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The "Montezuma" of the
Pueblo Indians

by Adolph F. Bandelier

* * * * *

Adolph Francis Bandelier ( 1840-1914) assumed a truly interdisciplinary
stance in his studies of traditional cultures in South America, Mexico, and the
American Southwest. A native of Switzerland, he came to the United States
when he was eight years old. Bandelier's father, a businessman who left
Switzerland in response to unfavorable political developments, eventually
settled in Highland, a Swiss community in central Illinois, where he helped to
establish a bank. The younger Bandelier, after studying geology at the Uni-
versity of Berne, returned to the United States and became involved in his
father's banking and other business enterprises. However, the influence of
cultural evolutionist Lewis Henry Morgan turned Bandelier's interests to-
ward ethnological research.

____________________
SOURCE: American Anthropologist, o. s. 5 ( 1892), 319-326. At the end of the
essay that periodical's editor has appended the following: "The above article
was written by Professor Bandelier while on board the steamship San Juan,
off the coast of Tehuantepec, en route to Bolivia, his new field of investigation."

-200-

Questia, a part of Gale, Cengage Learning. www.questia.com

Publication Information: Book Title: Native American Folklore in Nineteenth-Century Periodicals. Contributors: William M. Clements - author. Publisher: Swallow Press. Place of Publication: Athens, OH. Publication Year: 1986. Page Number: 200.
    
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