0
Your cart

Your cart is empty

Browse All Departments
  • All Departments
Price
  • R500 - R1,000 (5)
  • R1,000 - R2,500 (3)
  • R2,500 - R5,000 (1)
  • -
Status
Brand

Showing 1 - 9 of 9 matches in All Departments

Demographic Collapse - Indian Peru, 1520-1620 (Hardcover): Noble David Cook Demographic Collapse - Indian Peru, 1520-1620 (Hardcover)
Noble David Cook
R3,227 Discovery Miles 32 270 Ships in 12 - 19 working days

While many scholars have been interested in the size of the Indian population of the Americas at the time of first contact with Europeans, this book, first published in 1982, was the first to make a thorough examination of the question. Focusing on Peru, Professor Cook estimates population size on the basis of archaeology, carrying capacity of the agricultural systems, disease mortality, depopulation ratios, and census projection. He also analyses the catastrophic population decline that resulted from contact with Europeans, and compares this experience with that of the coastal region and the Andean highlands.

Demographic Collapse - Indian Peru, 1520-1620 (Paperback, Revised): Noble David Cook Demographic Collapse - Indian Peru, 1520-1620 (Paperback, Revised)
Noble David Cook
R1,120 Discovery Miles 11 200 Ships in 12 - 19 working days

By means of an innovative methodology, the author attempts to estimate the size of the aboriginal population of the Americas at the time of the first contact with the Europeans. He traces the catastrophic loss of over 90 percent of that population and compares the experience of coastal region with Andean highlands.

Born to Die - Disease and New World Conquest, 1492-1650 (Paperback): Noble David Cook Born to Die - Disease and New World Conquest, 1492-1650 (Paperback)
Noble David Cook
R729 R645 Discovery Miles 6 450 Save R84 (12%) Ships in 10 - 15 working days

Noble David Cook explains, in vivid detail and sweeping scope, how the conquest of the New World was achieved by a handful of Europeans--not by the sword, but by deadly disease. The Aztec and Inca empires with their teeming millions were destroyed by a few hundred Europeans whose most important weapons, though the conquerors did not realize it at the time, were diseases previously unknown in the Americas. The end result of the colonizing experience in the Americas, whether of the Portuguese, Dutch, Spanish, English, or French, was the collapse of native society.

People of the Volcano - Andean Counterpoint in the Colca Valley of Peru (Paperback): Noble David Cook, Alexandra Parma Cook People of the Volcano - Andean Counterpoint in the Colca Valley of Peru (Paperback)
Noble David Cook, Alexandra Parma Cook
R801 Discovery Miles 8 010 Ships in 12 - 19 working days

While it now attracts many tourists, the Colca Valley of Peru's southern Andes was largely isolated from the outside world until the 1970s, when a passable road was built linking the valley-and its colonial churches, terraced hillsides, and deep canyon-to the city of Arequipa and its airport, eight hours away. Noble David Cook and his co-researcher Alexandra Parma Cook have been studying the Colca Valley since 1974, and this detailed ethnohistory reflects their decades-long engagement with the valley, its history, and its people. Drawing on unusually rich surviving documentary evidence, they explore the cultural transformations experienced by the first three generations of Indians and Europeans in the region following the Spanish conquest of the Incas.Social structures, the domestic export and economies, and spiritual spheres within native Andean communities are key elements of analysis. Also highlighted is the persistence of duality in the Andean world: perceived dichotomies such as those between the coast and the highlands, Europeans and Indo-Peruvians. Even before the conquest, the Cabana and Collagua communities sharing the Colca Valley were divided according to kinship and location. The Incas, and then the Spanish, capitalized on these divisions, incorporating them into their state structure in order to administer the area more effectively, but Colca Valley peoples resisted total assimilation into either. Colca Valley communities have shown a remarkable tenacity in retaining their social, economic, and cultural practices while accommodating various assimilationist efforts over the centuries. Today's population maintains similarities with their ancestors of more than five hundred years ago-in language, agricultural practices, daily rituals, familial relationships, and practices of reciprocity. They also retain links to ecological phenomena, including the volcanoes from which they believe they emerged and continue to venerate.

Luis Gerónimo de Oré - The World of an Andean Franciscan from the Frontiers to the Centers of Power: Alexandra Parma Cook,... Luis Gerónimo de Oré - The World of an Andean Franciscan from the Frontiers to the Centers of Power
Alexandra Parma Cook, Noble David Cook, Anne J. Cruz
R2,012 R1,351 Discovery Miles 13 510 Save R661 (33%) Ships in 12 - 19 working days

Born in a provincial city in the Peruvian Andes, the Franciscan linguist and theologian Luis Gerónimo de Oré (1554–1630) lived during a critical period in the formation of the modern world, as the global empire of Spain engaged in a nearly continuous struggle over resources and religion. In the first full-length biography of Oré, Noble David Cook and Alexandra Parma Cook reconstruct the friar's life and the communities in which he circulated, tracing the career of this first-generation Creole from his roots in Huamanga to his work in Andean missions, his activities at the royal courts of Spain and throughout Spanish America, until his final years as bishop of Concepción, Chile. While serving in Peru's Colca Valley, Oré composed multilingual texts, translating doctrinal concepts into the indigenous languages Quechua and Aymara, alongside Latin and Spanish, which missionaries and secular clergy frequently used in their conversion efforts. As commissioner to Cuba and La Florida, he inspected the frontier missions along the coast of what became the southeastern United States and wrote an influential history of these outposts and their environment. After Philip III dispatched him to Concepción, Oré spent his last years working in the southernmost end of the Americas, where he continued his advocacy for indigenous justice and engaged in heated arguments with the governor over defensive war, royal patronage, and Indian enslavement. Drawn from research conducted in Spain and Latin America over several decades, this consequential biography recovers from obscurity a colonial friar whose legacy continues in the Andean world today.

Good Faith and Truthful Ignorance - A Case of Transatlantic Bigamy (Paperback, New Ed): Noble David Cook, Alexandra Parma Cook Good Faith and Truthful Ignorance - A Case of Transatlantic Bigamy (Paperback, New Ed)
Noble David Cook, Alexandra Parma Cook
R935 Discovery Miles 9 350 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

Good Faith and Truthful Ignorance uncovers from history the fascinating and strange story of Spanish explorer Francisco Noguerol de Ulloa. in 1556, accompanied by his second wife, Francisco returned to his home in Spain after a profitable twenty-year sojourn in the new world of Peru. However, unlike most other rich conquistadores who returned to the land of their birth, Francisco was not allowed to settle into a life of leisure. Instead, he was charged with bigamy and illegal shipment of silver, was arrested and imprisoned. Francisco's first wife (thought long dead) had filed suit in Spain against her renegade husband.
So begins the labyrinthine legal tale and engrossing drama of an explorer and his two wives, skillfully reconstructed through the expert and original archival research of Alexandra Parma Cook and Noble David Cook. Drawing on the remarkable records from the trial, the narrative of Francisco's adventures provides a window into daily life in sixteenth-century Spain, as well as the mentalite and experience of conquest and settlement of the New World. Told from the point of view of the conquerors, Francisco's story reveals not only the lives of the middle class and minor nobility but also much about those at the lower rungs of the social order and relations between the sexes.
In the tradition of Carlo Ginzberg's The Cheese and the Worms and Natalie Zemon Davis' The Return of Martin Guerre, Good Faith and Truthful Ignorance illuminates an historical period--the world of sixteenth-century Spain and Peru--through the wonderful and unusual story of one man and his two wives.

The Plague Files - Crisis Management in Sixteenth-Century Seville (Paperback): Alexandra Parma Cook, Noble David Cook The Plague Files - Crisis Management in Sixteenth-Century Seville (Paperback)
Alexandra Parma Cook, Noble David Cook
R903 Discovery Miles 9 030 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

In the first half of the 1580s, Seville, Spain, confronted a series of potentially devastating crises. In three years, the city faced a brush with deadly contagion, including the plague; the billeting of troops in preparation for Philip II's invasion of Portugal; crop failure and famine following drought and locust infestation; an aborted uprising of the Moriscos (Christian converts from Islam); bankruptcy of the municipal government; the threat of pollution and contaminated water; and the disruption of commerce with the Indies. While each of these problems would be formidable on its own, when taken together, the crises threatened Seville's social and economic order. In The Plague Files, Alexandra Parma Cook and Noble David Cook reconstruct daily life during this period in sixteenth-century Seville, exposing the difficult lives of ordinary men, women, and children and shedding light on the challenges municipal officials faced as they attempted to find solutions to the public health emergencies that threatened the city's residents.

Filling several gaps in the historiography of early modern Spain, this volume offers a history of not only Seville's city government but also the medical profession in Andalusia, from practitioner nurses and barber surgeons (who were often the first to encounter symptoms of plague) to well-trained university physicians. All levels of society enter the picture -- from slaves to the local aristocracy. Drawing on detailed records of city council deliberations, private and public correspondence, reports from physicians and apothecaries, and other primary sources, Cook and Cook recount Seville's story in the words of the people who lived it -- the city's governor, the female innkeepers charged with reporting who recently died in their establishments, the physicians who describe the plague victims' symptoms.

As Cook and Cook's detailed history makes clear, in spite of numerous emergencies, Seville's bureaucracy functioned with relative normality, providing basic services necessary for the survival of its citizens. Their account of the travails of 1580s Seville provides an indispensable resource for those studying early modern Spain.

The Discovery and Conquest of Peru (Paperback): Pedro de Cieza de Leon The Discovery and Conquest of Peru (Paperback)
Pedro de Cieza de Leon; Translated by Noble David Cook, Alexandra Parma Cook
R793 Discovery Miles 7 930 Ships in 12 - 19 working days

Dazzled by the sight of the vast treasure of gold and silver being unloaded at Seville's docks in 1537, a teenaged Pedro de Cieza de Leon vowed to join the Spanish effort in the New World, become an explorer, and write what would become the earliest historical account of the conquest of Peru. Available for the first time in English, this history of Peru is based largely on interviews with Cieza's conquistador compatriates, as well as with Indian informants knowledgeable of the Incan past.
Alexandra Parma Cook and Noble David Cook present this recently discovered third book of a four-part chronicle that provides the most thorough and definitive record of the birth of modern Andean America. It describes with unparalleled detail the exploration of the Pacific coast of South America led by Francisco Pizarro and Diego de Almagro, the imprisonment and death of the Inca Atahualpa, the Indian resistance, and the ultimate Spanish domination.
Students and scholars of Latin American history and conquest narratives will welcome the publication of this volume.


Good Faith and Truthful Ignorance - A Case of Transatlantic Bigamy (Hardcover): Alexandra Parma Cook, Noble David Cook Good Faith and Truthful Ignorance - A Case of Transatlantic Bigamy (Hardcover)
Alexandra Parma Cook, Noble David Cook
R2,397 Discovery Miles 23 970 Out of stock

Published on the 500th anniversary of Christopher Columbus' discovery of America, "Good Faith and Truthful Ignorance" uncovers from history the strange story of another, lesser-known Spanish explorer, Francisco Noguerol de Ulloa. In 1556, accompanied by his second wife, Francisco returned to his home in Spain after a profitable, 20-year sojourn in Peru. However, unlike other rich conquistadores who returned to their land of birth, Francisco was not allowed to settle into a life of leisure. Instead, he was charged with bigamy and the illegal shipment of silver, and was consequently arrested and imprisoned. Francisco's first wife (thought long dead) had filed suit in Spain against her renegade husband. So begins the legal tale of an explorer and his two wives, reconstructed through the authors' original archival research. Drawing on the records from the trial, the narrative of Francisco's adventures provides a window into daily life in 16th-century Spain, as well as the experience of conquest and settlement of the New World. Told from the point of view of the conquerors, Francisco's story reveals not only the lives of the middle class and minor nobility, but also much about those at the lower rungs of the social order.

Free Delivery
Pinterest Twitter Facebook Google+
You may like...
Hybrid Modernity - The Public Park in…
Mary Padua Paperback R1,317 Discovery Miles 13 170
Plaque Imaging, An Issue of Neuroimaging…
J Kevin DeMarco Hardcover R1,806 Discovery Miles 18 060
Circular Cities - A Revolution in Urban…
Jo Williams Hardcover R4,469 Discovery Miles 44 690
A History Of South Africa - From The…
Fransjohan Pretorius Paperback R435 Discovery Miles 4 350
Advances in Marine Biology, Volume 84
Charles Sheppard Hardcover R5,471 R4,577 Discovery Miles 45 770
Fatima Meer - Memories Of Love And…
Fatima Meer Paperback  (1)
R379 Discovery Miles 3 790
Next Generation Biomonitoring: Part 2…
David Bohan, Alex Dumbrell, … Hardcover R4,984 Discovery Miles 49 840
Ambient Literature - Towards a New…
Tom Abba, Jonathan Dovey, … Hardcover R3,145 Discovery Miles 31 450
Letters
Ivan Turgenev Hardcover R6,648 Discovery Miles 66 480
Clark's Essential Physics in Imaging for…
Ken Holmes, Marcus Elkington, … Paperback R990 Discovery Miles 9 900

 

Partners