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SPANISH NORTH AMERICA. Justin Winsor

ILLUSTRATIONS: Champlain's View of a Silver Mine, 192; Mining View, 193; Pun-

ishment of Indians, 194; Burning Indians, 195; Sir John Hawkins, 196; Aca-

pulco, 197; Map of the Valley of Mexico (1748), 199; of Mexico and Vicinity

(1800), 201; Humboldt's Map of same, 202; Adriano Boot's Map, 203; Maps of

Vera Cruz and the Castle of S. Juan de Uluá, 204, 205; West India Vessels,

Seventeenth Century, 206; View of Juan Fernandez (1655), 207; Porto Bello Fair,

207; Chart of Acapulco Harbor, 208; View of the Harbor, 209; George Anson,

210; Capture of a Galleon, 211; Map of San Francisco Harbor, 212; Ruins of

San Carlos, 213; Father Junipero Serra, 214; José de Iturrigaray, 215; Francisco

Javier de Lizana, 216; Miguel Hidalgo, 217; Plan of the Battle of Las Cruces,

218; Calleja, 218; Ignacio Lopez Rayon, 219; Plan of the Battle of Calderon,

220; José Maria Morelos, 221, 222; Francisco Javier Mina, 223; Ferdinand VII.

of Spain, 224; Augustin de Iturbide, 225; Nicolas Bravo, 226; Santa Anna, 227,

228; Samuel Houston, 230; Native Dance, 233; Map of St. Kitts, 234; Chateau of

General de Poincy, 235; Sir Henry Morgan, 236; Haven en Rivier van Chagres,

237; De Stad en Haven van Porto Bello, 238; Map of the Isthmus of Darien,

239; Pirogue Espagnole, 240; Maps of the Isthmus of Darien and Bay of Pana-

ma, 241, 242; Map of the Attack on Cartagena (1697), 243; View in Guatemala

(1720), 245; Juan de Solorzano Pereira, 247; Consag's Gulf of California, 255;

Venegas' Gulf of California, 256; Map of Yucatan (1506-1700), 261; Map of

Tabasco, Chiapa, Verapaz, Guatimala, Honduras, and Yucatan (1754), 262;

Port Royal et ses Environs, 263; Map of Nicaragua and Costa Rica, 264; Lúcas

Alaman, 267.

BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTES ON THE WEST INDIES AND THE SPANISH MAIN. The

Editor.

COLONIAL HISTORY OF SOUTH AMERICA, AND THE WARS OF INDEPENDENCE.
Clements R. Markham

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ILLUSTRATIONS: View of Callao, 298; Attack on Callao, 299; Map of Guayaquil
and Puna, 300; Plan of Guayaquil, 301; Figures of Luis Fernandez de Cordova,
Marques de Baydes, and Francisco Laso della Vega, 302; Map of the West In-
dies (1740), 308; Procession of the Inquisition, 310; View of Valparaiso, 312;
Plan of Lima, 313; Map of Peru (1792), 320; Plan of Santiago de Chile, 321;
Don Ambrosio O'Higgins, 322; Miranda, 325; José Miguel de Carrera, 326;
Belgrano, 327; Plan of the Battle of Huaqui, 328; Statue of San Martin, 329;
Bernardo O'Higgins, 330; Plan of the Battle of Maypu, 331; Lord Cochrane's
House at Quintero, 332; Lord Cochrane, 333; Bolivar, 335; General Miller, 336;
Plan of the Battle of Ayacucho, 338; Bolivar, 339; Valparaiso Fort, 340.

CRITICAL ESSAY

ILLUSTRATIONS: Juan Ignacio Molina, 345; Diego Barras Arana, 348.

EDITORIAL NOTE ON THE BIBLIOGRAPHY OF BRAZIL.

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342

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349

ILLUSTRATIONS: Count of Nassau, 352; Map of "Mauritiopolis, Reciffa et Circum-
jacentia Castra," 353; Map of the Attack on Rio Janeiro (1711), 355; René du
Guay-Trouin, 357.

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The Valley of the La Plata River, 358. Guiana, 363. The Revolution in the North-
west, 366. Peru and Chile, 367.

ILLUSTRATIONS: Map of the La Plata Country, 359; Plan of Auchmuty's Attack on
Montevideo, 361; Sir Samuel Auchmuty, 362; Map of the Island of Cayenne,
364; Plan of the Town of Cayenne, 365; Father Toribio, 368.

ILLUSTRATIONS: Sketch Map of South America, 370; Monte Pascoal, 371; Map of

the Brazil Coast (1504) by Lorenz Friess, 373; View of Cape Frio, 376; Schö-

ner's Globe-map (1515) of South America, compared with the actual outline,

378; Sixteenth-century Gore-map, 379; An Antwerp Ship, 381; Bordone's

Northern Coast of South America (1521), 382; Pigafetta's Magellan's Straits,

383; Recent Survey of the Straits, 383; Cabot's South America (1544), 385;

Ribero's Magellan's Straits (1529), 386; Martines' Brazil (1578), 386; Finæus'

Southern Hemisphere (1531), 387; Schöner's Southern Hemisphere (1533), 388;

French Map of South America (1540 ?), 389; South America by Joannes à Doete-

chum (1585), 390; De Léry's View of the Brazil Coast, 392; Juan Freire's Map of

South America (1546), 393; Nicolas Vallard's Map (1547) of Magellan's Straits,

394; Medina's America (1549), 395; The Carta Marina of the Ptolemy of 1548,

396; Bellero's America (1554), 397; Homem's Valley of the Amazon (1558), 398;

Gutierrez's South America (1562), 399; Forlani's South America (1570?), 400;

View of Du Noort's Fleet at Rotterdam (1598), 401; Brazil in Wolfe's Linscho-

ten (1598), 401; Oliverius a Nort, 402; Bay of Rio Janeiro (1599), 402; View of

São Sebastião do Rio de Janeiro (1722), 403; Map of the West Indies and Peru

in Wolfe's Linschoten (1598), 404; Patagonia (1599), 405; Magellan's Straits and

adjacent lands in Wolfe's Linschoten (1598), 406; Map of Brazil in Hulsius'

Schmidel (1599), 408; Frontispiece of Hulsius' Schmidel, 409; Schouten's Track

round Cape Horn, 410; Bougainville's Map of Magellan's Straits (1766), 411.

369

413.

I. The Federal Archives, 413.

II. State and Personal Archives, 426; Massachusetts, 426; New Hampshire, 438;
Vermont, 440; Rhode Island, 440; Connecticut, 442; New York, 444; New
Jersey, 448; Pennsylvania, 450; Delaware, 452; Maryland, 452; Virginia, 454;
North Carolina, 456; South Carolina, 457; Georgia, 458; West of the Allegha
nies, 458.

III. Foreign Archives, 459; English and Canadian, 459; French, 465; Dutch, 468;
German, 468; Spanish, 468; Italian, 468.

ILLUSTRATIONS: Lord Mahon, 418; Jared Sparks, with Autograph, 419, 421; James
Bowdoin, 430; Autograph of Timothy Pickering, 434; James Warren and Au-
tograph, 436; Autograph of Stephen Hopkins, 441; of Jonathan Trumbull, 443;
of Henry Moore, with Seal, 445; of Gouverneur Morris, 447; of Baron Steuben,
448; of Frederick Haldimand, 461.

COMPREHENSIVE PRINTED AUTHORITIES UPON THE GENERAL AND UPON SOME

SPECIAL PHASES OF THE HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES, 1776-1850.

Justin Winsor .

THE EDITOR'S FINAL STATEMENT.

CHRONOLOGICAL CONSPECTUS OF AMERICAN HISTORY. The Editor
GENERAL INDEX

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NARRATIVE AND CRITICAL

HISTORY OF AMERICA

THE

CHAPTER I.

THE HUDSON BAY COMPANY.1

BY GEORGE E. ELLIS, D. D., LL. D.,

President Massachusetts Historical Society.

HE most lavish liberality or generosity exhibited in this world of men is shown in the bestowal of a gift which does not belong to the donor of it. In such cases there is generally a very slight knowledge, if not an absolute ignorance, of the quality and value of the gift; so the terms of it are likely to be not only very general but very loose and vague. Indeed, part of the charm of such a gift will consist in the undefined possibilities, the imagined revelations, which may go with it. The burdens and responsibilities attending the acceptance of it, and the trespasses upon the rights of others, the injuries likely to be inflicted upon them, and the struggles, animosities, and controversies, with the risk of final discomfiture, in the maintenance of such a possession, are either not taken into. account, or are winked out of sight.

These familiar truths were signally illustrated, on a very grand scale too, in the gifts made by ecclesiastics and monarchs of the old world of expanses of territory on this western hemisphere, when opened by the early navigators. Under the latest advances of astronomical science, spaces in the moon might now be almost as definitely assigned to claimants for them as were the regions of this new world. Before it was known whether what had been discovered here were an island, an archipelago, or a continent, it was made over in a lump by the Pope to the monarchs of Spain. It was under the famous Bull of Demarcation that Spain was shortly after, by a convention with Portugal, forced to divide to a small extent with that power. Notwithstanding such papal partiality,2 Francis of France soon claimed his

1 [Dr. Ellis has given a summary of this chapter in the Bulletin of the Amer. Geog. Soc., 1886, No. 2, pp. 127-136. — ED.] 2 [See Vol. II. - ED.]

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