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Page 108
Colour in particular was treated , at least in so far as the Indians were concerned , in largely neutral terms . This was partly because the colour of the Indians , which was described by the cosmographer of the Indies , Juan López de ...
Colour in particular was treated , at least in so far as the Indians were concerned , in largely neutral terms . This was partly because the colour of the Indians , which was described by the cosmographer of the Indies , Juan López de ...
Page 112
for the future , in that the Indian mind , like a child's mind , was a tabula rasa on which any suitable doctrine could ... Although ' , he concludes , ' the Indians managed to do without them , they live now that they have them ...
for the future , in that the Indian mind , like a child's mind , was a tabula rasa on which any suitable doctrine could ... Although ' , he concludes , ' the Indians managed to do without them , they live now that they have them ...
Page 117
for whom the Indians , although ' of little understanding and civility ' , were not as brutish as the Spaniards made them out to be . Wages would create in them the acquisitive instinct , and a consequent propensity to work .
for whom the Indians , although ' of little understanding and civility ' , were not as brutish as the Spaniards made them out to be . Wages would create in them the acquisitive instinct , and a consequent propensity to work .
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Contents
ANNUAL REPORT 19712 | 9 |
PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS By Sir Denys Page | 61 |
THE LITERATE ANGLOSAXONON SOURCES AND DISSEMINATIONS Sir | 101 |
Copyright | |
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