Spanish
Found in 6 Collections and/or Records:
First official decree issued by Hernán Cortés after the conquest of Mexico Tenochtitlán, 14 August 1521
First official decree issued by Hernán Cortés after the conquest of Mexico Tenochtitlán.
Title/description created by Clevy Lloyd Strout, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Spanish, University of Tulsa, 1962.
Manuscript Collection: Andres Bernaldes
Manuscript Collection: Natchez Treaty
Collection summary derived from "Guidebook to Manuscripts", 1969: Completely handwritten, this is a treaty, written in Spanish, between the Chickasaws, Choctaws, and Governor Lemos of "the Place and District of Natchez." It contains many signatures, the majority "by his mark."
Peace treaty between the king of Spain, the Chicacha, and the Chacta, May 14, 1792
The signers of this treaty include, but are not limited to, Colonel Manuel Gayoso de Lemos, Governor of Natchez District, Fascoatura, King of the Chickasaws, and Franchimastabia, Principal Chief of Choctaw Nation. Folder 1
Spanish rectangular-based stirrup, late 19th century - early 20th century
Rectangular-based stirrup, has a square metal patch on the base; tag reads "Oldest type found, used by armored Spaniards".
The Removal of the Cherokee, circa 1927
Typescript of an essay titled "The Removal of the Cherokee" by John Madden. Describes how the comissioner J.F. Schermerhorn arranged the Treaty of 1835 in absence of Cherokee officers. By this treaty, the Cherokee Nation ceded to the U.S. all territory east of the Mississippi River. Includes history of the removal from June 1838 to March 1839. Folder 65