| George Ticknor - 1849 - 566 strani
...a great repository, to which Herrera, and through him all the historians of the Indies since, have resorted for materials ; and without which the history...Spanish settlements in America cannot, .even now, be properly written. 32 But it is not necessary to go farther into an examination of the old accounts... | |
| George Ticknor - 1849 - 606 strani
...a great repository. to which Ilerrcra, and through him all the historians of the Indies since, have resorted for materials; and without which the history of the earliest period of tlnSpanish settlements in America cannot, even now, be properly written. 32 But it is not necessary... | |
| Anne Charlotte Lynch Botta - 1860 - 592 strani
...Indians. It is a repository to which Herrera, and through him all the historians of the Indies since, have resorted for materials, and without which the history...history. 4. THE DRAMA. — Before the middle of the 16th century, the Mysteries were the only dramatic exhibitions of Spain. They were upheld by ecclesiastical... | |
| Anne Charlotte Lynch Botta - 1863 - 764 strani
...Indians. It is a repository to which Herrera, and through him all the historians of the Indies since, have resorted for materials, and without which the history...history. 4. THE DRAMA.— Before the middle of the 16th century, the Mysteries were the only dramatic exhibitions of Spain. They were upheld by ecclesiastical... | |
| George Ticknor - 1864 - 536 strani
...a great repository, to which Herrera, and through him all the historians of the Indies since, have resorted for materials ; and without which the history...the Spanish settlements in America cannot, even now, he properly written.85 But it is not necessary to go further into an examination of the old accounts... | |
| Charles Dudley Warner, Hamilton Wright Mabie, Lucia Isabella Gilbert Runkle, George H. Warner, Edward Cornelius Towne, George Henry Warner - 1898 - 720 strani
...a great repository, to which Herrera, and through him all the historians of the Indies since, have resorted for materials; and without which the history...Spanish settlements in America cannot, even now, be properly written.» So far as Mr. Ticknor questions at all the fairness of Las Casas, his view may... | |
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