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Bücher der Reihe Mercury

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  • - Essays in Honour of Sherry Olson
     
    87,00 €

    For 60 years Sherry Olson has been sharing her passion for understanding how people live in space and time. She has made major contributions to environmental, social, urban, and women's histories, as well as public health, demography, and geographic information systems.

  • 11% sparen
    von Terry Mahoney
    95,00 €

    This gazetteer and atlas defines and illustrates every named (as opposed to merely catalogued) object and term related to Mercury, offering a glossary, an index of all the headwords in the gazetteer, an atlas of maps and images and appendix material.

  • - The Archaeology of Port Joli, Nova Scotia
    von Matthew Betts
    127,00 €

    This book presents the work of the E'se'get Archaeology Project, a community-based research endeavor focused on defining the archaeological record of Port Joli Harbour, Nova Scotia.

  • - A Year and Its Legacies
     
    92,00 €

    The year 1968 in Canada was extraordinary. Leading scholars explore the year's major events, from the rise of Trudeaumania and the Parti Quebecois to the new visions articulated in the Royal Commission on the Status of Women, the CRTC, Medicare, the Indigenous rights movement, CanLit and more.

  • von Anna Kearney Guigne
    160,00 €

  • von Frances M. Slaney
    103,00 €

    This book examines Marius Barbeau's career at Canada's National Museum (now the Canadian Museum of History), in light of his education at Oxford and in Paris (1907-1911).Based on archival research in England, France and Canada, Marius Barbeau's Vitalist Ethnology presents Barbeau's anthropological training at Oxford through his meticulous course notes, as well as archival photographs at the Pitt Rivers Museum and the Bibliothèque et Archives nationales du Québec. It also draws upon Barbeau's professional correspondence at Library and Archives Canada, the BC Archives, and, above all, the National Museum, where he worked for over four decades.The author, Frances M. Slaney, sheds light on the professional life of this founder of Canadian anthropology, exploring his difficult working relationships with Edward Sapir, his collaborations with Franz Boas, and his outstanding fieldwork in rural Quebec and with Indigenous communities on British Columbia's Northwest Coast.Barbeau penned over 1,000 books and articles, in addition to curating innovative museum exhibitions and art shows. He invited Group of Seven artists into his field sites, convinced that their works could better capture the "vitality" of Quebec's rural culture than his own abundant photographs. For these-and many other-contributions, the Historic Sites and Monuments Board of Canada recognized him as a "person of national historic importance" in 1985.

  • von Robert von Bitter
    91,00 €

    In the mid-to late 1660s and early 1670s, the Haudenosaunee established a series of settlements at strategic locations along the trade routes inland at short distances from the north shore of Lake Ontario. From east to west, these communities consisted of Ganneious, on Napanee or Hay Bay, on the Bay of Quinte; Kenté, near the isthmus of the Quinte Peninsula; Ganaraské, at the mouth of the Ganaraska River; Quintio, on Rice Lake; Ganatsekwyagon, near the mouth of the Rouge River; Teiaiagon, near the mouth of the Humber River; and Qutinaouatoua, inland from the western end of Lake Ontario. All of these settlements likely contained people from several Haudenosaunee nations as well as former Ontario Iroquoians who had been adopted by the Haudenosaunee. These self-sufficient places acted as bases for their own inhabitants but also served as stopovers for south shore Haudenosaunee on their way to and from the beaver hunt beyond the lower Great Lakes. The Cayuga village of Kenté was where, in 1668, the Sulpicians established a mission by the same name, which became the basis for the region's later name of Quinte. In 1676, a short-lived subsidiary mission was established at Teiaiagon. It appears that most of the north shore villages were abandoned by 1688. This volume brings together traditional Indigenous knowledge as well as documentary and recent archaeological evidence of this period and focuses on describing the historical context and efforts to find the settlements and presents examinations of the unique material culture found at them and at similar communities in the Haudenosaunee homeland.Available formats: trade paperback and accessible PDF

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