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THE CORONADO EXPEDITION, 1540-1542
[eth.ann 14

Alvarado, Pedro de—Continued.

Ramirez. Lo publica paleografiado del MS. original el Lic. Ignacio L. Rayon. Mexico, 1847.

A collection of documents of considerable interest; with facsimile illustrations and portrait.

See Carta del Obispo de Guatemala.

Ardoino, Antonio.

Examen apologetico de la historica narracion de los naufragios, peregrinaciones, i milagros de Alvar Nuñez Cabeza de Baca, en las tierras de la Florida, i del Nuevo Mexico. Madrid, 1736.

Barcia, Historiadores Primitivos. I (vi), pp.50. See note nnder Cabeza de Vaca Relacion.

Ayllon, Lucas Vazquez de.

Testimonio de la capitulacion que hizo con el Rey, el Licenciado Lucas Vazquez de Ayllon, para descubrir la tierra que está á la parte del Norte Sur, de la Isla Española, 35 á 37 grados. Valladolid, 12 Junio, 1523.

Presentó eu Madrid, 31 Marzo, 1541.

Doc. de Indias, xiv, 503515.

Bancroft, George.

History of the United States. Author's latest revision. New York, 1883.

For Coronado see Vol. 1, 3237. Written from the documents translated in Ternaux, Cibola.

Bancroft, Hubert Howe.

History of the Pacific states of North America. San Francisco, 18821890.

34 volumes. Vol. v, Mexico, II, 15211600. Vol. x, North Mexican States, 15311800. Vol. XII, Arizona and New Mexico, 1530 1888: pages 173 are devoted to Cabeza de Vaca and Coronado. The range of Mr H. H. Bancroft's extensive literary labors has seriously interfered with the accuracy in statement and the soundness of judgment which are so essential to satisfactory historical writing. His volumes, however, contain an immense number of references, often mentioniug documentary sources and manuscript materials which are as yet practically beyond the reach of other students.

Bandelier, Adolph Francis (Alphonse).

Historical introductiou to studies among the sedentary Indians of New Mexico.Sauta Fé, N. M., Sept. 19, 1880.

Papers of the Archæological Institute of America, American series, 1, Boston, 1881. 2d edition, 1883, pp. 1-33. Relates especially to the Coronado expedition. Cited in the preceding pages as Bandelier's Introduction.

— A visit to the aboriginal ruins in the valley of the Rio Pecos.

Papers of the Archæological Institute of America, American series, 1, 1881, pp. 37133. In the same volume as the preceding entry.

— Eiu Brief über Akoma.

Das Ausland, 1884, No. XIII, pp. 241-243.

— Report of an archæological tour in Mexico in 1881.

Papers of the Archæological Institute of America, American series, 11, Boston, 1884.

— Report by A. F. Bandelier on bis iuvestigations in New Mexico in the

Bandelier, Adolph Francis (Alphonse) — Continned.

spring and summer of 1882. Highland, Ill., Aug. 15, 1882.

Bulletin of the Archeological Institute of America, I, Boston, Jan., 1883, pp. 13-33.

— The historical archives of the Hemenway southwestern archæological expedition.

Congrès International des Américanistes, 1888, pp. 450459. Berlin, 1890.

— Contributions to the history of the southwestern portion of the United States.

Papers of the Archaeological Institute of America, Am. series, v, and The Hemenway Southwestern Archeological Expedition, Cambridge. 1890. Cited in the preceding pages as Bundelier's Contributions. An invaluable work, the result of careful documentary study and of much experience in field work in the southwest. It will always serve as the fonndation of all satisfactory etudy of the history of the Spaniards in that portion of the United States.

— Quivira.

Nation, N. Y., 31 Oct. and 7 Nov. 1889. (Nos. 1970, 1271.) Lotters dated Santa Fé, October 15, 1889.

— The ruius of Casas Grandes.

Nation, N. Y., 28 Aug. and 4 Sept., 1890 (Nos. 1313, 1314). Letters dated Santa Fé, Aug. 1, 11, 1890.

— The Delight Makers. New York, 1890.

A story, in which Mr Bandelier has portrayed, with considerable success, the ways of life and of thinking among the Indians of the New Mexican pueblos, before the advent of Europeans.

— Fray Jnan de Padilla, the first Catholic missionary and martyr in eastern Kansas. 1542.

American Catholic Quarterly Review, Philadelphia, July, 1890, XV, 551565.

— An ontliue of the documentary his tory of the Zuñi tribe.

Journal American Ethnology and Archæology, iii, Boston, 1892, pp. 1115. This work remained in manuscript for some years before it was printed. It contains many extracts from the contemporary narratives, in translation; that of Castañeda being taken from Ternaux's version. See note on page 389.

— Final report of investigatious among the Indians of the southwestern United States, carried on mainly in the years from 1880 to 1885.

Papers of the Archaeological Institute of America. Cambridge; Part I. 1890; Part II, 1892.

The most valuable of all of Bandelier's memoirs on south western history and ethnology. It bears the same relation to the work of the American ethnologist as his Contributions do to that of the historical student.

— The "Moutezuma" of the pueblo Indians.

American Anthropologist, Washington, Oct., 1892, v, 319.

— The Gilded Man.New York, 1893.

This work contains much valuable material concerning the early history of the sonthwest, bnt should be used with care, as it was edited and published during the author's absence in Peru.