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Use Cases
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Resources
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Pricing
7000 BCE - 1800 CE
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1000 BCE - 450 CE
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Southern modern-day United States. Transition from hunter-gatherer agricultural society occurs by about 500 BCE, centered around corn and squash. Pithouses.
Cultural artifacts: "Items include variety of tightly woven, well made baskets; bone awls; stone pipes; square-toed sandals with a fringe at the toe end; fur and feather robes and blankets; string and cord woven from yucca and cedar bark; oval cradles; woven bags; bone whistles and small carved bone objects identified as dice or gaming pieces; a variety of projectile points, knives, and scrapers chipped from a variety of stone types."
(http://jan.ucc.nau.edu/d-antlab/Soutwestern%20Arch/Anasazi/basketmaker2.htm)
1000 BCE - 200 CE
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South-central modern-day Florida. Mounds for horticultural, not burial, purposes.
1000 BCE - 1600 CE
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Adjustment to a settled lifestyle. Modern-day Ohio/East Coast/Sourthern Canada area. Ceramics, complex mortuary practices, extensive trade networks (copper, precious stone, animal parts), burial mounds. In ~800 CE, transition to bows and arrows (from spear).
900 BCE - 500 CE
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Second wave of migration into northwestern North America. By 500 CE, they had spread as far east as Greenland.
700 BCE - 600 CE
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Located in the southern Ohio region. Significance of large earthen mounds. Knowledge of geometry and astronomy. Increase in trade.
Link to map: http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/e/ef/Hopewell_Exchange_Network_HRoe_2010.jpg
http://www.touring-ohio.com/southwest/art/hopewell-mounds_1351.jpg
450 CE - 750 CE
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Extension of Basketmaker II (Pueblo) culture.
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/6e/Basket_of_Basketmaker_Pueblo_people.jpg/250px-Basket_of_Basketmaker_Pueblo_people.jpg
500 CE - 1000 CE
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Decline in trade, building of burial mounds, artwork.
Theories: 1) overpopulation, 2) advanced tools = large game extinction, 3) climate change, 4) over-dependence (vulnerability) on horticulture.
500 CE - 1700 CE
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600 CE - 1000 CE
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Lead into Mississipian Culture.
Identified by "pottery forms, stone artifacts, and bone tools such as awls, fishhooks, needles, beamers, and turtle shell cups". (http://www.dhr.virginia.gov/arch_NET/timeline/late_wood.htm)
http://www.nps.gov/archeology/visit/images/ohTime5pic.jpg
http://www.dhr.virginia.gov/arch_NET/timeline/images2/awl_fishook_178.jpg
700 CE - 1600 CE
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800 CE - 1700 CE
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Slowly spread across eastern modern-day US. Adoption of symbolic and cultural earthen mounds. Great trade systems within the continent. Corn is central to the agricultural society.
900 CE - 1400 CE
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Lief, son of Eric the Red, lands in eastern Canada. First European civilization established.
1000 CE - 1400 CE
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Third wave of migrants from the east (pre-Inuit culture). Domesticated animals and sophisticated tools (boats). Conquered Dorset.
1100 CE
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1400 - 1500
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Inuit expansion east into Greenland and south into southeastern modern-day Canada.
1497 - 1620
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1497: John Cabot. England.
1500: Fr, Eng, Por, Spa make yearly fishing trips to Newfoundland.
Fr.: 1524 - Giovanni da Verrazano. France. Skirts NA. coast from NC to Newfoundland.
(Early N.Am. maps)
1497
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"John Cabot ... under patent from King ... of England ... reaches coast of N. America."
1500 CE - 1700 CE
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1562 - 1863
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1600 - 1763
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Eastern Coast of modern USA. New England, VA, Carolinas, Pennsylvania, Ohio.
http://www.history.com/images/media/slideshow/native-americans-tribes-and-cultures/pictograms-of-tribal-chiefs-of-six-nations.jpg
Pictograph signatures of Natives selling land to Pennsylvania.
http://www.mpm.edu/sites/default/files/images/collections/artifacts/anthropology/ledger/s2063-105.jpg
Early 20th cent. Ledger art, a Plains tribe traditional way of preserving oral history. Umbrella shows integration of new European culture.
http://www.mpm.edu/sites/default/files/images/collections/artifacts/anthropology/ledger/s2063-258.jpg
Early 20th cent. Similarly, guns portrayed speak to presence of settlers.
1600 - 1900
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http://lcweb2.loc.gov/service/pnp/cph/3a00000/3a05000/3a05300/3a05331r.jpg
"The savages let loose, or The cruel fate of the Loyalists", 1783, London. Comments both on the Revolutionary War (America as savages, British as "loyalists") and on the perception of Native Americans (savage, brutal, violent).
http://lcweb2.loc.gov/service/pnp/cph/3b30000/3b39000/3b39100/3b39147r.jpg
1875.
http://www.history.com/images/media/slideshow/native-americans-warriors-and-battles/heart-buffalo.jpg
19th cent. Ledger drawing by Lakota Bad Heart Buffalo.
1689 - 1759
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1689-1697: King William's War
1702-1713: Queen Anne's War
1744-1748: King George's War
1756-1763: Seven Year's War
1700 - 1970
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1830: Indian Removal Act of 1830. Tribes east of the Mississippi were moved to the west under a "voluntary" program.
1887: Dawes Act (allotments)
1924: Citizenship finally granted to Natives.
1763 - 1867
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"Treaty of Paris cedes most of North America to British."
19 April 1775 - 3 September 1783
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1776 - present
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http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/images/h2/h2_1978.57.jpg
1860, Andrew Jackson. "During this period when the Union was threatened, Kelly may have commissioned this sculpture to remind people of Jackson's most famous statement: 'Our Federal Union. It must be preserved.'"
http://nmai.si.edu/exhibitions/infinityofnations/images/contemporary-art/264315_900.jpg
1993, George Blake (Hupa/Yurok), Hang Around the Fort Injun
1803
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1812 - 1815
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Trade disputes. USA vs. Britain and Native American alliance.
1848 - 1920
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1861 - 1865
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1863
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1867 - present
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1870 - 1960
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http://lcweb2.loc.gov/service/pnp/var/2000/2053/2053r.jpg
1898. Theatrical poster.
1877 - 1900
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1900 CE - 1920 CE
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1941 CE - 1945 CE
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1945 CE - 1968 CE
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1955 - 1968
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1980 - present
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2/2013 - 5/2013
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2000 BCE - 1500 CE
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Advanced understanding of math, time, astronomy, written language. Sophisticated building structures. Population of 1 million. Human sacrifice.
http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/images/hb/hb_1999.484.2.jpg
"A palace court scene is depicted on the exterior of this cylindrical vessel" and Mayan art "include(s) representations of the ancient peoples, their costumes, architecture, and activities." Indicative of recorded history, hierarchy, judicial system, organized society.
1200 BCE - 400 CE
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First ancient Mesoamerican civilization located in modern-day Mexico, theorized to be the "mother culture" from which other cultures in the area developed. Sophisticated building structures and cities; trade; artwork, including giant stone heads; agricultural society based on maize, beans, and squash.
http://www.lacma.org/sites/default/files/styles/Exhibition_Main/public/image/Olmec6_0.jpg
0 CE - 600 CE
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North-east of modern-day Mexico City. 25,000+ inhabitants, whose ethnic origins are uncertain. Large pyramidal structures. Geometric, religious. More than 22 square miles large.
http://whc.unesco.org/uploads/thumbs/site_0414_0004-500-375-20080528120257.jpg
0 CE - 100 CE
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250 CE - 1200
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"Toltec Tula, a new settlement c. 70 km north-west of Teotihuacán, was established on a ridge overlooking the juncture of the Tula and Rosas rivers. It grew slowly at first, but by c. AD 950 covered c. 5 sq. km and contained between 15,000 and 20,000 people. Explosive growth during the principal period of occupation, the Tollan phase (c. AD 950–c. 1200), created one of Mesoamerica’s largest cities, with an estimated 35,000 to 40,000 inhabitants. Toltec culture disintegrated shortly after 1150. Crop failures and famines in the arid land, internal conflicts and pressures from northern immigrants in search of new lands all contributed to Tula’s downfall."
http://www.oxfordartonline.com/subscriber/fig//img/grove/art/F016721.full.jpg
500 CE - 1530 CE
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600 CE - 700 CE
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Evidence suggests that an internal uprising against the elites may have sparked the downfall of the city: only the elites' homes were burned.
800 CE - 1530 CE
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1000 CE - 1400 CE
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1000 CE - 1530
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1000 CE - 1530
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1200 CE - 1500 CE
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Likely descendants of tribes from modern-day southern US/northern Mexico.
http://www.loc.gov/exhibits/kislak/images/kc0007_2s.jpg
17th cent. Writing, depiction of people (pres. natives) as friendly. Writing.
1200 - 1450
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30 km south-east of Mérida in Yucatán, Mexico. Mayan influence. Contained some 3500 structures within 4 sq. km, about 100 of which were large masonry temples or ceremonial structures. An estimated population of 11,000–12,000. Decline due to infighting.
1200 CE - 1500 CE
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1492 - 1504
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http://lcweb2.loc.gov/service/pnp/cph/3b30000/3b38000/3b38900/3b38917r.jpg
"The Pride of Columbus", 1866
1493 - 1550
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"Art production consists predominantly of religious works commissioned for convents and churches."
http://www.loc.gov/exhibits/kislak/images/kc0026_1s.jpg
Mexico, 1650, artists unknown. "The painting displayed, the third in the series, depicts Hernando Cortés (1485-1547) meeting the Mexica emperor Montezuma (1480?-1520). The landscape and treatment of indigenous dress serve to romanticize the meeting of these two powerful leaders. Cortés approaches Montezuma with his arms opened in a gesture of embrace, which the Mexica leader respectfully rejects by raising his left hand. Montezuma's idealized body, dignified stance, full beard, and the golden sword in his right hand owe more to European ideas about the appropriate bearing of a king than to ethnographic accuracy. Furthermore, while the feather skirts shown on Montezuma and his court were part of the standard European iconography for depicting "Indians," skirts like this are not known to have been worn anywhere in the Americas."
1500 - 1550
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(Bartholomé de las Casas book)
1535 - 1821
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http://www.loc.gov/exhibits/1492/images/hcodex1a.jpg
1531. Note Madonna and Child.
http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/images/hb/hb_88.3.1.jpg
16th century Mexican. European + native art forms: hummingbird feathers and native gold with Christian motif.
1824 - 1838
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Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras, Nicaragua, and Costa Rica.
1838 - present
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1850 - present
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2200 BC - 900 BC
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1800 BC - 400 BC
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1800 BC - 400 BC
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1000 BC - 500 BC
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700 BC - 100 AD
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700 BC - 100 AD
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400 BCE - 400 CE
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http://metmuseum.org/toah/images/h2/h2_1995.427.jpg
Standing Figure, 1st century b.c.–1st century a.d.
http://www.sfu.museum/cco_images/artifacts/Medium/df_artifacts/x2006.003.230%20%285%29.jpg
300 BC - 300 AD
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-Figures made of adobe clay
-By the characteristics of signified by the genitals, the two figures on top are male and the bottom figure is female.
-The female has wide-set hips for child-bearing, but features small arms that blind. These features indicate that the woman is impaired and helpless.
-These figures establish the clear gender roles perceived in the Malagana cultures.
http://i5.photobucket.com/albums/y193/Krncoketastesour/20130226150642.jpg
200 BCE - 500 CE
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200 BCE - 600 CE
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200 BC - 400 AD
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1 AD - 800 AD
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1 AD - 900 AD
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1 AD - 1,000 AD
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1 AD - 800 AD
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100 - 700
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100 - 800
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400 - 1100
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http://i5.photobucket.com/albums/y193/Krncoketastesour/46be019c-f648-4801-aa67-94b1a1d844d9.jpg
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/c/c1/Zonnepoort_tiwanaku.jpg/800px-Zonnepoort_tiwanaku.jpg
http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/images/h2/h2_1979.206.833.jpg
http://www.atlantisbolivia.org/tiwanakucubits_files/tiwanakumapa.jpg
400 - 1000
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500 AD - 1600 AD
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500 AD - 1000 AD
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700 - 1470
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800 AD - 1469 AD
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800 AD - 1500 AD
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800 AD - 1600 AD
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800 AD - 1600 AD
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800 - 1250
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800 AD - 1600 AD
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900 AD - 1600 AD
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1000 - 1438
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1000 AD - 1550 AD
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1000 AD - 1600 AD
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1000 AD - 1550 AD
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1000 AD - 1550 AD
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1150 - 1450
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-Mirror frame made of wood (9th-12th century)
-Carving style is influenced by Southern Wari cultures which indicates trade and communication have sustained between the many cultures
-Human like figure is standing on a raft with a war club in hand
-Boat theme in Chimu Art was prevalent which shows that maritime activity was prominent and depended on.
http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/images/h2/h2_1995.428.jpg
-Pair of Earflares worn by the elite (12th-15th century)
-The central image is of a distinguished Chimú lord wearing an enormous fanned-out headdress and big circular ear flares.
-Highly Stratified labor force/ society
-Warrior elite with the
http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/images/h2/h2_1991.419.67,.68.jpg
1150 - 1450
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1250 - 1450
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1250 - 1450
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1400 - 1532
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1438 - 1532
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1450 - 1550
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http://i5.photobucket.com/albums/y193/Krncoketastesour/Machu_Picchu-lge-ariel.jpg
http://avw4yk.files.wordpress.com/2011/12/inca-fountain.jpg?w=529 http://www.google.com/url?sa=i&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=images&cd=&cad=rja&docid=pEwOx0bo4cQMpM&tbnid=rf2GorHfBuGdYM:&ved=&url=http%3A%2F%2Farmchairtravelingwithnikki.blogspot.com%2F2011%2F06%2Fperus-machu-picchu.html&ei=HJlkUb6KIoLe0gHMk4HYBw&bvm=bv.44990110,d.dmQ&psig=AFQjCNFasUJbW5eXSlHBFK9IUZFV61d1UA&ust=1365633673682999
1470 - 1532
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1499
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1501 - 1502
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1525
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1531
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1532
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"Pizarro Seizing the Inca of Peru" John Everett Millais, 1846
-John Everett Millais was an English painter from the Romantic Era.
-A piece completed 300 years, romantically depicts Pizarro seizing the Incan Emperor, Atahualpa
-Pizarro is glorified as a savior, justified by divine right of Christianity signified by the cross held by a priest behind him.
http://uploads5.wikipaintings.org/images/john-everett-millais/pizarro-seizing-the-inca-of-peru.jpg
-The Seizure of Atahualpa at Cajamarca
- Published between 1760 and 1810
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/1/13/Atahualpa_seizure.jpg/437px-Atahualpa_seizure.jpg
- Both depictions are produced by European artists 200 to 300 years after the event.
- These European artists clearly have positive sentiments which justify the Seizure of Atahualpa. The painting rarely show any bloodshed, only seizure and subordination.
1532 - 1542
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1542 - 1824
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1550 - 1700
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-Cuzco school was a group of European and indigenous painters active in Cuzco, Peru, from the 16th through the 18th century.
- Juan Iñigo de Loyola, one of the first members and Spanish painters who arrived in 1545, trained indigenous artists in the style of Spanish
http://cdn2.brooklynmuseum.org/images/opencollection/objects/size3/48.206.88_SL1.jpg?lightboxed=1
http://venetianred.files.wordpress.com/2009/12/virgincandlemas.jpg
1600 - 1816
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(Lands comprising modern Argentina, Uruguay, Paraguay, and Bolivia separated from Viceroyalty of Peru)
-Painted by Incan native who adapted European portrait style techniques.
-However paintings such as these were merely illustrations that were imagined in the minds of the Incans. They did not serve the purpose of documentation.
-They were revered by the remaining Incan royalty.
-Dominated by European painting technique, signifies the compromise and loss of Incan culture
http://cdn2.brooklynmuseum.org/images/opencollection/objects/size2/1995.29.14.bt_SL1.jpg
-Woman's shoulder mantle, Peru, 16th - 17th century. Cotton, silk, metallic yarns.
-Made of Cumbi, a type of cloth that was highly valued, woven by specialists, and used for the garments of the king.
-Symbolic of intercontinental trade, made of : Spanish silver threads with the Chinese silk (only available through trade from Philippines to Lima)
http://d1eujzb03uflva.cloudfront.net/object-of-the-day/2012/12/10/page_image_full/mantle.jpg
Monstrance, 1646
-Material: Silver gilt, enamel
-The inscription indicates that this monstrance was made for Pedro de Urraca, a Spanish-born Mercedarian friar who spent most of his life in Ecuador and Peru, where he was revered for the holiness of his ministry.
http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/images/h2/h2_32.100.231a,b.jpg
-Frieze Fragment (18th century)
-Bolivian
-Silver
http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/images/h2/h2_1978.303.7.jpg
1600 - 1700
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Lands comprising modern Ecuador, Colombia, Panama, and Venezuela
-Calvary Scene (18th Century)
-Although carved in a larger scale, this Crucifixion scene features figures whose garments display the same style of polychromy as the smaller Nativity scenes nearby. The broad swaths of background color derive their glow from the layer of silver leaf underlying the colored glazes, evidence of a technique called achinado. The carving of the figures' heads and faces closely resembles the work of the best known Quiteño sculptor, the mestizo Manuel Chil, called Caspicara.
http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/images/h2/h2_64.164.230-.233.jpg
1640 - 1822
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1800 - 1900
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-Commercial and industrial development exacerbates class division.
-Upper-class Latin Americans receive Arts education abroad in Italy and France.
-Influence from impressionist styles of art from France are evident in Argentinian art
1810 - 1825
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1810 - 1816
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-The period between 1810 and 1816 in the New Kingdom of Granada (today Colombia) was marked by such intense conflicts over the nature of the new government or governments that it became known as la Patria Boba (the Foolish Fatherland)
-Sovereignty from Spain
-Diminishing power of the Catholic Church
-Reign of terror
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/9/95/Flag_of_New_Granada_%281811-1814%29.svg/220px-Flag_of_New_Granada_%281811-1814%29.svg.png
Flag of Cartagena and Barranquilla
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/3/34/Flag_of_New_Granada_%281814-1816%29.svg/220px-Flag_of_New_Granada_%281814-1816%29.svg.png
Flag of the United Provinces
1811 - present
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1818 - present
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-Being With 1946
-Surreal Art
-Matta received arts education in Paris and worked for the modernist architect Le Corbusier
http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/images/h2/h2_2003.270.jpg
1821 - present
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Panorama of Machu Picchu 1930s
-Martín Chambi (Peruvian Artist)
http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/images/h2/h2_2003.31.jpg
1825 - Present
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1826 - 1879
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1828 - present
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1830 - Present
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1830 - present
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1849 - 1889
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1853 - present
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1886
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-Dancers of Colombia 1980
-Fernando Botero (Colombian Artist)
-Studied art in Florence, Italy
-Inspired by Goya and Picasso
http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/images/h2/h2_1983.251.jpg
1889 - Present
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