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MARC Record from harvard_bibliographic_metadata

Record ID harvard_bibliographic_metadata/ab.bib.00.20150123.full.mrc:751499329:1892
Source harvard_bibliographic_metadata
Download Link /show-records/harvard_bibliographic_metadata/ab.bib.00.20150123.full.mrc:751499329:1892?format=raw

LEADER: 01892cam a2200361I 4500
001 000900089-5
005 20100318171151.0
008 780309s1965 nyub b 00010 eng
010 $a 64023728
035 0 $aocm03701553$zocm00485209
035 0 $aocm03701553
040 $aDLC$cTLM
043 $as-bl---
050 0 $aF2528$b.M76
082 $a981.03
100 1 $aMorse, Richard M.$q(Richard McGee),$d1922-2001.
245 14 $aThe bandeirantes;$bthe historical role of the Brazilian pathfinders.$cEdited with an introd. by Richard M. Morse.
250 $a[1st ed.]
260 0 $aNew York,$bKnopf,$c1965.
300 $aviii, 215 p.$bmap.$c19 cm.
490 0 $aBorzoi books on Latin America
504 $a"Bibliographical note": p. [213]-215.
504 $aBibliographical footnotes.
520 $aA treatment of Brazil's westward expansion, and of the men who were the "pathfinders" of the great southern republic, translated from Portuguese original writings. Unlike the North American pioneer, however, the bandeirante was usually at least part Indian, and this, along with the influence of the missionary padres, resulted in a different "West" for Brazil, - a vast area even today largely untouched by modern civilization. The bandeirante expeditions did not come from the European settled coastal areas but usually developed from the inland plateau country.
650 0 $aBandeiras.
650 7 $aExploradores$zBrasil.$2bidex
651 0 $aBrazil$xHistory$y1549-1762.
651 7 $aBrasil$xHistoria$y1549-1762.$2bidex
655 7 $aHistory.$2fast
776 08 $iOnline version:$aMorse, Richard M. (Richard McGee), 1922-2001.$tBandeirantes.$b1st ed.$dNew York : Knopf, 1965$w(OCoLC)590839136
776 08 $iOnline version:$aMorse, Richard M. (Richard McGee), 1922-2001.$tBandeirantes.$b1st ed.$dNew York : Knopf, 1965$w(OCoLC)607763200
988 $a20020608
906 $0DLC