CALAFIA Home Page

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

CALAFIA Home Page Spanish and Mexican California Collections at Bancroft Library, UC Berkeley Alviso Family Papers: Documentos para la historia de California BANC SS C-B 66 Archivo del Obispado de Monterey y Los Angeles BANC MSS C-C 6 Archivos de las Misiones BANC MSS C-C 4, BANC MSS C-C 5 Argüello (José D.) Documents BANC MSS C-A 308 Bancroft Reference Notes BANC MSS 97/31 c Bancroft Reference Notes for California BANC MSS B-C 12 Bowman, J.N., Papers Regarding California History, undated BANC MSS C-R 18 Castro (Manuel de Jesús) Papers BANC MSS C-B 483 Colegio de San Fernando: concerning missions in Alta and Baja California BANC MSS M-M 1847 Documentos de la Comisión Confidencial [Vega, Plácido] BANC MSS M-M 325-339 Documentos para la historia de California BANC MSS C-B 98 Documentos para la historia de California, 1749-1850 [Carillo, Domingo A.I.] BANC MSS C-B 72 Documentos para la historia de California, 1799-1845 [Carillo, José] BANC MSS C-B 73 Documentos para la historia de California, 1801-1851 [Carillo, Pedro C.] BANC MSS C-B 74 Documentos para la Historia de California, 1802-1847 [Olvera, Agustín] BANC MSS C-B 87 Documentos para la historia de California, 1821-1872 [Coronel, Antonio F.] BANC MSS C-B 75 Documentos para la historia de California, 1827-1858 [Fitch, Henry D.] BANC MSS C-B 55 Documentos para la historia de California, 1827-1873 [Avila, Miguel] BANC MSS C-B 67 Documentos para la historia de California, 1828-1875 [Castro, Manuel de Jesús] BANC MSS C-B 51- 52 Documentos para la historia de California, 1846-1847, and especially concerning the Battle of San Pascual: 1846-1876 BANC MSS C-B 79 Documentos para la historia de California, 1878 [Del Valle, Ignacio] BANC MSS C-B 99 Documentos para la historia de California [Bonilla, José M.] BANC MSS C-B 71 Documentos para la historia de California: colección del Sr. Don Rafael Pinto BANC MSS C-B 90-91 Documents for the history of the conquest of California BANC MSS C-B 97 Documents relating to Missions of the Californias BANC MSS M-A 5:1 Fitch Family Papers BANC MSS C-B 357 Guerra (de la) Family Photographs BANC PIC 1984.062--PIC Hartnell (William E.) Papers BANC MSS C-B 665 Juarez (Cayetano) Papers BANC MSS C-B 584 Land Case Maps LAND CASE MAP Larkin (Thomas O.) Account Books BANC MSS C-E 1-25 Larkin (Thomas O.) Papers BANC MSS C-B 37-45 Limantour (José Y.) Papers BANC MSS C-B 460 Official documents relating to early San Francisco BANC MSS C-A 370 Papers on the Bear Flag BANC MSS C-B 70 Pico (Pío) Papers: Additions BANC MSS 68/115 c Rivera y Moncada (Fernando Xavier de) Papers BANC MSS C-A 368 San Antonio de Padua Mission Documents BANC MSS C-C 31 Vallejo (General M.G.) Family Members and Descendants Photograph Collection BANC PIC 1978.195—PIC Arizona and Sonora Report on the Province of Sonora : Mátape BANC MSS M-A 19:2 Selected documents on the missions of Sonora & Southern Arizona BANC MSS M-A 25 Selected papers relating to affairs in Sonora : typescripts BANC MSS M-A 19:1 Texas Documents relating to Coahuila, Coahuila and Tejas, and Nuevo León y Coahuila BANC MSS 67/142 m Documents relating to Texas BANC MSS M-M 1856 New Mexico Documentos relativos a las misiones del Nuevo Mexico BANC MSS M-A 4:1 Louisiana Louisiana Papers BANC MSS M-M 508 Mexico Archivo General de Indias BANC Foreign Archives - various documents so please go to: http://www.oac.cdlib.org/ and search for specific documents) Bancroft Notes BANC MSS 97/31 c Bancroft Notes for Mexico BANC MSS B-C 10 Documentos de la Secretaría de Relaciones Exteriores de México, 1764-1921 BANC MSS M-A 26 Documentos originales para la historia de Baja California y de la Colonia Militar de la Frontera BANC MSS M-M 20-21 Documents concerning government affairs in Mexico BANC MSS M-A 5:2 Documents reflecting relations of Indians and Spaniards over tribute, wool mills, treatment of the natives, and government regulations, 1544-1608 (Morelia, Mexico) BANC MSS M-A 7 Documents relating to Coahuila, Coahuila y Tejas, Nuevo León y Coahuila, 1806-1860 BANC MSS 67/142 m Documents relating to land transactions in Baja California BANC MSS 67/77 m Documents relating to the Juzgado de Indios BANC MSS M-A 3 Fernández del Castillo y de Mier (Manuel) Papers BANC MSS M-B 4 Fonte y Hernández de Miravete (Pedro J.) Documents BANC MSS M-M 382 German Diplomatic service papers in Mexico : ms. BANC MSS M-B 12 Indian complaints over payment of tribute, and related matters, in Michoacán, 1566-1573 BANC MSS M-A 8:2 López Uraga (José) Papers BANC MSS 71/94 m Los yndios de la encomienda de Turicato contra Bartolomé de Gallego sobre pago de tributos, 1573 BANC MSS M-A 8:1 Mexía Family Papers BANC MSS M-B 1 Mexía, Ynéz Papers BANC MSS 68/130 m Mexican Inquisition original documents organized by collection and Bancroft manuscript classification BANC MSS M-M 144, 147-8, 175, 511, 1744, 1826-27; Z-P 1; 67/140 m, 72/57 m, 96/95 m Mexican photograph album documenting the American Seminar on Relations with Mexico [graphic], 1927 BANC PIC 2000.070--ALB Mexican posters on social and educational themes, 1954-198 BANC PIC 2001.206--D Mexican Views BANC PIC 1942.007--ALB Mexico: October 28 to November 15, 1905 BANC PIC 1984.029--ALB Mexico – Views BANC PIC 1980.049--AX Miramón Family Papers BANC MSS M-B 17 Miscellaneous documents relating chiefly to northern Mexico BANC MSS M-A 4:2 Mugarrieta (José M.) Papers BANC MSS 69/93 m Papers relating to the Jesuits in Baja California and other northern regions in New Spain BANC MSS M-M 1716 Pascoe, Juan collection 1971-2004 BANC MSS 2004/248 m Pinart, Alphonse Louis Papers, 1870-1885 BANC MSS Z-Z 17 Quintera Mining Company Records, 1880-1909 BANC MSS 69/19 m Terrazas (Silvestre) Papers BANC MSS M-B 18 Trip to Mining Sites in Mexico – Album BANC PIC 2000.005--ALB Vázquez (Samuel G.) Papers BANC MSS 72/219 m Vistas Mexicanas; Calendario Azteca BANC PIC 1979.059--ALB Yucatan, Mexico Documents BANC MSS M-A 27 Central America Bancroft Reference Notes for Central America BANC MSS B-C 9 Nicaragua Information Center Records BANC MSS 92/807 cz Nicaraguan poster collection, 1979-1989 BANC PIC 1999.042—C Pinart, Alphonse Louis Papers, 1870-1885 BANC MSS Z-Z 17 Stephens (John L.) Papers BANC MSS Z-Z 116 Other Latin America Documents relating to Peru BANC MSS Z-D 123 Latin American political poster miscellany, 1951-1987 BANC PIC 2001.166--D Mujica Diez de Bonilla (Francisco) Papers BANC MSS 84/89 m Oliver (Roland L.) Collection - Views from Chile and Peru BANC PIC 1960.010 Philippine Islands Philippine Commerce and the Manila Galleon Collection BANC MSS 91/111 z Scrapbooks of Photographs and Cartoons Dealing with the Spanish-American War from the Graupner Family Papers, 1898-1899 BANC PIC 1964.026--fALB and BANC PIC 1964.066--PIC Caribbean Cuban poster collection , 1960-2000 BANC PIC 2001.061--C Documents relating to British West Indies BANC MSS Z-A 3 Documents relating to Saint-Barthelemy BANC MSS Z-A 4 Puerto Rico Documents, 1660-1881 BANC MSS M-M 513 Scrapbooks of Photographs and Cartoons Dealing with the Spanish-American War from the Graupner Family Papers, 1898-1899 BANC PIC 1964.026--fALB and BANC PIC 1964.066--PIC Berkeley's Faculty, Researchers & Collectors on Latin America & the Philippines Barrows (David P.) Papers BANC MSS C-B 1005 Fisher (Lilian E.) Papers BANC MSS 85/44 c Mexía (Ynés) Papers BANC MSS 68/130 m Moses (Bernard) Papers BANC MSS C-B 994 Packard (Walter E.) Papers BANC MSS 67/81 c Pinart (Alphonse L.) Papers BANC MSS Z-Z 17 Stephens (Henry M.) Papers BANC MSS C-B 926 Stephens (Henry M.) Papers: Additions BANC MSS 71/14 c Taylor (Paul S.) Papers BANC MSS 84/38 c Wagner (Henry R.) Papers BANC MSS C-B 849.
Recommended publications
  • The Kumeyaay: Native San Diegans N 1542, Spanish Conquistador Juan
    Queen Califia Voyage to California J?8==<I>IL99#9<KF8CM8I<QD@:?<CC<>@C:?I@JK U-T n 1542, Spanish conquistador The original DETAIL ABOVE Juan Rodríguez Cabrillo sailed up ‘California Dream’ The word “California” existed the uncharted coast of present-day in fiction before it was ever on California in search of treasure a map. A novel published DETAIL BELOW around 1500 had “an island aInd passage to the Atlantic. The journey called California, very near to A mural at the yielded neither and Cabrillo died along the region of the Terrestrial Mark Hopkins Hotel Paradise.” In the story, the in San Francisco the way. It was 50 years after Christopher island was populated by “black depicts Queen Amazons” who rode gri"ns Calafia and her Columbus landed in North America and and used gold armor and Amazons greeting was Spain’s final push to find wealth on weapons; they were ruled by visitors in the beautiful queen Calafia. California. the scale of the Aztecs and Incas. The story is in line with other Amazon myths: California is a wealthy, hard-to-reach paradise filled with free, warrior women. Cabrillo — and other mariners for the next two centuries — missed San Francisco Bay. Fog and high cli!s obscure the harbor’s entrance. 7 The fleet IMAGES COURTESY turns south INTERCONTINENTAL a second 4 Two Channel Brief stop preludes wide settlement MARK HOPKINS time to Islands were named Though Cabrillo’s visit was relatively non-violent, it preceded later return home. after the two larger settlement that would kill or displace most of the native Californians.
    [Show full text]
  • Calafia the Journal of the California Map Society September 2019
    Calafia The Journal of the California Map Society September 2019 Leonardo da Vinci CARTOGRAPHER World Map, Southern Ostrich Egg Hemisphere, Globe, 1504 c. 1508 Volume 2019, issue 2 Calafia Journal Page 1 Town Plan of Imola, 1502 Calafia the Journal of the California Map Society Volume 2019, Issue 2 — September 2019 www.californiamapsociety.org Fall meeting, October 26, 2019 Contents WESTCHESTER BRANCH, LOS ANGELES PUBLIC LIBRARY SoCal 2019 Meeting 2 33° 57’ 34”N, 118° 25’ 02”W or copper.brick.oddly* President’s Letter 3 Saturday, October 26, 2019, 9:30 am to 4:30 pm Meeting Program 4 7114 West Manchester Avenue, Los Angeles, CA 90045 Library Map, Directions 5 Our 86th Regional Meeting! Editor’s Note 6 CMS Education Fund 6 ur Southern California fall meeting Da Vinci-World Map 7 O will take place Saturday, October Da Vinci Globe-Review 13 23rd at the Westchester/Loyola Village branch of the Los Angeles Public Library. Da Vinci-Plan of Imola 14 How to Map a Spirit 19 We are excited to once again have our A Map Colorist ‘s Tale 22 meeting free and open to the public! One Carto-Quiz 26 of the society's goals is to spread the appre- Colonial Frontier Maps 27 ciation of maps, and we can't think of a better way than to do that than to remove Maps on Walls 32 financial barriers to participation. GLAM Meetings 33 My Favorite Map 35 The Westchester LAPL branch is located Jailed for Mappimg 38 two blocks south of Loyola Marymount Meet Our Member 40 University.
    [Show full text]
  • Cortés After the Conquest of Mexico
    CORTÉS AFTER THE CONQUEST OF MEXICO: CONSTRUCTING LEGACY IN NEW SPAIN By RANDALL RAY LOUDAMY Bachelor of Arts Midwestern State University Wichita Falls, Texas 2003 Master of Arts Midwestern State University Wichita Falls, Texas 2007 Submitted to the Faculty of the Graduate College of the Oklahoma State University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Degree of DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY December, 2013 CORTÉS AFTER THE CONQUEST OF MEXICO: CONSTRUCTING LEGACY IN NEW SPAIN Dissertation Approved: Dr. David D’Andrea Dissertation Adviser Dr. Michael Smith Dr. Joseph Byrnes Dr. James Cooper Dr. Cristina Cruz González ii Name: Randall Ray Loudamy Date of Degree: DECEMBER, 2013 Title of Study: CORTÉS AFTER THE CONQUEST OF MEXICO: CONSTRUCTING LEGACY IN NEW SPAIN Major Field: History Abstract: This dissertation examines an important yet woefully understudied aspect of Hernán Cortés after the conquest of Mexico. The Marquisate of the Valley of Oaxaca was carefully constructed during his lifetime to be his lasting legacy in New Spain. The goal of this dissertation is to reexamine published primary sources in light of this new argument and integrate unknown archival material to trace the development of a lasting legacy by Cortés and his direct heirs in Spanish colonial Mexico. Part one looks at Cortés’s life after the conquest of Mexico, giving particular attention to the themes of fame and honor and how these ideas guided his actions. The importance of land and property in and after the conquest is also highlighted. Part two is an examination of the marquisate, discussing the key features of the various landholdings and also their importance to the legacy Cortés sought to construct.
    [Show full text]
  • "Ocean Chivalry": Issues of Alterity in Don Quixote
    Colby Quarterly Volume 32 Issue 4 December Article 4 December 1996 "Ocean Chivalry": Issues of Alterity in Don Quixote Diana De Armas Wilson Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.colby.edu/cq Recommended Citation Colby Quarterly, Volume 32, no.4, December 1996, p. 221-235 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by Digital Commons @ Colby. It has been accepted for inclusion in Colby Quarterly by an authorized editor of Digital Commons @ Colby. Wilson: "Ocean Chivalry": Issues of Alterity in Don Quixote "Ocean Chivalry": Issues ofAlterity in Don Quixote By DIANA DE ARMAS WILSON LTHOUGH DON QUIXOTE stridently identifies himself with the fictional fig­ A ures of his favorite books-chivalric heroes such as Lancelot or Amadis or Renaldo de Montalban-he has of late been assimilated, in studies of spiral­ ing scholarly confidence, to the historical figures of the conquistadores. One critic claims that it is easy for the twentieth-century reader to see Don Quixote as "a comic incarnation" of "the conquistador mentality of Golden Age Spain" (Skinner 54). Another calls Cervantes's hero an "aspiring" and even "divinely inspired" conqueror, a figure who embodies "what is great and what is insane about Spanish imperialism" (Higuera 1-2). Such New World axes of identity for Don Quixote are an intrepid development from older constructions, which often used assertion as a mode of argument or, as what follows will show, in­ voked some literally preposterous connections. The aim of this essay is to ex­ plore the state of the union between Don Quixote and the "quixotic" conquista­ dores-all of whom are "other identified" with the heroic figures in the libros de caballerfas [books of chivalry].1 After sampling the representational prac­ tices that hover over this triple interalterity, I shall suggest that Don Quixote not so much "incarnates" or even "aspires to" the conquistador mentality as that he "minlics" it.
    [Show full text]
  • Spanish Friar Antonio De La Ascension, Who Accompanied Sebastian
    In 1510, the Spanish writer Garci Ordonez de Montalvo wrote Las sergas de Esplandian (The Exploits of Esplandian) in which he described an island of riches ruled by an Amazon Queen. "Know that to the right hand of the Indies was an island called California, very near to the region of the Terrestrial Paradise, which was populated by black women, without there being any men among them, that almost like the Amazons was their style of living. These were of vigorous bodies and The Warrior Queen Calafia strong and ardent hearts and of great strength …” “They dwelt in caves very well hewn; they had many ships in which they went out to other parts to make their forays, and the men they seized they took with them, giving them their deaths … And some times when they had peace with their adversaries, they intermixed … and there were carnal unions from which many of them came out pregnant, and if they gave birth to a female they kept her, and if they gave birth to a male, then he was killed…” “There ruled on that island of California, a queen great of body, very beautiful for her race … desirous in her thoughts of achieving great things, valiant in strength, cunning in her brave heart, more than any other who had ruled that kingdom before her...Queen Calafia." The novel was highly influential in motivating Hernan Cortez and other explorers in the discovery of the "island", which they believed lay along the west coast of North America. 1620 – Spanish Friar Antonio de la Ascension, who accompanied Sebastian Vizcaino on his West Coast expedition of 1602-03, drew the first map depicting California as an island.
    [Show full text]
  • Berkeley Juneteenth Poster Design Depicts California's Reported
    Media Release May 24, 2012 Contact: Clifford L. Williams Public Information Officer 510.430.9441 [email protected] Delores Nochi Cooper Festival Publicity Chair 510.524.8804 [email protected] Berkeley Juneteenth poster design depicts California’s reported namesake – Queen Califia Emmy Award winning artist and East Bay resident, James Gayles created the design for this year’s poster which features an image of Queen Califia. Califia (aka Calafia) is the name of a legendar yBlack Amazon warrior queen, associated with the mythical Island of California. The US state of California is thought by some to be named after Queen Califia (see Origin of the name California). The Califia image has also been depicted in art present at the Mark Hopkins Hotel in San Francisco and on a mural at Disney California Adventure Park. The legend of Queen Califia dates back to the novel Las Sergas de Esplandián (The Adventures of Esplandián), written around 1510 by the Spanish writer Garci Rodríguez de Montalvo: “It is known that to the right of the Indies there exists an island called California very near the terrestrial paradise; and peopled by black women among whom there was not a single man since they lived in the way of the Amazons. They had beautiful robust bodies, spirited courage and great strength. Their island was the most impregnable in the world with its cliffs and headlands and rocky coasts. Their weapons were all of gold . because in the entire island there was no metal except gold. And there ruled over that island of California a queen of majestic proportions, more beautiful than all others, and in the very vigor of her womanhood.
    [Show full text]
  • Pisonia Calafia (Nyctaginaceae) Species Nova from the Baja California Peninsula, Mexico
    Acta Botanica Mexicana 101: 83-93 (2012) PISONIA CALAFIA (NYCTAGINACEAE) SPECIES NOVA FROM THE BAJA CALIFORNIA PENINSULA, MEXICO José Luis León de La Luz1,3 and RacheL a. Levin2 1Centro de Investigaciones Biológicas del Noroeste (CIBNOR), Herbario HCIB, Apdo. postal 128, 23000 La Paz, Baja California Sur, Mexico. 2Department of Biology, Amherst College, Amherst, Massachusetts 01002 USA. 3Author for correspondence: [email protected] ABSTRACT Pisonia is a primarily American genus, distributed mainly in subtropical to tropical regions. In this paper a new species, Pisonia calafia, is described and documented. This species occurs as a small population on a coastal strand in the Cape Region of the Baja California Peninsula. The main characteristics that differentiate P. calafia from the rest of Pisonia is the lack of sulci and glands in the fruit. In addition to the new species description, we discuss the evolutionary affinities of this new taxon based on phylogenetic analysis of nrITS sequence data. The known population is limited to a few dozen individuals, now seriously endangered by the ongoing development of tourism projects. Key words: East Cape Region, Nyctaginaceae, Pisonia, phylogeny. RESUMEN El género Pisonia es primordialmente americano, se distribuye principalmente en regiones subtropicales y tropicales. En este trabajo se describe y documenta la nueva especie Pisonia calafia. Este taxon consiste de una relativamente pequeña población en la costa de la región de Los Cabos en la península de Baja California. La principal característica que diferencia a P. calafia del resto de las especies de este género es la carencia de sulcos y glándulas en el fruto. En adición a la descripción morfológica, se documenta la afinidad evolutiva del nuevo taxon con base en el análisis filogenético de la secuencia de nrITS.
    [Show full text]
  • The Colonial Argument of the Princess Micomicona Episode in Don Quijote Part I ______Stacey Triplette
    Chivalry and Empire: The Colonial Argument of the Princess Micomicona Episode in Don Quijote Part I ______________________________________ Stacey Triplette ervantes’ engagement with the motifs of the libros de ca- ballerías is undeniably deep and complex. Critics may never agree on the degree to which Cervantes’ romance borrowings are admir- Cing or antagonistic, but it remains beyond doubt that the chivalric features of Don Quijote are so deeply enmeshed in the fabric of the text that it would be almost impossible to unravel and catalogue each one. Without the intervention of the romances of chivalry, particularly of the Amadís de Gaula, which the character Don Quijote upholds as the mirror of all virtuous action, the major moments of Cervantes’ text would not even exist. Both Daniel Eisenberg and Judith Whitenack have demonstrated the depth of Cervantes’ chivalric borrowings, and both critics would prob- ably categorize Cervantes’ gaze as admiring more often than not.1 Don Quijote’s chivalric episodes go beyond mere citation of motif; rather, they interpret and re-contextualize the values of the source works. One episode, the appearance of Princess Micomicona, showcases Cervantes’ particular reading of romance motif. In order to coax Don Quijote out of Sierra Morena, the cura and Dorotea present the mad knight with the fictional Micomicona, an African princess who requires the knight’s assistance in order to rid her kingdom of a troublesome giant. Sancho makes his own contribution to the story by planning to enslave Micomicona’s people once Quijote has slain the giant and taken control of Micomicona’s kingdom. 1 See Daniel Eisenberg, “Don Quijote y los libros de caballerías,” and Judith Whitenack, “Don Quijote and the Romances of Chivalry Once Again” for a discussion of Cervantine versions of chivalric motifs.
    [Show full text]
  • Exploring Baja California's Submerged Landscapes
    Journal of California and Great Basin Anthropology | Vol. 30, No. 1 (2010) | pp. 35–49 Exploring Baja California’s Submerged Landscapes AMY E. GUSICK Department of Anthropology, University of California, Santa Barbara [email protected] LOREN G. DAVIS Department of Anthropology, Oregon State University [email protected] Recent research utilizing paleolandscape reconstruction and targeted underwater survey has led to the discovery of prehistoric cultural material on the submerged landscape off of Espíritu Santo Island, Baja California Sur. Our ability to identify preserved inundated cultural remains suggests that Baja California’s unique geography and environment may be favorable for identifying evidence of late Pleistocene coastal occupations. Indeed, survey data identifying unique geomorphological and environmental characteristics clarifies the various factors that made this region attractive to early hunter­gatherer populations, and also explains why Baja California may be integral in the search for some of the earliest coastal inhabitants of the New World. aja California Sur has historically been into the cultural development of some of the New Bdepicted as a region uncomplicated in its cultural World’s earliest inhabitants, but also help clarify a major landscape, due—in part—to its geographic isolation and issue within archaeology—the timing and manner of the the marginality of its resources (Laylander 2000:96 –100). peopling of the New World. However, we argue that the cultural development in this region, and our ability to study that development, has not suffered, but instead has been positively shaped by the NEW WORLD COASTAL MIGRATION region’s unique geography and environment. Indeed, the The first discovery of a fluted point associated with cultural landscape within Baja California may be one of extinct megafauna (Cook 1925) began a “predilection to the most ancient in the New World, dating to the first wave envision the first inhabitants of the Americas as stout- of migrants into the Americas.
    [Show full text]
  • William Michael Mathes
    Journal of California and Great Basin Anthropology | Vol. 33, No. 1 (2013) | pp. 1–7 IN MEMORIAM William Michael Mathes IRIS ENGSTRAND Professor of History, University of San Diego ichael mathes, well known as an honored by the government of Mexico in 1985 with the Maward-winning historian and professor of Order of the Aztec Eagle and by the government of history, was a many-faceted individual with a variety Spain with the Order of Isabel the Catholic in 2005— of talents that endeared him to legions of admirers. both for his efforts as a foreigner in promoting the An expert in all things Mexican and a specialist in the history of those countries. history of Baja California, Mike was truly bicultural and Mike grew up in the Hancock area of Los Angeles, flawlessly bilingual.T hose who interacted with him, even attending Harvard School for Boys (now Harvard- slightly, never forgot his willingness to help, his valuable Westlake). As a child, he spent time living on a ranch in suggestions, his ability as a teacher, his talent as a tour Baja California near the ruins of a Dominican mission guide, and his success as a writer of history. Mike was that had piqued his interest in learning about a remote 1 2 Journal of California and Great Basin Anthropology | Vol. 33, No. 1 (2013) area of the peninsula. Always a student of history, he mission trail spanning Baja and Alta California. His work received his B.A. from Loyola Marymount University, in these areas continues to be carried out by those who his M.A.
    [Show full text]
  • Early California History Exploration and Settlement Early California History
    EARLY CALIFORNIA HISTORY EXPLORATION AND SETTLEMENT EARLY CALIFORNIA HISTORY EXPLORATION AND SETTLEMENT A Resource for Students and Educators ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS It is with great pleasure that the Bowers Museum presents this Resource Guide for Students and Educators with our goal to provide worldwide virtual access to the themes and artifacts that are found in the museum’s eight permanent exhibitions. There are a number of people deserving of special thanks who contributed to this extraordinary project. First, and most importantly, I would like to thank Victoria Gerard, Bowers’ Vice President of Programs and Collections, for her amazing leadership; and, the entire education and collections team, particularly Laura Belani, Mark Bustamante, Sasha Deming, Carmen Hernandez and Diane Navarro, for their important collaboration. Thank you to Pamela M. Pease, Ph.D., the Content Editor and Designer, for her vision in creating this guide. I am also grateful to the Bowers Museum Board of Governors and Staff for their continued hard work and support of our mission to enrich lives through the world’s finest arts and cultures. Please enjoy this interesting and enriching compendium with our compliments. Peter C. Keller, Ph.D. President Bowers Museum cover art San Gabriel Mission, c. 1832 Ferdinand Deppe (1794-1861) Oil on canvas; 27 x 37 in. Laguna Art Musuem Collection 1994.083 Gift of Nancy Dustin Wall Moure EARLY CALIFORNIA HISTORY EXPLORATION AND SETTLEMENT MODULE ONE: INTRO / FOCUS QUESTIONS 5 MODULE FOUR: PUEBLOS AND PRESIDIOS 34 The Spirit of Exploration
    [Show full text]
  • Do More Good Deeds- Queen Califia…The Real Amazon 1
    Do More Good Deeds! Words are our Best Weapon Against the Lies of History (Truth in the Root of the Word). Queen Califia….The Real Amazon Queen Califia (Calafia) is the name of A Legacy- A Myth and The Truth. She was large, and Black as the ace of clubs. But the prejudice of color did not then exist even among the most brazen-faced, or the most copper-headed. For, as you shall learn, she was reputed the most Beautiful of Women; and it was she, O California! Who accomplished great deeds, she was valiant and courageous and ardent with a brave heart, and had ambitions to execute nobler actions than had been performed by any other ruler……Queen Califia. Do More Good Deeds- Queen Califia…The Real Amazon 1 Queen Califia was a Black Virgin Amazon Warrior associated with the mythical Island of California. See: Origin of the Name California. The Amazons: Spirited Courage and Great Strength. They had beautiful robust bodies, Spirited Courage and Great Strength. Their island was the most impregnable in the world with its cliffs and headlands and rocky coasts. Their weapons were all of gold, “…because in all the island there was no metal except gold.” And there ruled over that island of California a queen of majestic proportions, more beautiful than all others, and in the very vigor of her womanhood. She was not Petite, nor Blond, nor Golden-haired. See: Media Release (May 24, 2012) The Legend of Queen Califia appears to date back to the novel Los Sergas de Esplandian (The Adventures of Esplandian), written around 1500 by the Spanish writer Garci Rodriguez de Montalvo: He described the island in this passage: “Know, that on the right hand of the Indies there is an island called California very close to the side of the Terrestrial Paradise; and it is peopled by black women, without any man among them, for they live in the manner of Amazons.” http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Island_of_California Califia’s Life and Land, as described by Garci Rodriguez de Montalvo.
    [Show full text]