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Incidents Of Travel In Central America, Chiapas, And Yucatan (1841) Stephens by Victorian Vault

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TitleIncidents Of Travel In Central America, Chiapas, And Yucatan (1841) Stephens
CreatorVictorian Vault
Year1841
PPI600
LanguageEnglish
Mediatypetexts
SubjectIncidents of Travel in Yucatan, John Lloyd Stephens, 1843, Legends Of Mexico, 1847, George Lippard, Quaker City, Monks of Monk's Hall, Mormonism Unvailed, 1834, Leo Tolstoy, Brigham Young, Napoléon Bonaparte, Repin, Napoleonic Code, Lorenzo Dow, General, Chekov, Literary, Salt Lake City, fathers and sons, Oliver Twist, Daguerreotypes, Prussia, Drama, Moby Dick, Wilderness Preacher, 1812, Emperor of the French, horse, Austerlitz, Peninsular War, Mormon Trail, French Revolution, American History, USA, West, Fourth Coalition, Third Coalition, Grande Armée, 18th Century, mountain man, Inkerman, War, Russian Literature, 1810, Jena, Auerstedt, Hundred Days, David Copperfield, 1809, Wagram, macabre, mountain, Czar, 1847, Nauvoo Temple, Charles Dickens, course, Polygamy, The Brothers Karamazov, Corsica, Vengence, 1840s, 19th Century, Silas, 1799, George Furber, LDS Movie, Alfred Tennyson, Tolstoy, Crimean War, Ulysses Grant, Russia, General Lee, Literature, Crime And Punishment, Oregon, Tale, Journal Of A Private, Charge, The Possessed, Trail, Civil War, 1850s, The Overcoat, Czarist Russia, Literature, Civil War, Franklin Expedition, Harper's Ferry, 1849, Victorian Era, Gothic, Balaclava, Biography, 19th Century, Return Of The Native, Battle, Dead Souls, Arctic passage, 1850s, 1853, Gogol, Travel, Moby Dick, Western, French Directory, volunteer, novel, War and Peace, Victorian Era, Diary of a Madman, Siege of Sevastopol, invasion of Russia, Russian Empire, Island, Count Of Monte Cristo, sailors, Queen Victoria, history, 19th Century, Novel, poetic, camp, LDS, Life On The Mississippi, Trail, Thriller, Light Brigade, ED Howe, Emperor Russia, Alexandre Dumas, British Army, Herman Melville, Ulm Campaign, Alma, Thomas Hardy, Life And Work, Lorenzo Dow, course, Christian, Wilderness Preacher, Mansfield Park, Literary, adventure, Typee, Herman Melville, Benjamin Scrivener, adventure, 1866, Christ, George Eliot, Tale, 1815, Gothic, Gogol, The Idiot, Silas Marner, Camp Life Of A Volunteer, Christopher Lee, 1850s, book of Mormon, horror, Utah, War and Peace, Leipzig, Austrian Empire, Dostoyevsky, Western, 1845, First Consul, West, Tell Tale Heart, poetry, Black Cat, Jesus, book of mormon, Herman Melville, Queen Victoria, mountain man, Mutiny, Tracker, short story, Leo Tolstoy, Victorian Era, Saint Helena, Danites, Mormon, Holy Bible, history, wild west, Zion, Elba, Horror, Iberian Peninsula, poetic, Thriller, Victorian Era, November, black cat, Mark Twain, War And Peace, Mark Twain, Continental System, Turgenev, daguerreotype, Czarist, Vincent Price, 19th Century, Sevastopol, premature burial, Western, Literature, Documentary, Battle
Collectionfolkscanomy_history, folkscanomy, additional_collections
Uploaderbrettncarmen
IdentifierIncidentsOfTravelInCentralAmericaChiapasAndYucatanVol.21841Stephens
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John Lloyd Stephens, (born Nov. 28, 1805, Shrewsbury, N.J., U.S.—died Oct. 12, 1852, New York City), American traveler and archaeologist whose exploration of Maya ruins in Central America and Mexico (1839–40 and 1841–42) generated the archaeology of Middle America.Bored with the practice of law and advised to travel for reasons of health, in 1834 he set out on a journey that took him through eastern Europe and the Middle East, where he was particularly drawn to many of the archaeological sites. Two popular books resulted, Incidents of Travel in Egypt, Arabia Petraea, and the Holy Land, 2 vol. (1837), and Incidents of Travel in Greece, Turkey, Russia, and Poland, 2 vol. (1838), with drawings by the English illustrator and archaeologist Frederick Catherwood.Reports of the existence of ancient ruins in Central America and Yucatán stirred Stephens’ curiosity to locate and explore them. He obtained an appointment as U.S. chargé d’affaires to Central America through the influence of President Martin Van Buren, and in 1839, accompanied by Catherwood, he went to Central America, then torn by political upheaval and civil war. Their progress to Copán, Honduras, was imperiled first by local strife and then by the hazards and extreme hardships of travel through dense, dark jungle. At times they nearly despaired of finding what they sought, but their perseverance was vastly rewarded. After coming upon a wall of uncertain significance, they were stunned by the appearance of a magnificently carved stone stela (slab).Other discoveries—more stelae, terraces, stairways, and walls with strange and fantastic ornamentation—came in quick succession. Stephens “purchased” the extensive site for $50, and work progressed in clearing away the jungle overgrowth. There and elsewhere, including Uxmal and Palenque in Mexico, Catherwood set about drawing the Maya remains. The report of the first expedition, Incidents of Travel in Central America, Chiapas, and Yucatan, 2 vol. (1841), and the subsequent publication of Catherwood’s superb drawings caused a storm of popular and scholarly interest and precipitated much study of earlier, mostly forgotten accounts of the lands of the Maya by Spanish conquerors and explorers.After their second expedition, Stephens and Catherwood published Incidents of Travel in Yucatan, 2 vol. (1843), containing accounts of visits to the remains of 44 ancient sites. Stephens’ last years were devoted to directing the first American transatlantic steamship company and to developing a railroad across the Isthmus of Panama.