
audiobook
by Adolph Francis Alphonse Bandelier, Spain) Exposición Histórico-Americana (1892 : Madrid, Jesse Walter Fewkes, United States. Commission to the Madrid Exposition (1892- )
The Hemenway Expedition, a privately funded venture from the early 1890s, set out to document the lives of the Hopi peoples of Arizona and New Mexico. Over several summers the team gathered a remarkable assortment of tools, pottery, textiles and other objects, recording details that had never been published before. This audio guide walks you through the catalog that resulted, offering a clear picture of the fieldwork, the harsh desert landscape, and the meticulous care taken to preserve each artifact.
Listeners will hear descriptions that blend archaeological context with ethnological insight, showing how ancient items and contemporary crafts mirror one another. The narration highlights the striking continuity of Hopi culture, the everyday functions of the objects, and the environmental backdrop of mesas, canyons and sparse flora. By the end, you’ll have a vivid sense of how a single community’s material heritage can illuminate both its past and its present.
Language
es
Duration
~2 hours (119K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Adrian Mastronardi and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
Release date
2012-02-11
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1840–1914
A Swiss-born American anthropologist, archaeologist, and historian, Bandelier helped open up the study of the Indigenous peoples and historic sites of the American Southwest and Mexico. His fieldwork, travel writing, and careful research made him an important early voice in Southwestern archaeology.
View all booksCreated for Madrid’s 1892 Historical-American Exposition, this entry points to a collective body of exhibition publications rather than a single personal author. These volumes gathered research, catalog records, and reports tied to one of the late 19th century’s major displays on the histories and cultures of the Americas.
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1850–1930
An early American anthropologist and archaeologist, he helped bring serious public attention to the cultures and ruins of the American Southwest. His work ranged from Pueblo ceremonial life to major excavations at sites such as Mesa Verde and Casa Grande.
View all booksA U.S. government commission rather than an individual writer, this name is attached to a detailed record of America’s role in the 1892–93 Columbian Historical Exposition in Madrid. The work brings together reports, catalogues, and special papers on archaeology, ethnology, and Columbus-related materials assembled for the exhibition.
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