Lexicographical Neighbors of Ethnohistorians
Literary usage of Ethnohistorians
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Architecture and Urbanization in Colonial Chiapas, Mexico by Sidney David Markman (1984)
"The generally accepted view among ethnohistorians and urban historians regarding
settlement patterns of the Indians of Chiapas prior to their evangelization ..."
2. The South Sea Islanders and the Queensland Labour Trade: A Record of Voyages by William T. Wawn (1893)
"It is among this latter group that Pacific historians - if I may exclude
pre-historians and ethnohistorians - take their place. The initial impetus towards ..."
3. America's Curious Botanist: A Tercentennial Reappraisal of John Bartram by Nancy Everill Hoffmann, John C. Van Horne (2004)
"While his report of the congress and assorted other tidbits of information on
the Indians are extremely valuable to ethnohistorians, it is what he did not ..."
4. Home Cooking in the Global Village: Caribbean Food from Buccaneers to by Richard R. Wilk (2006)
"... and thanks to archeologists and ethnohistorians we know quite a bit about how
the lives of the indigenous Mayan people changed as a consequence. ..."
5. Explorations Into the World of Lewis and Clark: 194 Essays from the Pages of by Robert A. Saindon (2003)
"Historians and ethnohistorians have, perhaps, sometimes been too enamored of
narrative documents and have regarded maps as "illustrations" rather than as ..."