There was neither a political society, nor a citizen, nor a state, nor any civilization in America when it was discovered. One entire ethnical period intervened between the highest American Indian tribes and the beginning of civilization, as that term... Houses and House-life of the American Aborigines - Sida 4efter Lewis Henry Morgan - 1881 - 281 sidorObegränsad förhandsgranskning - Om den här boken
| Lewis Henry Morgan - 1876 - 256 sidor
...civilized society, we caricature the Indians and deceive ourselves. There was neither a political society, nor a state, nor any civilization in America when it was discovered; and, excluding the Eskimos, but one race of Indians, the Red Race. LEWIS H. MORGAN. ART. III. — THE... | |
| Jared Sparks, Edward Everett, James Russell Lowell, Henry Cabot Lodge - 1876 - 494 sidor
...civilized society, we caricature the Indians and deceive ourselves. There was neither a political society, nor a state, nor any civilization in America when it was discovered ; and, excluding the Eskimos, but one race of Indians, the Red Race. LEWIS H. ART. III. — THE CONSULAR... | |
| Lewis Henry Morgan - 1877 - 698 sidor
...herein the substitutions required, and propose to show the parallelism of these several organizations. The plan of government of the American aborigines...civilization, as that term is properly understood. In like manner the plan of government of the Grecian tribes, anterior to civilization, involved the... | |
| Lewis Henry Morgan - 1877 - 586 sidor
...respectively spoke dialects of the same stock language. It resulted in a gentile society (societas), as distinguished from a political society or state...civilization, as that term is properly understood. In like manner the plan of government of the Grecian tribes, anterior to civilization, involved the... | |
| Lewis Henry Morgan - 1877 - 584 sidor
...respectively spoke dialects of the same stock language. It resulted in a gentile society (societas), as distinguished from a political society or state...civilization, as that term is properly understood. In like manner the plan of government of the Grecian tribes, anterior to civilization, involved the... | |
| John Wesley Powell - 1881 - 374 sidor
...civilized society, we caricature the Indians and deceive ourselves. There was neither a political society, nor a state, nor any civilization in America when it was discovered ; and, excluding the Eskimos, but one race of Indians, the Red Race. CHAPTER XI. RUINS OF HOUSES OF... | |
| Gates Phillips Thruston - 1890 - 430 sidor
...Mexico, as "semi-civilized."* Morgan, on the contrary, says: " There was neither a political society, nor a state, nor any civilization in America when it was discovered, and excluding the Eskimos, but one race of Indians, the Red Race." f Bancroft, in his elaborate volumes,... | |
| John Henry Wilbrandt Stuckenberg - 1903 - 360 sidor
...respectively spoke dialects of the same stock language. It resulted in a gentile society (societas), as distinguished from a political society or state...political society, nor a citizen, nor a state, nor any civilisation in America when it was discovered." The only way to become connected with a confederacy... | |
| Lewis Henry Morgan - 1907 - 600 sidor
...spoke dialects of the same stock language. It resulted in a gentile society (socictas), as distinguised from a political society or state (civitas). The difference...civilization, as that term is properly understood. In like manner the plan of government of the Grecian tribes, anterior to civilization, involved the... | |
| Lewis Henry Morgan - 1909 - 606 sidor
...resulted in a gentile society (spcirtas), as distinguised from a political society or state (ciz'itas). The difference between the two is wide and fundamental....political society, nor a citizen, nor a state, nor any civilizatJonTn America when it was discovered. One entire ethnical period intervened between the highest... | |
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