Hostname: page-component-77c89778f8-sh8wx Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-17T17:13:22.784Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Dissertations on Luso-Brazilian Topics; A Bibliography of Dissertations Completed in the United States, Great Britain and Canada, 1892-1970

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 December 2015

Carl A. Hanson*
Affiliation:
The University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, New Mexico

Extract

After the first American doctoral dissertation related to Luso-Brazilian studies was completed in 1892, the output of dissertations in that area of scholarship grew slowly and unsteadily. In contrast, graduate student interest in Luso-Brazilian studies increased greatly during the twenty years after 1950. Students in British universities also contributed an increasing number of studies during the latter period (Table I). Unfortunately, few compilations of this accelerating scholarly production have been available to scholars interested in Luso-Brazilian studies.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Academy of American Franciscan History 1973

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

A. REFERENCE

McCabe, James Patrick., Catholic Reference Sources: A Critical Study. Michigan, 1968. DAI, 30 348-A.Google Scholar
2. Rutherford, Phillip Roland., Linguistic Research in American Universities: Dissertations and Influences from 1900 to 1964. East Texas State, 1966, DA, 27, 2517-A.Google Scholar

B. GENERAL AND MISCELLANEOUS

3. Allen, Joseph Heatley Dulles Jr., Portuguese Word Formation with Suffixes. Pennsylvania, 1940.Google Scholar
4. Anthony, Hid Elizabeth., Iron Age Cultures in the North-west of the Iberian Peninsula. London, 1956.Google Scholar
5. Bittencourt, Benedito de Paula., The Portuguese New Testament in the Light of Modern Research: Its Translations and Text. Boston, 1956. DA, 16, 1291.Google Scholar
6. Craddock, Sister Clare Eileen., Style Theories as Found in Stylistic Studies of Romance Scholars, 1900–1950. Catholic, 1952.Google Scholar
7. Eastlack, Charles Leonard., The Morphology of the Verb in Portuguese. Texas, 1964. DA, 25, 2973.Google Scholar
8. Kunek, Wenancjusz Franciszek., Origins and Pronomial Functions of “y” in French, Spanish, Portuguese and Italian. Pennsylvania State, 1967. DA, 28, 659-A.Google Scholar
9. Leder, Hans Howard., Cultural Persistence in a Portuguese-American Community. Stanford, 1968. DAI, 29, 2269-B.Google Scholar
10. Lunden, Walter Albin., Changes in Mobility and Structure of Higher Education in the Western World since 1100 A. D. Harvard, 1934. Harvard Summaries, 1934, p. 440. [Some Treatment of Portugal.]Google Scholar
11. Martínez, Quino E., Motif Index of Portuguese Tales. North Carolina, 1955. North Carolina Record, No. 562, p. 237.Google Scholar
12. Messner, Arnold Emil., The Development of the Second Person Pronoun in the Major Romance Languages. Columbia, 1967. DA, 28, 5024-A.Google Scholar
13. Naro, Anthony Julius., History of Portuguese Passives and Impersonals. Masschusetts Institute of Technology, 1968.Google Scholar
14. Pap, Leo., Portuguese American Speech: An Outline of Speech Conditions among Portuguese Immigrants in New England and Elsewhere in the United States. Columbia, 1948.Google Scholar
15. Pratola, Daniel J., Portuguese Words of Italian Origin. California, 1952.Google Scholar
16. Richman, Stephen Herbert., A Comparative Study of Spanish and Portuguese. Pennsylvania, 1965. DA, 26, 3319.Google Scholar
17. Saciuk, Bohdan., Lexical Strata in Generative Phonology (with illustrations from Ibero-Romance). Illinois, 1969. DAI, 31, 746-A.Google Scholar
18. Sheridan, Leora James., The Origin and Development of Secondary Education in Portugal. Pennsylvania, 1940. [Covers period, 1073–1936.]Google Scholar
19. Taft, Donald Reed., Two Portuguese Communities in New England. Columbia, 1923.Google Scholar
20. Veiga, Gérson Soares. A Comparative Study of Five Major Versions of the Portuguese Old Testament. Northwestern, 1969. DAI, 30, 3091-A.Google Scholar
21. Vieira, Nelson Harry., The Luso-Brazilian Reciprocal Image. Harvard, 1969.Google Scholar
22. Wyatt, James L., An Automated Portuguese to English Transformational Grammar. Texas, 1965. DA, 27, 195-A. ALSO SEE No.: 238.Google Scholar

C. MEDIEVAL PORTUGAL (TO. CA. 1500)

23. Abraham, Richard David., A Portuguese Version of the Life of Baarlam and Josaphat. Pennsylvania, 1937.Google Scholar
24. Adams, Nathan., Fernão Lopes, Late Medieval Portuguese Chronicler. Princeton, 1956. DA, 17, 607.Google Scholar
25. Algeo, James Edward., Mood in the Concessive Clause in Medieval Ibero-Romance. Wisconsin, 1969. DAI, 30, 1542-A.Google Scholar
26. Anderson, Carleton Q., The Evolution of the Ines de Castro Story in Drama. Brigham Young, 1970. DAI, 31, 2333-A.Google Scholar
27. Bagby, Albert Ian Jr., The Moor and the Jew in the Cántigas of Alfonso X, el Sabio. Kentucky, 1968. DAI, 30, 1550-A.Google Scholar
28. Bagley, CP., The Influence of the Provençal Troubadours on the Gallego-Portuguese Trovadores, 1200–1350. Leeds, 1963.Google Scholar
29. Bloom, Leonard., The Emergence of an Intellectual and Social Ideal as Expressed in the Works of Alfonso X and Don Juan Manuel. Pittsburgh, 1967. DA, 28, 1427-A.Google Scholar
30. Bourne, Edward Gaylord., The Demarcation Line of Pope Alexander VI. Yale, 1892.Google Scholar
31. Callcott, Frank., The Supernatural in Early Spanish Literature, Studied in the Works of the Court of Alfonso X, el Sabio. Columbia, 1923.Google Scholar
32. Carter, Henry Hare., Paleographical Edition and Study of the Language of a Portion of Codex Alcobacensis 200. Pennsylvania, 1937.Google Scholar
33. Clemens, George Beaver., A Tentative Portuguese Dictionary of Dated First Occurrences to the Year 1350. Pennsylvania, 1949. DA, 13, 817.Google Scholar
34. Davis, William Richard Jr., The Role of the Virgin in the Cántigas de Santa Maria. Kentucky, 1969. DAI, 31, 383-A.Google Scholar
35. Dexter, Elsie Forsythe., Sources of the Cántigas of Alfonso el Sabio Wisconsin, 1926.Google Scholar
36. Dominicovich, Ruth., Portuguese Orthography to 1500. Pennsylvania, 1947.Google Scholar
37. Eaton, Thelma., The Wandering Printers of Spain and Portugal, 1473–1536. Chicago, 1948.Google Scholar
38. Jacobs, Julian Godfey. The Suffering of the Jews in Spain and Portugal in the Fifteenth Century, as Reflected in Contemporary Homiletical Hebrew Literature. London, 1961.Google Scholar
39. Jaffe, Erwin., A Treatment of Certain Aspects of Galician as Found in the Crónica troyana . Harvard, 1939. Harvard Summaries, 1939, p. 268.Google Scholar
40. Kline, Lawton., A Metrical Study of the Cántigas of Alfonso el Sabio. Stanford, 1950. Stanford Abstracts, 25, 232.Google Scholar
41. Kress, Robert A., Imago Mundi: Some Neglected Aspects of the Early Age of Discovery. Minnesota, 1951. DA, 12, 180.Google Scholar
42. Lathrop, Thomas Albert., An Edition of the Legend of the Siete infantes de Lara from the Refundición toledana de la crónica de España de 1344. California (Los Angeles), 1970. DAI, 31, 6557-A. [Portuguese origin asserted for Crónica de 1344.]Google Scholar
43. Learned, Erma R., Old Portuguese Vocalic Finals (Phonology and Orthography of Accented -ou, -eu, -iu, and -ao, -eo, -io). Pennsylvania, 1948.Google Scholar
44. Nelson, Jan A., A Critical Edition of the Limo de cifraria. North Carolint, 1964. DA, 26, 1653.Google Scholar
45. O’Malley, Brother E. Austin., Tello and Theotonio, the Twelfth-Century Founders of the Monastery of Santa Cruz in Coimbra. Catholic, 1954.Google Scholar
46. Parker, Kelvin M., A Classified Vocabulary of the Crónicatroyana. Chicago, 1953.Google Scholar
47. Phillips, Florence Virginia., An Edition of Some of the Cantigas d’escarnho e de maldizer. Ohio State, 1955. DA, 16, 529.Google Scholar
48. Pope, Isabel., Sources of the Musical and Metrical Forms of the Mediaeval Lyric in the Hispanic Peninsula. Radcliffe, 1930.Google Scholar
49. Pupo-Walker, Constantino Enrique., A Critical Edition of the Old Portuguese Version of Barlaam and Josaphat. North Carolina, 1967. DA, 28, 3681-A.Google Scholar
50. Roberts, Kimberly Sidney., Orthography, Phonology and Word Study of the Leal conselheiro. Pennsylvania, 1940.Google Scholar
51. Rose, Stanley Ludwig., Edition and Language Study of the Crónica de D. Pedro I by Fernão Lopes. Wisconsin, 1969. DAI, 31, 766-A.Google Scholar
52. Ruiz, Lina Antonio., A Tentative Portuguese Dictionary of Dated First Occurrences in Certain Documents Between 1351–1450. Pennsylvania, 1964. DA, 25, 5285.Google Scholar
53. Russo, Harold J., Morphology and Syntax of the Leal conselheiro. Pennsylvania, 1939.Google Scholar
54. Sacks, Norman Paul., The Latinity of Dated Documents in Portuguese Territory. Pennsylvania, 1940. [Covers period 770–1192.]Google Scholar
55. Sharpe, Lawrence Allbright., A Critical Edition of the Old Portuguese Vida de S. Bernardo, with Introduction, Notes and Glossary. North Carolina, 1956. North Carolina Record, No. 576, p. 288.Google Scholar
56. Sousa, Thomas Frederic., A Linguistic Analysis of a Portion of the Galician Translation of the General estoria by Alfonso X, el Sabio. Wisconsin, 1964. DA, 24, 5418. ALSO SEE Nos.: 18,216.Google Scholar

D. IMPERIAL PORTUGAL, CA. 1500–1800

57. Aitken, J.M., The Trial of George Buchanan Before the Lisbon Inquisition. Edinburgh, 1939.Google Scholar
58. Andrews, James Richard., The Artistry of the Plays of Gil Vicente. Princeton, 1953. DA, 14, 116.Google Scholar
59. Apostolides, Diana Lynn Stewart., Voltaire’s Lisbonne and Loi Poems: A Quantitative Approach to the Problem of Variants. North Carolina, 1970. DAI, 31, 6043-A.Google Scholar
60. Askins, Arthur Lee., A Critical Edition and Study of the Cancionero de Évora, in Manuscript CXIV/1-17 of the Public Library of Évora, Portugal. California, 1963. DA, 24, 5403.Google Scholar
61. Avelino, Leonidas Querubim, S.J., The Adjective and the Verb in The Luskds of Camões: A Critical Analysis and Interpretation Preceded by a Survey of Camonean Criticism. Harvard, 1965.Google Scholar
62. Baird, Joseph A., The 18th Century Retable in the South of Spain, Portugal and Mexico. Harvard, 1951.Google Scholar
63. Beal, Tarcísio., Os jesuítas, a Universidade de Combra e a igreja brasileira, subsidios para a historia do regalismo em Portugal e no Brasil, 1750–1850. Catholic, 1969. DAI, 30, 1936-A.Google Scholar
64. Brass, Denis John., Frei Thome de Jesus O. E. S. A. and His Trabalhos de Jesus: A Bio-Bibliographical Study. London, 1967.Google Scholar
65. Brooks, Mary Elizabeth., Gabriel de Espinosa, “el pastelero de Madrigal,” in History and Literature. New Mexico, 1960. DA, 20, 4394.Google Scholar
66. Cannon, Mary Agnes. The Education of Women during the Renaissance. Catholic, 1916. [Contains chapter on Spain and Portugal.]Google Scholar
67. Chyet, Stanley Franklin. A Merchant of Eminence: The Story of Aaron Lopez, Hebrew Union, 1960.Google Scholar
68. CirurgiãO, Antonio Amaro., Fernão Alvares do Oriente: o homen e a obra. Wisconsin, 1970. DAI, 31, 475-A.Google Scholar
69. Clemente, Alice Rodrigues., The Allegories of Gil Vicente. Brown, 1967. DA, 28, 3138-A.Google Scholar
70. Cohen, Martin Aaron., Samuel Usque’s Consalaçam as Tribulaçoens de Israel. Hebrew Union, 1960.Google Scholar
71. Corbett, Theodore Graham., The Elements of Reform in Early Seventeenth Century Spain. Southern California, 1970. DAI, 31, 3463-A. [Some discussion of Portugal.]Google Scholar
72. Dordick, Mildred Evelyn. An Edition of the Sixteenth Century Portuguese Manuscript Espelho de christãos novos by Frei Francisco Machado. Wisconsin, 1965. DA, 28, 626-A.Google Scholar
73. Duffy, James Edward., Portuguese Narratives of Shipwreck, 1552–1649. Harvard, 1952.Google Scholar
74. Duncan, Thomas Bentley., Uneasy Allies: Anglo-Portuguese Commercial, Diplomatic, and Maritime Relations, 1642–1662. Chicago, 1967.Google Scholar
75. Fisher, Harold Edward Stephen., Anglo-Portuguese Trade, 1700–1770. London, 1961.Google Scholar
76. Fishlock, A.D.H., A Critical Study of the Poems of João Pinto Delgado Published at Rouen in 1627. London, 1953.Google Scholar
77. Freeman, Ludmila Cermak., A History of Portuguese Orthography since 1500. Pennsylvania, 1965. DA, 26, 3335.Google Scholar
78. Freitas, William John., An Historic and Geographic Commentary on The Lusiads of Camões. Stanford, 1958. DA, 19, 327.Google Scholar
79. Giamatti, Angelo Bartlett., The Earthly Paradise in the Renaissance Epic. Yale, 1964. [Discussion of Camões.]Google Scholar
80. Gómez, Valerie Masson., The Origin of “Capitolo” as a Metric Term, and Its Use in the Poetry of Italy, Spain and Portugal. California, 1969. DAI, 31, 1757-A.Google Scholar
81. Gotaas, Mary C., Bossuet and Vieira, a Study in National, Epochal and Individual Style. Catholic, 1953.Google Scholar
82. Gulstad, Daniel Elias., Phonological Theory in the Renaissance. Illinois, 1969. DAI, 30, 2989-A.Google Scholar
83. Hasbrouck, Francis Mahlon. Spanish and Portuguese Historical Characters in Modern French Drama Before 1830. John Hopkins, 1933.Google Scholar
84. Hernández, Gustavo Augusto., João de Barros: First Great Portuguese Prose Writer. North Carolina, 1952. North Carolina Record, No. 520. p. 250.Google Scholar
85. Hudson, Barton., A Portuguese Source of Seventeenth-Century Iberian Music. Manuscript No. 1577, Loc. B, 5, Municipal Library, Oporto, Portugal. Indiana, 1961. DA, 22, 3220.Google Scholar
86. Joiner, Ida Virginia. The Dramatic Art of Gil Vicente. Texas, 1940.Google Scholar
87. Letzring, Madonna Marie., The Influence of Camoens in English Literature. Maryland, 1962. DA, 25, 1915.Google Scholar
88. Lunardini, Peter J., The Poetic Technique of Gil Vicente. New Mexico, 1953.Google Scholar
89. Lytle, Evelyn Pomroy., Rolim de Moura’s Os novissimos do homen: A Portuguese Biblical Epic. Tulane, 1967. DA, 28, 2688-A.Google Scholar
90. Moseley, William Whatley., An Etymological Vocabulary of the Spanish in the works of Gil Vicente. New Mexico, 1954. DA, 15, 119.Google Scholar
91. Newman, Elizabeth Thompson. A Critical Edition of an Early Portuguese Cookbook. North Carolina, 1964. DA, 26, 1641.Google Scholar
92. Piper, Anson Conant. The Portuguese Court of the Sixteenth Century as Reflected in the Dramatic Novels of Jorge Ferreira de Vasconcellos. Wisconsin, 1953. Wisconsin Summaries, 15, 629.Google Scholar
93. Preto-Rodas, Richard A., Structure and Theme in Rodrigues Lobo’s Corte na aldeia e noites de inverno. Michigan, 1966, DA, 27, 3467-A.Google Scholar
94. Rangel-Guerrero, Daniel., Gil Vicente. Comedia sobre a divisa da cidade de Coimbra, con una introducción y notas. Oregon, 1967. DA, 28, 2219-A.Google Scholar
95. Riccio, Edward Anathony., The Place of the Comic in the Theater of Gil Vicente. Pittsburgh, 1969. DAI, 30, 1572-A.Google Scholar
96. Rosenblatt, Norman. Joseph Nasi, Court Favorite of Selim II. Pennsylvania, 1957. DA, 17, 2587. [Nasi (João Miquez) was a native of Portugal who fled the Inquisition.]Google Scholar
97. Rozen, Eva J., Renaissance Motifs in Epic Theory and Poetry in the Romance Languages. New York, 1962. DA, 27, 1792-A. [Treatment of Camões.]Google Scholar
98. Schneider, Susan Cora. The General Company of the Cultivation of the Vine of the Upper Douro, 1756–1777: A Case Study of Pombal’s Economic Reform Program. Texas, 1970. DAI, 31, 3484-A.Google Scholar
99. Servín, Manuel., The Act of Sovereignty in the Age of Discovery. Southern California, 1959. DA, 20, 4379.Google Scholar
100. Silva, Paulo Wailler da. An Ethical Analysis of the Sermons of Antonio Vieira, S.J. Southwestern Baptist, 1962.Google Scholar
101. Smith, Robert C Jr., The Architecture of João Frederico Ludovice and Some of His Contemporaries at Lisbon, 1700–1750. Harvard, 1936. Harvard Summaries, 1936, p. 130.Google Scholar
102. Solenni, Gino de., Lope de Vega’s El Brasil restituido, Together with a Study of Patriotism in His Theater. Columbia, 1929.Google Scholar
103. Speer, Klaus., A Portuguese Manuscript of Keyboard Music from the Late Seventeenth Century: Manuscript No. 1607, Loc. G, 7 Muncipal Library, Oporto, Portugal. Indiana, 1956. DA, 16, 2477.Google Scholar
104. Stathatos, Constantine Christopher., A Critical Edition, with Introduction and Notes, of Gil Vicente’s Floresta de Enganos. Oregon, 1970. DAI, 31, 3521-A.Google Scholar
105. Tomlins, Jack Edward., The Nature of Gil Vicente’s Dramatic Artistry. Princeton, 1954. DA, 18, 238.Google Scholar
106. Turner, Mary E., Anglo-Portuguese Relations During the War of the Spanish Succession. Oxford, 1952.Google Scholar
107. Villiers, John Francis Hyde. Portuguese Society in the Reigns of D. Pedro II and D. João V, 1680–1750. Cambridge, 1963.Google Scholar
108. Willis, R.C., The Lusiads of Luís Vaz de Camões, as an Expression of the Spirit of the Renaissance. Manchester, 1968.Google Scholar
109. Yerushalmi, Yosef H., Isaac Cardoso: A Study of Seventeenth Century Marranism and Politics. Columbia, 1966. Also See Nos.: 18, 37, 41, 204, 211, 216, 285.Google Scholar

E. NINETEENTH AND TWENTIETH CENTURY PORTUGAL

110. Beller, Dennis Charles. The Portuguese Territories Issue in the United Nations: An Analysis of Debates. California (Los Angeles), 1970. DAI, 31, 2450-A. Google Scholar
111. Bestor, William Porter. Aldeia: Value Orientations and Social Status in a Portuguese Village. Harvard, 1970.Google Scholar
112. Contreras, Matilda., Two Interpreters of Galicia: Rosalia de Castro and Emilia Pardo Bazán. Pittsburgh, 1960. DA, 21, 2703.Google Scholar
113. Cutileiro, J.P., The Social Structure of a Portuguese Rural District. Oxford, 1968.Google Scholar
114. Da Cal, Ernesto Guerra., Lengua y estilo de Eça de Queiroz. Columbia, 1950.Google Scholar
115. Da Rosa, Alberto Machado. Rosalía de Castro. A mulher e o poeta. Wisconsin, 1953. Wisconsin Summaries, 14, 460.Google Scholar
116. Davis, William Myron. Neo-Troubadourism in Galicia, Portugal, and Brazil. New York, 1969. DAI, 30, 2479-A.Google Scholar
117. Fagan, David Stanton., Santa Leocádia: A Linguistic Study of a Northern Portuguese Community. Wisconsin, 1969. DAI, 31, 742-A.Google Scholar
118. Fair, Eugene Robert. Anglo-French Relations Concerning Spain and Portugal and Their American Colonies, 1822–1827. Iowa, 1938. Iowa Abstracts in History, 4, 19.Google Scholar
119. Fein, John Morton., Eugênio de Castro and the Development of Cosmopolitanism in Hispanic Poetry. Harvard, 1950.Google Scholar
120. Fernandes, Roberto Saboia de Madeiros. Portugal and Its Overseas Territories: Economic Structure and Policies, 1950–1957. Harvard, 1960.Google Scholar
121. Gomez, Samuel., Education in Portugal. Connecticut, 1968. DA, 29, 2435-A.Google Scholar
122. Head, Brian Franklin., A Comparisonof the Segmental Phonology of Lisbon and Rio de Janeiro. Texas, 1964. DA, 25, 5268.Google Scholar
123. Hill, Emma Mae. Irony in the Novels of Eça de Queiroz. Wisconsin, 1954. DA, 17, 2610.Google Scholar
124. Horward, Donald David., The French Invasion of Portugal, 1810–1811. Minnesota, 1962. DA, 26, 2711.Google Scholar
125. Houk, Richard Joseph., The Portuguese Maritime Fishing Industry, Northwestern, 1950. Northwestern Summaries, 18, 494.Google Scholar
126. Jost, B., The Technique of Characterization in Eça de Queiroz, London, 1958.Google Scholar
127. Kemler, John H. The Struggle for Wolfram in the Iberian Peninsula, June, 1942-June, 1944. Chicago, 1949.Google Scholar
128. Kerr, John Austin Jr., Aspects of Time, Place and Thematic Content in the Prose Fiction of José Rodrigues Miguéis as Indications of the Artist’s Weltansicht. Wisconsin, 1970. DAI, 31, 6062-A. Google Scholar
129. Landeira, Ricardo Lopez., La saudade en el renacimiento de la literatura gallega. Colorado, 1965. DA, 27, 776-A.Google Scholar
130. McAdams, John., The Corporate State in Portugal. Forham, 1952. Forham Dissertations, 19, 3.Google Scholar
131. Makler, Harry Mark., The Portuguese Industrial Elite. Columbia, 1968. DAI, 32, 552-A.Google Scholar
132. Parker, John Morris. The Life and Works of Mário de Sá-Carneiro. Cambridge, 1959.Google Scholar
133. Pintado, Valantim Xavier., Public Expenditures and Economic Growth with Special Reference to Portugal (and Summary). Edinburgh, 1960.Google Scholar
134. Reckert, Frederick S., Galician Literature: A Study in Essential Romanticism. Yale, 1950.Google Scholar
135. Riegelhaupt, Joyce Firstenburg., In the Shadow of the City: Integration of a Portuguese Village. Columbia, 1964. DA, 26, 26.Google Scholar
136. Rogers, Francis Millet., The Pronunciation of the Madeira and Azores Dialects as Compared with Standard Portuguese. Harvard, 1940. Harvard Summaries, 1940, p. 414.Google Scholar
137. Schnerr, Walter J. Modern Portuguese Uses of Ser and Estar. Pennsylvania, 1947. MA, 10, No. 2, p. 106.Google Scholar
138. Silva, Fernanado Manuel Soares., The Philosophic and Educational Thought of Antero Quental. California, 1969. DAI, 30, 937-A.Google Scholar
139 Smith, William Herbert Cecil., Anglo-Portuguese Relations, 1851–1861. London, 1965.Google Scholar
140. Sweeney, Jerry K., United States’ Policy Toward Portugal During the Second World War. Kent State, 1970. DAI, 31, 5998-A.Google Scholar
ALSO SEE Nos.: 16, 18, 22, 63, 77, 83, 279, 359.Google Scholar

THE PORTUGUESE EMPIRE

A. PORTUGUESE AFRICA

141. Araujo, Norman. From Classicism to Clarity: A Study of Cape Verdean Literature. Harvard, 1962.Google Scholar
142. Birmingham, David Bevis., The Mbundu and Neighboring Peoples of Central Angola under the Influence of Portuguese Trade and Conquest. London, 1964. London Bulletin, 38, 224.Google Scholar
143. Birmingham, John Calhoun Jr., The Papiamentu Language of Curaçao. Virginia, 1970. DAI, 31, 4746-A. [Author concludes that the language derives from West Coast African Portuguese.]Google Scholar
144. Booth, Newell Snow., Teaching a Bantu Community. Kennedy School of Missions, 1936. [Gives discussion of Angola.]Google Scholar
145. Carpenter, George W., Church, State and Society in Central Africa. Yale, 1937. DA, 28, 797-A. [Contains a brief discussion of Portuguese Africa.]Google Scholar
146. Childs, Gladwyn Murray., Umbundu Kinship and Character: Being a Description of the Social Structure and Individual Development of the Ovimbundu of Angola, with Observations Concerning the Bearing on the Enterprise of Christian Missions of Certain Phases of the Life and Culture Described. Columbia, 1950.Google Scholar
147. Constantine, James Robert., The African Slave Trade: A Study of Eighteenth Century Propaganda and Controversy. Indiana, 1953. DA, 14, 97.Google Scholar
148. Crowe, Sibyl Eyre., The Berlin West Africa Conference, 1884–1885. Cambridge, 1939. Cambridge Dissertations, 1939–40, p. 64.Google Scholar
149. Edwards, Adrian Campion., Social Change and Social Control among the Ovimbundu. Cambridge, 1959.Google Scholar
150. Fuller, Charles Edward. An Ethnohistoric Study of Continuity and Change in Gwambe Culture. Northwestern, 1955. DA, 15, 1970.Google Scholar
151. Gold, Joel Jay., Samuel Johnson’s “Epitomizing” of Lobo’s Voyage to Abyssinia. Indiana, 1962. DA, 28, 4357.Google Scholar
152. Hastings, Daniel A., Ovimbundu Customs and Practices as Centered around the Principles of Kinship and Psychic Power. Hartford Seminary, 1933.Google Scholar
153. Heisel, Donald Francis., The Indigenous Populations of the Portuguese African Territories. Wisconsin, 1966. DA, 26, 6901.Google Scholar
154. Isaacman, Allen Frederick., The Historical Development of the prazos da coroa, 1750–1902. Wisconsin, 1970. DAI, 31, 5967-A.Google Scholar
155. Jackson, Mabel V., International Relations on the Southeast Coast of Africa, 1796–1856. London, 1938.Google Scholar
156. Johnson, Ladd Lind., Luanda, Angola: The Development of International Forms and Functional Patterns. California (Los Angeles), 1970. DAI, 31, 2050-B.Google Scholar
157. Katzenellenbogen, S.E., The Building of the Benguela Railway and the Related Railway and Economic Development of Northern Rhodesia and Katanga, 1900–1931. Oxford, 1969.Google Scholar
158. Kent, Raymond Knezevich., Early Kingdoms in Madagascar and the Birth of the Sakalava Empire, 1500–1700. Wisconsin, 1967. DA, 28, 2624-A. [Portuguese documents are cited.]Google Scholar
159. Langworthy, Harry Wells III., A History of Undi’s Kingdom to 1890: Aspects of Chewa History in East Cental Africa. Boston, 1969. DAI, 30, 1942-A.Google Scholar
160. Lockhart, Donald Merritt., Father Jeronymo Lobo’s Writings Concerning Ethiopia, Including Hitherto Unpublished Manuscripts in the Palmella Library. Harvard, 1959.Google Scholar
161. Martin, E.B., The Development of Malindi from the Portuguese Period to the Present. Liverpool, 1970.Google Scholar
162. Matos, Maria Leoror Maia Mendes Correia de., Portuguese Law and Administration in Mozambique and their Effect on the Customary Land Laws of Three Tribes in the Lake Nyasa Region. London, 1969.Google Scholar
163. Nerhood, Harry W., The Proposed Distribution of the Portuguese Colonies between 1898 and 1914. Ohio, 1945.Google Scholar
164. Newitt, Malyn Dudley Dunn., The Zambesi ‘Prazos’ in the Eighteenth Century. London, 1967.Google Scholar
165. Nketsia, K., The Effect of Christian Missionary Activities on Some Akan Social Institutions from the Portuguese Settlement on the ‘Mina coast’ in 1482 to 1916. Oxford, 1959.Google Scholar
Oakes, Katherine Beverly., Social Theory in the Early Literature of Voyage and Exploration in Africa. California, 1944.Google Scholar
167. Okuma, Thomas Masaji., The Social Response of Christianity in Angola: Selected Issues. Boston, 1964. DA, 25, 3143.Google Scholar
168. Olaniyan, Richard Adeboye., The Anglo-Portuguese Dispute over Bulama: A study in British Colonial Policy, 1860–1870. Georgetown, 1970. DAI, 31, 2317-A.Google Scholar
169. Parmenter, William K., The Congo and Its Critics, 1880–1913. Harvard, 1952.Google Scholar
170. Postma, Johannes., The Dutch Participation in the African Slave Trade: Slaving on the Guinea Coast, 1675–1795. Michigan State 1970. DAI, 31, 4068-A.Google Scholar
171. Reeves, Jesse S., The International Beginnings of the Congo Free State. Johns Hopkins, 1894.Google Scholar
172. Rodney, Walter Anthony., A History of the Upper Guinea Coast, 1545–1800. London, 1966.Google Scholar
173. Samuel, Michael Anthony., Educação or Instrução? A History of Education in Angola, 1874–1914. Columbia, 1969. DAI, 32, 3069-A.Google Scholar
174. Scotter, W.H., International Rivalry in the Bights of Benin and Biafra, 1815–85. London, 1933.Google Scholar
175 Smith, Alan Kent., The Struggle for Control of Southern Moçambique, 1720–1835. California (Los Angeles), 1970. DAI, 31, 5338-A.Google Scholar
176. Soremekun, Fola., A History of the American Board of Missions in Angola, 1880–1940. Northwestern, 1965. DA, 28, 1381-A.Google Scholar
177. Stuart, Charles Harpell., The Lower Congo and the American Baptist Mission to 1910. Boston, 1969. DAI, 30, 1970-A.Google Scholar
178. Wheeler, Douglas Lanphier., The Portuguese in Angola, 1836–1891: A Study in Expansion and Administration. Boston, 1963. DA, 24, 2454.Google Scholar
179. Zoghby, Samir M., The Impact of the Western Sudanic Empires on the Trans-Sahara Trade: Tenth to Sixteenth Century. Georgetown, 1966 DA, 27, 2471-A. [Some discussion of Portuguese in Africa.]Google Scholar
ALSO SEE Nos.: 173, 110, 120, 216, 222.Google Scholar

B. THE PORTUGUESE IN ASIA

180. Abeysingha, Tileira Banda Herat., Portuguese Rule over the Kingdom of Kotte During the Captain-Generalcy of Don Jeronimo de Azevedo, 1591–1612. London, 1963.Google Scholar
181. Cares, Paul Benjamin., The Dutch Conquest of the Malay Archipelago, Ceylon, Formosa, and the European Trade with Japan. Michigan, 1941.Google Scholar
182. Collier, Theodore F., The Miracles of St. Francis Xavier. Cornell, 1906.Google Scholar
183. Cooper, Michael John., João Rodrigues and His Description of Japan: Translation and Editing of an Early Seventeenth Century Manuscript Describing Social Life in Contemporary Japan, with an Assessment of Its Accuracy and Value. Oxford, 1969.Google Scholar
184. Crowther, K.J., Portuguese Society in India in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries. Oxford, 1959.Google Scholar
185. Das Gupta, Arun Kumar. Acheh in Indonesian Trade and Politics: 1600–1641. Cornell, 1962. DA, 23, 613.Google Scholar
186. Das Gupta, Asin Ranjan. Malabar in Asian Trade, 1740–1800. Cambridge, 1961.Google Scholar
187. De Silva, Chandra Richard., The Portuguese in Ceylon, 1617–1638. London, 1968.Google Scholar
188. Friedman, Harry J. Consolidation of India since Independence: A Comparison and Analysis of Four Indian Territorial Problems, the Portuguese Possessions, the French Possessions, Hyderabad and Kashmir. Pittsburgh, 1956. DA, 17, 669.Google Scholar
189. Goonewardena, K., The Establishment of Dutch Power in Ceylon, 1638–58. London, 1953.Google Scholar
190. Kublin, Hyman. The Bonin Islands, 1543–1875. Harvard, 1947.Google Scholar
191. McKenna, James Brian., A Spaniard in the Portuguese Indies: The Narrative of Martín Fernández de Figueroa. Harvard, 1965.Google Scholar
192. Ozbaran, Salih., The Ottoman Turks and the Portuguese in the Persian Gulf, 1534–1581. London, 1969.Google Scholar
193. Parshad, Ignatius Durga. Some Aspect of Indian Foreign Trade, 1757–1893. London, 1928.Google Scholar
194. Rickey, Rodger Marshall., Southeast Asia: Crossroads of Civilization. A Comparative Study of Conflicting Influences and Early European Exploration. Denver, 1966. DA, 27, 2967-A.Google Scholar
195. Swecker, Zoe., The Early Iberian Accounts of the Far East, 1550–1600. Chicago, 1960.Google Scholar
196. Wallis, Helen Margaret., The Exploration of the South Sea, 1519 to 1644. A study of the Influence of Physical Factors, with a Reconstruction of the Routes of the Explorers. Oxford, 1953.Google Scholar
197. Winius, George Davison., The Fall of Portuguese Ceylon, 1638–1656: Military, Diplomatic and Political Aspects in the Decline of an Empire. Columbia, 1964. DA, 25, 2936.Google Scholar
ALSO SEE NOS: 173, 120, 216.Google Scholar

C. COLONIAL BRAZIL

198. Alden, Dauril., The Marquis of Lavradio, Viceroy of Brazil (1769–1779), and the Climax of Luso-Spanish Platine Rivalry. California, 1959.Google Scholar
199. Breymann, Walter Norman., The Opening of the Amazon, 1540–1640. Illinois, 1950. MA, No. 4, p. 188.Google Scholar
200. Canales, José Carlos., Rio Grande do Sul in Luso-Spanish Platine Rivalry, 1626–1737. California, 1959.Google Scholar
201. Cardozo, Manoel da Silveira Soares., A History of Mining in Colonial Brazil, 1500–1750. Stanford, 1939. Abstracts, 15, 132.Google Scholar
202. Chandler, Billy Jaynes., The Inhamuns: A Community in the Sertão of Northwest Brazil, 1707–1930. Florida, 1967. DAI, 29, 207-A.Google Scholar
203. Davidson, David Michael., RIVERS AND EMPIRE: The Madeira Route and the Incorporation of the Brazilian Far West, 1737–1808. Yale, 1970. DAI, 31, 2838-A.Google Scholar
204. Dutra, Francis Anthony., Matias de Albuquerque: A Seventeenth Century Capitão-mor of Pernambuco and Governor-General of Brazil. New York, 1968. DAI, 29, 4421-A.Google Scholar
205. Emert, Martine., European Voyages to Brazil before 1532: A Chapter in International Rivalry in America. California, 1944.Google Scholar
206. Galloway, John Herbert., Pernambuco, 1770–1920: An Historical Geography. London, 1965.Google Scholar
207. Gross, Sue Ellen Anderson., The Economic Life of the Estado do Maranhão e Grão Pará, 1686–1751. Tulane, 1969. DAI, 30, 2441-A.Google Scholar
208. Harrison, William Fredric., A Struggle for Land in Colonial Brazil: The Private Captaincy of Paraiba do Sul, 1533–1753. New Mexico, 1970. DAI, 31, 5319-A.Google Scholar
209. Kiemen, Mathias Charles., The Indian Policy of Portugal in the Amazon Region, 1614–1693. Catholic, 1954.Google Scholar
210. Marchant, Alexander Nelson De Armond., The Economic Relations of Portuguese and Indians in the Settlement of Brazil, 1500–1580. Johns Hopkins, 1941.Google Scholar
211. Maxwell, Kenneth Robert., Conflicts and Conspiracies: Brazil and Portugal, 1750–1807. Princeton, 1970. DAI, 31, 1713-A.Google Scholar
212. Momsen, Richard Paul., Routes over the Serra do Mar: An Historical Geogaphy of Tansportation in the Rio de Janeiro-São Paulo Area, Brazil. Minnesota, 1960. DA, 22, 226.Google Scholar
213. Russell-Wood, A.J.R., The Santa Casa da Misericórdia of Bahia: A Social Study, 1550–1750. Oxford, 1967.Google Scholar
214. Schwartz, Stuart Barry., The High Court of Bahia: A Study in Hapsburg Brazil, 1580–1630. Columbia, 1968. DAI, 29, 531-A.Google Scholar
215. Starling, George Westley Jr., The War of the Mascates in Brazil, 1710–1714. California, 1957.Google Scholar
216. Tambs, Lewis A., March to the West: Seven Centuries of Luso-Brazilian Expansion, Origins to 1808. California (Santa Barbara), 1967.Google Scholar
217. Umstead, Kenneth H.H., The French in the Americas during the Sixteenth Century. California, 1940.Google Scholar
218. Vogt, John Leonard Jr., Portuguese Exploration in Brazil and the Feitoria System, 1500–1530: The First Economic Cycle of Brazilian History. Virginia, 1967. DA, 28, 2635-A.Google Scholar
219. Weir, John F., The Colonization of Brazil to 1580. Southern California, 1947. Southern California Abstracts, 1947, p. 82.Google Scholar
220. Wetzler, Duane Lewis., A Study of Cecília Meireles’ Romanceiro da Inconfidencia with an Annotated English Translation. Tulane, 1970. DAI, 31, 4800-A.Google Scholar
ALSO SEE Nos.: 63, 83, 102, 225, 232, 275, 277, 278, 279, 280, 285, 300.Google Scholar

D. THE RIO DE LA PLATA REGION (TO CA. 1850)

221. Cady, John Frank., Foreign Intervention in the Rio de la Plata, 1835–50. Pennsylvania, 1929.Google Scholar
222. Chace, Russell Edward Jr., The African Impact on Colonial Argentina. California (Santa Barbara), 1969. DAI, 32, 3 3 6-A.Google Scholar
223. Coulthard, George Robert., The Literary Treatment of the Indian in the Literature of the River Plate Countries. London, 1952.Google Scholar
224. Criscenti, Joseph. Lances and Frock Coats: Urquiza and Rio de la Plata Politics, 1842–1862. Harvard, 1956.Google Scholar
225. Hutchins, John A. Portugal and the Plata: The Conflict of Luso-Hipanic Interests in Southern Brazil and the North Bank of the Rio de la Plata, 1493–1807. American, 1953.Google Scholar
226. Kroeber, Clifton B., River Trade and Navigation in the Plata Region, 1800–1852. California, 1951.Google Scholar
227. Lowery, Martin J., A Back Door to the Empire: A Study of the Character of the Commerce of the Rio de la Plata, 1580–1630. Loyola, 1951.Google Scholar
228. Lynch, John. The Intendant System in the Viceroyalty of La Plata, 1782–1810. London, 1955.Google Scholar
229. Meiners, Evelyn Peterson., The Negro in the Rio de la Plata. Northwestern, 1948. Northwestern Summaries, 16, 284.Google Scholar
230. No Well, Charles E., The British Invasions of Rio de la Plata. California, 1932.Google Scholar
231. Murguía, Theodore Infante., The Evolution of the Gaucho in Literature. Washington (Seattle), 1961. DA, 22, 1630.Google Scholar
232. Rodríguez, Mario., Colonia de Sacramento: Focus of Spanish-Portuguese Rivalry in the Plata, 1640–1683. California, 1952.Google Scholar
233. Street, J., British Influences in the Independence of the River Plate Provinces, with Special Reference to the Period 1806 to 1816. Edinburgh, 1951.Google Scholar
234. Stricton, Arnold., The Grandsons of the Gauchos: A Study in Subcultural Persistence. Columbia, 1960. DA, 21, 1021.Google Scholar
235. Wright, Almon Robert., Church and State in the Provinces of La Plata to 1861. Illinois, 1934.Google Scholar
236. Wyatt, Loretta Sharon., D. Carlota and the Regency Affair. Florida, 1969.Google Scholar
ALSO SEE Nos.: 198, 200, 250, 275.Google Scholar