Robert H. Jackson 
Population History of the Missions of the Jesuit Province of Paraquaria [PDF ebook] 

Support

Scholars have debated the demographic consequences for the indigenous populations of the Americas of 1492, the beginning of sustained contact between the Old and New Worlds. Some have hypothesized an initial die-off of indigenous population resulting from the introduction of highly contagious crowd diseases such as smallpox and measles. So-called "virgin soil" epidemics caused catastrophic mortality that culled the indigenous populations, and some scholars such as the late Henry Dobyns hypothesized a rate of decline of around 90 percent as epidemics spread across the Americas like a miasmic cloud. However, over the course of generations, the indigenous populations developed immunities to the maladies, and recovered.This book presents a detailed case study of indigenous populations congregated on Jesuit missions in lowland South America that challenges the basic assumptions of the model of "virgin soil" epidemics. It shows that epidemic mortality varied between communities, and that catastrophic mortality occurred on some mission communities generations after first sustained contact. It concludes that patterns of demographic change among indigenous populations were far more complex than is often assumed. This study is of interest to specialists in historical demography, colonial Spanish America, Native American history, and the history of Spanish frontier missions.

€120.91
Zahlungsmethoden
Dieses Ebook kaufen – und ein weitere GRATIS erhalten!
Format PDF ● Seiten 343 ● ISBN 9781527534308 ● Verlag Cambridge Scholars Publishing ● Erscheinungsjahr 2019 ● herunterladbar 3 mal ● Währung EUR ● ID 7008571 ● Kopierschutz Adobe DRM
erfordert DRM-fähige Lesetechnologie

Ebooks vom selben Autor / Herausgeber

225.711 Ebooks in dieser Kategorie