Cabeza de Vaca, Alvar Nuñez — Cont'd.
This French translation of the Naufragios forms volume VII of Ternaux's Voyages. The Commentaires are contained in volume vi. The translation is from the 1555 edition.
This English translation was printed at Washington in 1851, and was reprinted at New York, with considerable additions and a short sketch of tho translator, shortly after Mr Smith's death. Chapters xxxxxxvi were reprinted in an Old South Leaflet, general series, No. 39, Boston.
Historical Mag.(Sept.-Dec., 1867), xii, 141. 204, 267, 847. Translated and condensed from an account printeil in Oviedo's Historia General, Lib. xxxv, cap. i-vi, which was sent to the Real Audiencia of Sancto Domingo by the four survivors of the expedition. See Introduction, p. 349 ante.
Doc. de Indias, XXIII, 8-33.
Cabrillo, Juan Rodriguez. See Paez, Juan.
Camus, Armand Gaston.
For "Cornado," see p. 176.
This splendid volume contains 108 letters, 29 of which are reproduced in facsimile written from various portions of Spanish America during the XVI century. The indices contain a large amount of information concerning the people and places mentioned.
Volume I of Icazbalceta's Nueva Colección. The 26 letters which make up this volume throw much light on the early civil and economical as well 88 on the ecclesiastical history of New Spain. The second volums of the Nueva Colección, entitled Codice Franciscano Siglo XVI, contains 14 additional letters.
Castañeda, Pedro de.
Printed for the first time in the Fourteenth Annual Report of the Bureau of Ethnology, pp. 414-460, from the manuscript in the Lenox Library in New York. This narrative has been known chiefly through the French translation printed in 1838 by Henri Ternaux-Compans, the title of which follows.
Ternaux, Cibola, 1-246.
Castaño de Sosa, Gaspar.
Doc. de Indias, vol. xv. pp. 191-261. The exploring party started 27th July, 1590, and this report was presented to the Conncil 10th November, 1592.
Cervantes Salazar, Francisco.
Invaluable for anyone who wishes to understand the early social and economic conditions of Spanish America. The bibliography at the end of the volume is not only of great value as a guide to the study of this history, but it is of interest as a partial catalog of the library of Sr Garcia Icazbalceta.
Chapin, Frederick Hastings.
Congrés International des Américanistes.
Compte-rendu de la premiire session. — Nancy, 1875;. . . Actas de la Novena Reunion, Huelva, 1892-Madrid, 1894.
Many of the papers presented at the meetings of the Congrès des Américanistes, have been of the very greatest interest to the American ethnologist and to the historian of early Spanish America. Several of the papers presented at Berlin in 1888 are entered under the authors' names in the present list.
Coronado, Francisco Vazquez.
Ramusio, iii, fol. 354, ed. 1556. Translated in Ternaux, Cibola, app. v, pp. 340-351. The special value of these Italian translations of Spanish documents, to which reference is made in the present list, in due to the fact that in very many cases where Ramusio used original documents for his work later students have been unable to discover any trace of the manuscript sources.
Ramusio, iii. fol. 854 verso. ed 1556. Translated in Ternaux, Cibola, app. v. pp. 352-354.