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March 2008

6 x 9 in.
366 pp., 1 line drawings, 10 maps

ISBN: 978-0-292-71792-3
$60.00, hardcover, no dust jacket
33% website discount: $40.20

ISBN: 978-0-292-71793-0
$24.95, paperback
33% website discount: $16.72

 
 
 
     

Historic Native Peoples of Texas

By William C. Foster
Foreword by Alston V. Thoms

 

Table of Contents and Excerpt

 

"William C. Foster provides us with an unprecedented opportunity to learn in considerable detail about Indian lifeways during the initial rounds of European exploration in south-central North America. . . . This book is indeed a major component of the late twentieth and early twenty-first century historiographies and ethnographies that place Texas at the forefront of Native American studies. Its humanistic perspective and synthesis of ethnohistorical research will be valued for generations to come."

—Alston V. Thoms, from the foreword

Several hundred tribes of Native Americans were living within or hunting and trading across the present-day borders of Texas when Cabeza de Vaca and his shipwrecked companions washed up on a Gulf Coast beach in 1528. Over the next two centuries, as Spanish and French expeditions explored the state, they recorded detailed information about the locations and lifeways of Texas's Native peoples. Using recent translations of these expedition diaries and journals, along with discoveries from ongoing archaeological investigations, William C. Foster here assembles the most complete account ever published of Texas's Native peoples during the early historic period (AD 1528 to 1722).

Foster describes the historic Native peoples of Texas by geographic regions. His chronological narrative records the interactions of Native groups with European explorers and with Native trading partners across a wide network that extended into Louisiana, the Great Plains, New Mexico, and northern Mexico. Foster provides extensive ethnohistorical information about Texas's Native peoples, as well as data on the various regions' animals, plants, and climate. Accompanying each regional account is an annotated list of named Indian tribes in that region and maps that show tribal territories and European expedition routes.

This authoritative overview of Texas's historic Native peoples reveals that these groups were far more cosmopolitan than previously known. Functioning as the central link in the continent-wide circulation of trade goods and cultural elements such as religion, architecture, and lithic technology, Texas's historic Native peoples played a crucial role in connecting the Native peoples of North America from the Pacific Coast to the Southeast woodlands.

An award-winning historian and fellow of the Texas State Historical Association, William C. Foster is the author of Spanish Expeditions into Texas, 1689-1768 and editor of Texas and Northeastern Mexico, 1630-1690 by Juan Bautista Chapa.


 Also by the Author Spanish Expeditions into Texas, 1689-1768
Chapa, Texas and Northeastern Mexico,1630-1690 (editor)
 Of Related Interest Newcomb, Indians of Texas
Wade, The Native Americans of the Texas Edwards Plateau, 1582-1799
Zappler, Learn about Texas Indians

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