01793pam a2200301 a 45000010008000000030008000080050017000160080041000330100013000740200031000870200042001180350012001600400037001720430012002090500021002210820017002421000035002592450050002942600036003443000061003804400039004415040064004805050748005446510028012929420012013209990017013329520142013491716015BD-DhUL20201115121054.0960816s1997 mauabf b 001 0 eng  a96038512 a0631167919qalkaline paper a0631205470qalkaline paperqpaperback a1716015 aDLCbengcDLCdDLCdTOCdBD-DhUL acl-----00aF1410b.B18 199700a980220bBAH1 aBakewell, P. J.q(Peter John),12aA history of Latin America /cPeter Bakewell. aMalden, MA :bBlackwell,c1997. axxiii, 520 p., [12] p. of plates :bill., maps ;c26 cm. 4aThe Blackwell history of the world aIncludes bibliographical references (p. 493-512) and index.0 aPt. I. Bases. 1. Lands and Climates. 2. American Peoples. 3. Iberia -- Pt. II. Approaches. 4. Columbus and Others. 5. Experiment in the Caribbean. 6. Military Conquest -- Pt. III. Domination. 7. Administration: the Power of Paper. 8. Church: Friars, Bishops, and the State. 9. Society: Old Orders Changed. 10. Economy: Ships and Silver -- Pt. IV. Mature Colonies. 11. The Seventeenth Century: a Slacker Grip. 12. Eighteenth-century Spanish America: Reformed or Deformed? -- Pt. V. Portugal in America. 13. Colonial Brazil: Slaves, Sugar, and Gold -- Pt. VI. Self-Discovery: The Nineteenth Century and Beyond. 14. Independence. 15. Adrift in Storms: Caudillos and Penury. 16. Calmer Waters and a New Course: Oligarchs and Exports. 17. Epilogue. 0aLatin AmericaxHistory. 2ddccBK c92200d92200 00102ddc406980_000000000000000_BAH708NFIC9153757aDULbDULcGENd2016-08-02epurchasedo980 BAHp371140r2016-08-02w2016-08-02yBK