Montezuma's Dinner: A Review of Native Races of the Pacific States by Hubert Howe Bancoft, New York: D. Appleton & Co., Civilized Nations, Vol. IICollege Division, Bobbs-Merrill Company, 1976 - 44 Seiten |
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Seite 281
... Common . Among the Iroquois the public domain was owned by the tribe in common . A person who cultivated land had a posses- sory right to its use as long as he chose to occupy it ; and upon his death it passed like his personal property ...
... Common . Among the Iroquois the public domain was owned by the tribe in common . A person who cultivated land had a posses- sory right to its use as long as he chose to occupy it ; and upon his death it passed like his personal property ...
Seite 285
... common stock . Within the household . they lived from common stores . After the daily meal was cooked at the several fires , the matron of the household was summoned , and it was her duty to divide the food from the kettle to the ...
... common stock . Within the household . they lived from common stores . After the daily meal was cooked at the several fires , the matron of the household was summoned , and it was her duty to divide the food from the kettle to the ...
Seite 307
... common dinner . These accounts , when divested of their misconceptions , render it probable that Montezuma was living with his gentile kinsmen in a house they owned in common ; and that what the Spaniards saw was a dinner in common by ...
... common dinner . These accounts , when divested of their misconceptions , render it probable that Montezuma was living with his gentile kinsmen in a house they owned in common ; and that what the Spaniards saw was a dinner in common by ...
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
American aborigines ancient Anonymous Conqueror April Aztec Confederacy Aztec society brother brother to brother brought Central America chafing-dish children afterwards civilization Clavigero common stores communism in living composed confederacy of three cooked council of chiefs court customs dian dinner of Montezuma dishes earthen bowls eight gentes elective ethnical period existed facts federacies floor gens gentile halls History of America History of Mexico hundred and fifty Indian family Indian house Indian society institutions Iroquois joint-tenement house kettle king lands in common large households law of hospitality lords maize marble mats meal each day Middle status Montezuma lived Montezuma's Dinner napkins organized in gentes palace person Peru phratries plates presented principal war-chief probably pueblo of Mexico Red Race sachem and chiefs social Spaniards Spanish writers status of barbarism stone Tenochtitlan three Indian tribes three thousand tion Tlacopan usages Uxmal Valley of Mexico Village Indians