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Show TWN a eee BIBLIOGRAPHY Alarcon, Hernando Alvarado, Hernando Bancroft, Hubert Bandelier, A. de Howe F. an tor” fe Mil Veet eas a Coat of Arms and fac-simile of signature of Don Antonio de Mendoza 4 Bandelier, Barcia, lutee deper dependence the Spani iudlefttgabte | on them by the hunting Indians for every want. But alas for Rs dh le fe, sae resulted in disappointment for all, and its which he had accomplished so much? > ToTeotten by his country for Mrs. Andrés Fanny Gonzales De lo que hizo por la mar Hernando de Alarcon, que con dos nauios andaua por la costa por orden del Visorey don Antonio de Mendoza, 14th B. A. E.; Coronado Expedition, Winship, George Parker. Relacion de lo que Hernando de Alvarado y Fray Juan de Padilla descubrieron en demanda de la mar Gel Sur, 14th B. A. E., «bid. History of the Pacific States of North America, Vol. V; Mexico, Vol. X; North Mexican States, Vol. XII; Arizona and New Mexico. Historical Introduction to Studies among the sedentary Indians of New Mexico, Santa Fé, N. M., Sept. 19, 1880. Papers of the Arch. Inst. of Am., American Series, I, Boston, 1881. This relates specially to the Coronado Expedition. A visit to the Aboriginal Ruins in the Valley of the Pecos, Papers of the Arch. Inst. of Am., American Series, I, 1881. Contributions to the history of the southwestern portion of the United States, Papers of the Arch. Inst. of Am., American Series, V, and, The Hemenway Southwestern Archeological Expedition, Cambridge, 1890. Fray Juan de Padilla, The First Catholic Misstionary and Martyr in Eastern Kansas, 1542, Amer: ican Catholic Quarterly Review, Phila., July, 1890. Final Report of Investigations among the Indians of the Southwestern United States, Carried on mainly in the years 1880-1885, Papers of the Arch. Inst. of Am., Part I, 1890, Part II, 1892, Jambridge. The Discovery of New Mexico by Fray Marcos de Nizea, Magazine of Western History, iv, Cleveland, Sept., 1886. The Journey of Alwar Nufez Cabeza de Vaca, with notes by A. F. Bandelier; The Tratl Makers, A. 8. Barnes and Co., New York, 1905. Historiadores primativos de las Indias Occidentales, que junto traduxo en parte, y saco G luz, ilustrados con eruditas notas, y copiosos indices, el ilustrissimo Setor D. Andrés Gonzales Barcia, del Consejo, y Camara de S. M. Divididos en The Madrid, Afio MDCCXLIX. tres tomos. |