|
|
Award-winning book explains how Chilean people successfully resisted; Spanish conquest for three centuries6/11/2008
10:26 am
Contact:
In the book, Dillehay, who is the Distinguished Professor of Anthropology at Vanderbilt University, examines the methods that the Araucanian people of southern Chile used to resist Spanish dominance for more than 300 years. In 1550, when the Conquistador Pedro de Valdivia attempted to conquer southern Chile, he ran into stiff opposition from the scattered population of the Araucanians who had successfully resisted Incan conquest. Before disease and fighting reduced their numbers, the Araucanians earned the nickname of the Apache of South America by defeating Valdivia and his followers and nearly capturing Santiago. Subsequently, the Spanish pushed the resisters into a forest region south of the Bio-Bio River, which remained the boundary between the two peoples for three centuries. It wasn’t until the late 1800’s that the Chilean army defeated the Araucanians and settled them on reservations farther to the south. Dillehay’s book draws on 30 years of anthropological, archaeological and archival research to investigate the manner in which the Araucanians successfully resisted the Spanish and actually flourished in the process, including their use of sacred monuments to help form widespread alliances and adoption of the use of horses in battle. Media Contact: David F. Salisbury, (615) 322-NEWS david.salisbury@vanderbilt.edu |
Vanderbilt In The NewsRecords: Percentage of Mormons in Utah declinesAutumn babies at greater risk of asthma - U.S. studyRacial progress seenEvansville Courier-Press (Ind.) State cuts back anti-smoking budgetAround CampusNo. 12 VU holds off ETSU late rally, wins 66-55Vanderbilt neuroscience research featured at annual conference in Washington, D.C.Timing is Everything When it Comes to Childhood AsthmaNews Releases from Vanderbilt Medical Center Transgender Day of Remembrance offers vigil, supportSharpened FocusClimb Every Mountain: Julia Velkovska (September 25, 2008) |
| Vanderbilt University | 2201 West End Avenue Nashville, TN 37235 | Phone: (615) 322-7311 | Vanderbilt Home | Public Affairs | Sitemason |