User:Lorelei/Ramón Pané
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Fray Ramón Pané | |
---|---|
Born | Unknown Catalonia, Spain |
Died | Unknown |
Occupation | Friar |
Notable work | An Account of the Antiquities of the Indians |
Ramón Pané was a
Hieronymite Order who accompanied Christopher Columbus on his second voyage to the New World in 1494. He is the author of Antiquities of the Indies, a ...[1][2][3][4][5] He is also known as the person who first introduced tobacco to Europe in 1518.[6]
Life
Ramon Pane came from the Spanish region of Catalonia, where he entered the priesthood as a friar of the Order of St. Jerome.[7]
Time in Hispaniola
The Account of the Antiquities of the Indians (c. 1498)
References
Notes
- ^ Arrom 1999a.
- ^ Whitehead 2011.
- ^ Thomson 1993.
- ^ McNeil 1982.
- ^ Echevarria 1997.
- ^ Winter 2000.
- ^ Arrom 1999a, p. xiii.
Sources
- Arrom, Jose Juan (1999a). "Introduction to the English Edition". In Ramón Pané (ed.). An Account of the Antiquities of the Indians. Durham: Duke University Press. pp. xi–xv. )
- Echevarria, Roberto Gonzalez (1997). "Fray Ramon Pane - "How the Men Were Parted From the Women"". The Oxford Book of Latin American Short Stories. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 25–27. )
- McNeil, W. K. (1982). "History in American Folklore: An Historical Perspective" (Restricted Access). Western Folkore. 41 (1): 30–35. )
- Thomson, David (1993). "The Cronistas de Indias Revisited: Historical Reports, Archaeological Evidence, and Literary and Artistic Traces of Indigenous Music and Dance in the Greater Antilles at the Time of the Conquista" (Restricted Access). Latin American Music Review. 14 (2): 181–201. )
- ISBN 9780271037998.
- Winter, Joseph C (2000). Tobacco Use by Native North Americans: Sacred Smoke and Silent Killer. Norman, Oklahoma: University of Oklahoma Press. p. 2. ISBN 9780806132624.
External links
Notes to myself
Thomson: indebted for info on Tainos (183), extremely little known (183). Quote: The Relacion de Fray Ramon is not only our most authentic description of the life and customs of the Antillean indigenes but must also be recognized as the first essay in the field of American anthropology more generally' (183). Catalan > Castilian (183)