Page 199 - Encyclopedia Of World History Vol V
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1976 berkshire encyclopedia of world history
Castro’s forces swelled to seven thousand as the public Nunn. F. M. (1983). Yesterday’s soldiers: European military profession-
reacted unfavorably to repressive tactics employed by the alism in South America, 1890–1940. Lincoln: University of Nebraska
Press.
Batista regime. (When Castro victoriously entered Nunn, F. M. (1992). The time of the generals: Latin American professional
Havana, he had not clearly allied himself with the Com- militarism in world perspective. Lincoln: University of Nebraska
Press.
munist Soviet Union.) A key factor in the rebels’ victory
Reis, J. J. (1993). Slave rebellion in Brazil:The Muslim uprising of 1835
was their high morale and good discipline. Operation in Bahia. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press.
from a remote base (foco) was a common strategy, and Rock, D. (1987). Argentina, 1516–1987: From Spanish colonization to
Alfonsín. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press.
the Cuban Revolution served as a model for other revo- Rodríguez O., J. E. (1998). The independence of Spanish America. Cam-
lutionary forces. However, only in Nicaragua did such a bridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
Scheina, R. L. (1987). Latin America: A naval history, 1810–1987.
revolutionary force actually gain political power. Castro’s
Annapolis, MD: United States Naval Institute Press.
Argentine-born comrade, Ernesto “Che” Guevara (1928– Scheina, R. L. (2003). Latin America’s wars.Washington, DC: Brassey’s.
1967), died in Bolivia leading a failed foco-based revo- Smith, M. E. (2003). The Aztecs (2nd ed.). London: Blackwell.
Stern, S. J. (Ed.). (1987). Resistance, rebellion, and consciousness in the
lutionary guerrilla force. Andean peasant world, 18th to 20th centuries. Madison: University of
Wisconsin Press.
Bruce A. Castleman Vásquez, J. Z., & Meyer, L. (1985). The United States and Mexico.
Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Walker, C. F. (1999). Smoldering ashes: Cuzco and the creation of repub-
lican Peru, 1780–1840. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.
Further Reading
Andrien, K. J. (2001). Andean worlds: Indigenous history, culture, and
consciousness under Spanish rule, 1525–1825. Albuquerque: Uni-
versity of New Mexico Press.
Anna,T. E. (1978). The fall of the royal government in Mexico City. Lin- Warfare—
coln: University of Nebraska Press.
Berger, T. R. (1992). A long and terrible shadow: White values, native
rights in the Americas. Seattle: University of Washington Press. Post-Columbian
Bethell, L. (Ed.). (1987). The independence of Latin America. Cambridge,
UK: Cambridge University Press.
D’Altroy,T. N. (2003). The Incas. London: Blackwell. North America
Eisenhower, J. S. D. (1989). So far from God: The U.S. war with Mexico,
1846–1848. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press.
Guevara, C. (1985). Guerrilla warfare. Lincoln: University of Nebraska ost-Columbian warfare in North American deter-
Press. Pmined the settlement pattern of European coloniza-
Kamen, H. (2003). Empire: How Spain became a world power, 1492–
1763. New York: HarperCollins. tion and rule as well the pattern of European-Native
Katz, F. (Ed.). (1988). Riot, rebellion, and revolution: Rural social conflict American relations for the next 400 years. It also estab-
in Mexico. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
Klein, H. S. (1992). Bolivia: The evolution of a multi-ethnic society (2nd lished what many historians have termed the American
ed.). New York: Oxford University Press. way of war.
Knight,A. (1986). The Mexican Revolution. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge Post-Columbian warfare in North America (1492–
University Press.
Langley, L. D. (2002). The banana wars: United States intervention in the 1774 in what is today Canada, the United States, and the
Caribbean, 1898–1934. Wilmington, DE: Scholarly Resources. islands of the Caribbean) can be divided into three major
Loveman, B., & Davies, T. M., Jr. (Eds.). (1989). The politics of anti-
politics: The military in Latin America (2nd ed.). Lincoln: University types.The first type are the conflicts that were primarily
of Nebraska Press. between various Native American groups, the second are
Lynch, J. (1986). The Spanish American revolutions 1808–1826. New the campaigns of conquest conducted by Europeans
York: W.W. Norton.
Lynch, J. (1989). Bourbon Spain, 1700–1808. London: Blackwell. against a variety of Native American tribal groupings,
Lynch, J. (1991). Spain, 1516–1598: From nation state to world empire. sometimes with other Native Americans allied to the
London: Blackwell.
Lynch, J. (1992). The Hispanic world in crisis and change, 1598–1700. Europeans.The third and most significant campaigns are
London: Blackwell. those of Europeans against other Europeans with some