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2003

7 x 10 in.
319 pp., 13 maps, line drawings

ISBN: 978-0-292-79156-5
$39.95, hardcover with dust jacket
33% website discount: $26.77

 
 
 
     

The Native Americans of the Texas Edwards Plateau, 1582-1799

By Maria F. Wade
Foreword by Thomas R. Hester
Maps by Don E. Wade

 

Table of Contents and Excerpt


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2003 Texas Old Missions and Forts Restoration Association Book Award
Texas Catholic Historical Society


2004 Finalist: Friends of the Dallas Public Library Award for Book Making the Most Significant Contribution to Knowledge
Texas Institute of Letters

 

"This is truly an exceptional work.... It makes a significant contribution to our understanding of the Native people of Texas by introducing new information from previously unused sources and fresh English translations of known documents."

—William C. Foster, author of Spanish Expeditions into Texas, 1689-1768

The region that now encompasses Central Texas and northern Coahuila, Mexico, was once inhabited by numerous Native hunter-gather groups whose identities and lifeways we are only now learning through archaeological discoveries and painstaking research into Spanish and French colonial records. From these key sources, Maria F. Wade has compiled this first comprehensive ethnohistory of the Native groups that inhabited the Texas Edwards Plateau and surrounding areas during most of the Spanish colonial era.

Much of the book deals with events that took place late in the seventeenth century, when Native groups and Europeans began to have their first sustained contact in the region. Wade identifies twenty-one Native groups, including the Jumano, who inhabited the Edwards Plateau at that time. She offers evidence that the groups had sophisticated social and cultural mechanisms, including extensive information networks, ladino cultural brokers, broad-based coalitions, and individuals with dual-ethnic status. She also tracks the eastern movement of Spanish colonizers into the Edwards Plateau region, explores the relationships among Native groups and between those groups and European colonizers, and develops a timeline that places isolated events and singular individuals within broad historical processes.

Maria F. Wade is assistant professor of anthropology at the University of Texas at Austin.

Texas Archaeology and Ethnohistory Series
Thomas R. Hester, Editor

 Of Related Interest Foster, Historic Native Peoples of Texas
Holliday, Paleoindian Geoarchaeology of the Southern High Plains
Reilly and Garber, Ancient Objects and Sacred Realms

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