Charles Gibson (historian)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
For other persons named Charles Gibson, see Charles Gibson (disambiguation).
Charles Gibson (1920–1985) was an American ethnohistorian who studied the Nahua peoples of colonial Mexico. His most significant works are Tlaxcala in the Sixteenth Century (1952) and The Aztecs Under Spanish Rule (1964).
[edit] References
- Chevalier, François (May 1986). "Charles Gibson (1920–1985)". The Hispanic American Historical Review 66 (2): 349–351.
- Lockhart, James [1991] (1993). "Charles Gibson and the Ethnohistory of Postconquest Central Mexico", Nahuas and Spaniards: Postconquest Central Mexican History and Philology. Stanford: Stanford University Press, pp. 159–182. ISBN 0-8047-1954-3. OCLC 23286637.
This article about a historian is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |