The People are King is the first ethnohistorical study of the transformation of Andean communities over three centuries, from the Inca era into the nineteenth century, which traces the movement of indigenous people toward self-government.
The People are King is the first ethnohistorical study of the transformation of Andean communities over three centuries, from the Inca era into the nineteenth century, which traces the movement of indigenous people toward self-government.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
S. Elizabeth Penry is Assistant Professor of History and Latin American Studies at Fordham University.
Inhaltsangabe
* Acknowledgments * A Note on Terminology * Introduction: The Genesis of an Andean Christianity and Politics * Part I Inca and Early Spanish Peru * Chapter 1 Incas and Asanaqi in Qullasuyu * Chapter 2 Spanish República and Inca Tyranny * Chapter 3 Resettlement: Spaniards Found New Towns for "Indians" * Part II The Andeanization of Spanish Institutions and Christianity * Chapter 4 Andeans Found Their Own Towns: The Andeanization of Reducción * Chapter 5 Cofradía and Cabildo in the Eighteenth Century: The Merger of Andean Religiosity and Town Leadership * Chapter 6 Rational Bourbons and Radical Comuneros: Civil Practices That Shape Towns * Part III The Revolutionary Común * Chapter 7 Comunero Politics and the King's Justice: The Común Takes Moral Action * Chapter 8 A Lettered Revolution: A Brotherhood of Communities * Conclusion The Rise of the Común and Its Legacy * Notes * Bibliography * Index
* Acknowledgments * A Note on Terminology * Introduction: The Genesis of an Andean Christianity and Politics * Part I Inca and Early Spanish Peru * Chapter 1 Incas and Asanaqi in Qullasuyu * Chapter 2 Spanish República and Inca Tyranny * Chapter 3 Resettlement: Spaniards Found New Towns for "Indians" * Part II The Andeanization of Spanish Institutions and Christianity * Chapter 4 Andeans Found Their Own Towns: The Andeanization of Reducción * Chapter 5 Cofradía and Cabildo in the Eighteenth Century: The Merger of Andean Religiosity and Town Leadership * Chapter 6 Rational Bourbons and Radical Comuneros: Civil Practices That Shape Towns * Part III The Revolutionary Común * Chapter 7 Comunero Politics and the King's Justice: The Común Takes Moral Action * Chapter 8 A Lettered Revolution: A Brotherhood of Communities * Conclusion The Rise of the Común and Its Legacy * Notes * Bibliography * Index
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