1 / 123

Burkholder and Johnson, p. 155.

Burkholder and Johnson, p. 155. Bota de porto: Supple gaucho boot made from the legskin of a calf. Chiripá: Large skirt-like cloth worn by gauchos in lieu of trousers. Facón: Gaucho’s long, swordlike knife. Dormador: Gaucho broncobuster.

nitza
Télécharger la présentation

Burkholder and Johnson, p. 155.

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Burkholder and Johnson, p. 155.

  2. Bota de porto: Supple gaucho boot made from the legskin of a calf.

  3. Chiripá: Large skirt-like cloth worn by gauchos in lieu of trousers.

  4. Facón: Gaucho’s long, swordlike knife

  5. Dormador: Gaucho broncobuster.

  6. Taba: Dice-like game of throwing the knuckle bone of a cow.

  7. Payador: Gaucho troubadour, folk singer.

  8. Malambo

  9. Gato Dance Zamba Dance

  10. Pulpería: Combination tavern and general store.

  11. La doma (The Breaking-in) Reinaldo GiudiciColección Museo Isaac Fernández Blanco

  12. Pobladores del campo, 1865

  13. Una pulpería en la frontera, 1865

  14. Pulpería

  15. Pulpería

  16. San Martín Juan Manuel de Rosas

  17. Justo José de Urquiza

  18. In 1862, Bartolomé Mitre was inaugurated as president, and he launched a new drive to unify Argentina.

  19. Mitre was followed in the presidency by Domingo Sarmiento, author of Facundo (1845), the most famous literary attack on the caudillo-style gauchos.

  20. During the term of Nicolás Avellaneda (1874-80), Argentina undertook its last major territorial conquest—the “Indian wars.”

  21. Casimiro y su hijo Sam Slick, 1865

  22. A Tehuelche Toldo.

  23. Toldo

  24. Toldo

  25. Araucanians in front of their toldo.

  26. A native American in Argentina.

  27. A toldería of the tehuelche.

  28. Native-American boy in Argentina on horseback.

  29. Toldería of the Tobas in Colonia San Antonio de Obligado. Since 1887. Fotógrafo Catre.

  30. A Mataca Woman.

  31. Dibujo de Guaman Poma.

  32. Mapuche en el cepo hacia fines del siglo XIX.

  33. Argentine Soldiers at a Telegraph Post, around 1880.

  34. A priest preaching to Patagonian Indians during the Campaign of Roca.

More Related