The Lives of the Poets of Great Britain and IrelandLibrary of Alexandria, 2004 |
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... Islands” came to me from the Pacific World while I was preparing the others. The discovery of the Pacific is so intimately connected with the discovery of America, that this paper would not be out of place even if the Mexican and ...
... Islands” came to me from the Pacific World while I was preparing the others. The discovery of the Pacific is so intimately connected with the discovery of America, that this paper would not be out of place even if the Mexican and ...
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... island, known as Isle Royale. The area covered by the ancient works is larger than that which includes the modern mines, for they are known to exist in the dense forests of other districts, to which the modern mining has not yet been ...
... island, known as Isle Royale. The area covered by the ancient works is larger than that which includes the modern mines, for they are known to exist in the dense forests of other districts, to which the modern mining has not yet been ...
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... island in the midst of the Algonquins lay the country of tribes speaking the generic tongue of the Iroquois.” There is no trace or probability of any direct relationship whatever between the Mound-Builders and the barbarous Indians ...
... island in the midst of the Algonquins lay the country of tribes speaking the generic tongue of the Iroquois.” There is no trace or probability of any direct relationship whatever between the Mound-Builders and the barbarous Indians ...
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... islands in Buzzard's Bay, and had with him twenty men who were expected to stay as colonists, but finally refused to do so. He saw a great deal of the Indians, and knew much more of their actual condition than the story admits. 2 ...
... islands in Buzzard's Bay, and had with him twenty men who were expected to stay as colonists, but finally refused to do so. He saw a great deal of the Indians, and knew much more of their actual condition than the story admits. 2 ...
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... islands at the northwest and the northeast, and perhaps by some migration from the south; the fauna at the south meanwhile remaining very much as it was before, with very little change through later migrations from the north. Professor ...
... islands at the northwest and the northeast, and perhaps by some migration from the south; the fauna at the south meanwhile remaining very much as it was before, with very little change through later migrations from the north. Professor ...
Indhold
IV MEXICO AND CENTRAL AMERICA | |
V MEXICO AND CENTRAL AMERICA | |
VI ANTIQUITY OF THE RUINS | |
VII WHENCE CAME THAT OLD CIVILIZATION? | |
VIII AMERICAN ANCIENT HISTORY | |
IX THE AZTEC CIVILIZATION | |
X ANCIENT PERU | |
XI PERUVIAN ANCIENT HISTORY | |
APPENDIX A | |
APPENDIX B | |
APPENDIX C | |
APPENDIX D | |
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ages ancient history antiquity appears architecture Atlantic Aztecs barbarous Brasseur de Bourbourg builders building built called Central America character Chichen-Itza Chichimecs chiefly civilization coast Colhuas communities Conquest constructed continent Copan copper Cortez covered Cuzco decay decorations described discovered edifices Eirek existed explored extent farther south feet high feet long Figure forest foundations Greenland hewn stone Huayna Capac hundred Iceland important Incas inclosures influence inhabitants inscriptions island Kabah known Lake Titicaca land Malays masonry Mayapan Mayas mentioned Mexican Mexico and Central Mississippi Mitla Montesinos Montezuma monuments Mound-Builders mounds Nahuas natives North America occupied Ohio old books old city old ruins older original ornamentation Pacific Palenque period Peru Peruvian Phoenicians preserved probably Pueblos pyramidal Quichés Quirigua race region remains remarkable sailed says sculptured seen settlements Spaniards Spanish Squier structures summit supposed temple terrace Toltecs traces Uxmal Valley Vinland voyage walls wild Indians writing Xibalba Yucatan