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Philosophy of Liberation (Paperback)
Enrique Dussel; Translated by Aquilina Martinez, Christine Morkovsky
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R688
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Discovery Miles 5 700
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Three centuries after the French explorer La Salle was murdered in
the Texas wilds, this volume presents translations of three obscure
documents that broaden the view of the man and his exploits. The
first non-Spanish effort to settle areas along the Gulf of Mexico
is seen from the perspectives of La Salle's engineer; a Spanish
pilot who searched for the French colony; and two French lads who,
orphaned as a result of the Fort Saint-Louis massacre, lived first
among the Texas Indians, then the Spaniards.
The engineer Minet relates both La Salle's 1682 exploration of the
Mississippi River and his 1685 voyage to the Gulf of Mexico, from
which Minet himself returned to France and prison rather than share
the fate of the colonists.
The pilot Juan Enriquez Barroto recounts the Spaniards' 1687
circumnavigation of the Gulf, the finding of La Salle's wrecked
ships, and the first close examination of Texas and Louisiana bays
and rivers, including the Mississippi passes.
Among the few survivors of La Salle's venture, the two Talon
brothers returned to France as adults to give information that was
vital to a new undertaking, Iberville's Mississippi colony. In an
unparalleled adventure narrative and exploration account, they
describe the land, its flora and fauna, and the natives' lives and
languages--data of incalculable historical value.
From all three documents, significant sidelights emerge: Minet's
description of the English colony of Jamestown, Enriquez's finding
of Spanish castaways among the Atakapa Indians, and the Talons'
description of life in seventeenth-century Mexico.
With careful scholarly attention--historical introductions,
annotation, and commentaries by noted authorities--the documents
emphasize the tendency of modern observers to ascribe to La Salle a
knowledge of geography that simply was not possible in his time.
They lead the editors to a somewhat surprising conclusion about why
the vaunted explorer landed in Texas when he was seeking the
Mississippi.
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