harkin, Michael E. 1994 Contested Bodies Affliction and Power .... Ethnohistory 43 4 . Harkin, Michael E. 1997 The Heiltsuks Dialogues of Culture and History on the Northwest ... Indians and Tourism. Ethnohistory 50 3 573 583. Harkin, Michael E. 2003 Feeling and Thinking in Memory and Forgetting Towards an Ethnohistory of the Emotions. Ethnohistory 50 2 261 284. Mauz , Marie ... more details