600 



THE CORONADO EXPEDITION, 1540-1542 



IETH. ANN. 14 



Alvarado, Pedro de — Continued. 



Ramirez. Lo publica paleografiado 



del M.S. original el Lie. Ignacio 1, 

 Rayim.— Mexico, 1847. 



A collection of documents of considerable 



interest ; with facsimile illustrations and 



portrait. 



— See Carta del Obispo de Guatemala. 

 Ardoino, Antonio. 

 Exainen apologetico de la historica 

 narracion de los nanfragios, pereo-ri- 

 naciones, i milagroa de Alvar Nunez 

 Cabeza de Baca, en las tierras de la 

 Florida, i del Nuevo Mexico.— Mad- 

 rid, 1731'). 



Barcia, Sistoriadores Primitives i (vo 

 pp.50. See note under Cabeza de Vaca 

 Jielacion. 



Ayllon, Lucas Vazquez de. 

 Testimonio de la oapitulaeion quo hizo 

 con el Rey, el Licenciado Lucas Vaz- 

 quez de Ayllon, para deseubrir la 

 tierra quo esta a la parte del Norte 

 .Stir, de la Isla EspaBola, 35 ii 37 gra- 

 dos.— Valladolid, 12 .lunio, 1523 — 

 Presents en Madrid, 31 Marzo, 1541. 

 Doc. de Indias, xiv, 503-515. 



Bancroft, George. 

 History of the United States. Author's 

 latest rovi.sion._New York. 1883 



For ■Ooronado see Vol. I, 32-37. "Written 

 from the documents translated in Ternaux 



\j\D01Q,, 



Bancroft, Hubert Howe. 

 History of the Pacific states of North 

 America.— San Francisco, 1882-181)0. 



34 volumes. Vol. V, Mexico, II, 1521-1601) 

 Vol. x, North Mexican States, 1531-1800 

 )* XII > Arizona and New Mexico, i;,:;ii- 

 1888; pages 1-73 are devoted to Cabeza de 

 Vaca and Coronado. The tango of Mr H 

 il. Bancroft's extensive literary labors has 

 seriously interfered with the 'accur.iov in 

 statement and the soundness of judgment 

 which are so essential to satisfactory his- 

 torical writing. His volumes, however con- 

 tain nn immense number of references, often 

 mentioning documentary souroes and manu- 

 script materials which are as vet praeticallv 

 beyond the reach of other students. 



Bandelier, Adolph Francis (Alphonse). 

 Historical introduction to studies 

 among the sedentary Indians of New- 

 Mexico.— Santa F<j, N. M., Sept. 19, 

 1880. 



Papers of the Archaeological Institute of 

 Amen,,,, American scries, I, Boston 1881 

 2d edition, 1883, pp. 1-38. Relates especially 

 to the < oronado expedition. Cited in the 

 preceding pages as Bandolier's Introduc- 



— A visit to the aboriginal ruins in the 

 valley of the Rio Pecos. 



Papers of the Archaeological Institute of 

 -i inenca, A merman series, 1. 1881, pp. 37-133 

 In the same volume as the preceding entry.' 



— Kin Brief liber Akoma. 



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



— Report of an archaeological tour in 

 Mexico it, 1881. 



Papers of the Archaeological Institute of 

 imertca, American series, n, Boston, 1884. 



— Report by A. F. Bandolier on his in- 

 vestigations in New Mexico in the 



Bandelier, Adolph Francis (Alphonse}— 

 Continued. 

 spring and summer of 1882.— Hio-h- 

 land, 111., Aug. 15, 1882. 



Bulletin of the Archasologieal Institute of 

 America, i, Boston, Jan.. lss::, ,,,,. 13.33. " 



— The historical archives of the Hem- 

 euway southwestern archasologieal 

 expedition. 



j;";'"''"'?"'": '' aei Amvricanistes, 



1888, pp. 450-4o9 Berlin, 1890. 



— Contributions to the history of the 

 southwestern portion of the United 

 States. 



Papers of the Archceological Institute of 

 America, Am. series, v, and The Semen. 

 way Southwestern Archasologieal Expedi- 

 tion, Cambridge, 1890. Cited in the priced, 

 ing pages as Bandolier's Contributions. An 

 invaluable work, the result of careful docu- 

 iiientary study and of much experience in 

 Beld work in the southwest. It will always 

 serve as the foundation of all satisfactory 

 study of the history of the Spaniards in 

 that portion of the tfnited States. 



— Quivira. 



a 8 ber 2 i°5,1889-.' Lett8 ™ <^ Santa Fe, 



— The ruins of Casas Grandes. 



Nation, N. Y., 28 Aug. and 4 Sept. 1890 

 (Nos. 1313, 1314). Letters dated MntaF, 

 Aug. 1, ii, 1890. 



~ 189( 6 Delight Wa kers.— New York, 



A story, in which Mr Bandelier has por- 

 trayed, with considerable success, the ways 

 of life and of thinking among the Indians 

 tbe Aew Mexican pueblos, before the ad- 

 vent of Europeans. 



— Fray Juan de Padilla, the first Cath- 

 olic missionary and martyr in east- 

 ern Kansas. 1542. 



Anwicom Catholic Quarterly Review, 



1 hiladelplna, July, 1890, xv, .V,l-505. 



— An outline of the documentary his- 

 tory of the Zufii tribe. 



Journal American Ethnology and Arehceol 

 o.W, in, Boston, 1892, pp. 1-115.' Thisworkre- 

 mained in manuscript for some years before 

 it was printed. It contains many extracts 

 Irom the contemporary narratives', in trans- 

 lation; that of Castaneda being taken from 

 lernaux s version. See note on page 389. 



— Final report of investigations amono- 

 the Indians of the southwestern 

 I mted States, carried on mainly in 

 the years from 1880 to 1885. 



Papers of the Archasologieal Institute ,,f 

 U1892 8 " Cambrid S e i Parl r ' 1S90; Part 



The most valuable of all of Bandelier's 

 memoirs on southwestern historv and etb 

 nologv. It bears the same relation to the 

 work oi the American ethnologist as his 

 Contributions do to that of the historical 

 student. 



— The "Montezuma" of the pueblo In- 

 dians, 



American Anthropologist, Washington, 

 Oct., 1892, V, 319. 6 V ""> 



— The Gilded Man.— New York, 1893. 



Tins work contains much valuable mate- 

 rial concerning the early history of the 



southwest, but should he used with care as 

 it was edited and published during tiie 

 author s absence in Peru 



