Click filter to remove
Displaying 1 - 6 of 6
Culture: Cahuilla
Date: 1959
Subject: Linguistics | Anthropology | Uto-Aztecan languages
Type:Text
Genre: Correspondence
Extent: 1 folder
Description: One item relating to the Cahuilla language has been identified in the C. F. Voegelin Papers. It is located in Subcollection II, Series I. Correspondence, and consists of a letter from Hansjakob Seiler containing information about Cahuilla linguistics. Researchers might also be interested ni viewing the entries for the Uto-Aztecan language family and other specific Uto-Aztecan languages.
Collection: C. F. Voegelin Papers (Mss.Ms.Coll.68)
Culture: Cahuilla
Date: 1990, 1993-1995
Contributor: Elliott, Eric | Thorne, Tanis C. | Saubel, Katherine Siva
Subject: California--History | Linguistics
Type:Text
Extent: 1039 pages
Description: The Cahuilla materials in the Phillips Fund collection consist of 2 items. Materials in this collection are listed alphabetically by last name of author. See materials listed under Elliott and Thorne.
Collection: Phillips Fund for Native American Research Collection (Mss.497.3.Am4)
Culture: Cahuilla
Date: ca.1950s-2004
Contributor: Bright, William, 1928-2006 | Saubel, Katherine Siva
Subject: Linguistics | Music | Ethnography | Folklore | California--History
Type:Text | Sound recording
Genre: Books | Drafts | Vocabularies | Stories
Extent: 0.5 linear feet
Description: William Bright's most significant Cahuilla materials consist of audio recordings of Cahuilla songs and wordlists made between the 1950s and 1980s. Katherine Siva Saubel is identified as a speaker on some, while others contain singing from an unidentified male. These can be found in Series 6 and the Digital Library. In addition are Bright's own interlinear glosses of Cahuilla songs and notes on J. P. Harrington's Cahuilla materials (Series 4), a lexical slip file comparing several Takic languages (Series 5), correspondence (Series 1) and copies of several small publications on Cahuilla language and culture, including a lexicon by Saubel (Series 2).
Collection: William O. Bright Papers (Mss.Ms.Coll.142)
Alternate forms: Cocopa
Language(s): English
Date: 1915
Contributor: Murphy, Robert Cushman, 1887-1973
Type:Still Image | Text
Genre: Diaries | Photographs | Maps
Extent: 1 volume; 28 black and white silver gelatin prints; 1 map
Description: "A record of the trip into northeastern Lower California." Typed manuscript of a diary kept on the Brooklyn Museum Expedition to Lower California, 1915. Mentions Cocopa Indians, which he regards as a branch of the Cahuilla tribe.
Collection: Robert Cushman Murphy journals (Mss.B.M957)
Culture: Atikamekw | Dene | Hopi | Makah | Inca | Yurok | Hupa | Yuki | Maidu | Miwok | Cahuilla | Mojave | Pomo | Chukchi | Kwakwaka'wakw | Nuu-chah-nulth | Séliš | Maya | Ktunaxa
Alternate forms: Athabaskan, Athapascan, Têtes-de-Boules, Têtes de Boules, Tete de Boule, Hoopa, Mohave, Kwakiutl, Nootka, Kutenai, Kootenai, Kootenay, Na:tini-xwe
Language(s): English
Date: 1920-1958
Contributor: Hallowell, A. Irving (Alfred Irving), 1892-1974
Subject: History | Ethnography | Linguistics | Basketry | Textiles | Population | Botany | Tools | Architecture | Clothing and dress | Marriage customs and rites | Tobacco | Material culture | Religion | Art | Hunting | Animals | Physical anthropology | Psychology | Mounds | Art | Painting | Cartography | Sculpture | Material culture | Canoes and canoeing
Type:Text
Genre: Bibliographies | Lecture notes | Charts | Newspaper clippings | Drawings | Reading notes | Postcards
Description: Materials from a wide range of indigenous cultures around the world are scattered throughout Series V of the A. Irving Hallowell Papers. Hallowell was interested in comparative ethnology on a number of topics including Bear Ceremonialism, textiles, artistic representations of Native people, basketry, kinship, pre-history, the development of language, family and marriage, nets and netting, etc. Much of this material constitutes Hallowell's reading notes on secondary sources and his research for very broad-based studies of humanity. Geographic regions represented in Series V include Australia, Africa, Pacific Islands, Polar regions California, Northwest coast, Southwest, and Southeast. The correspondence, in Series I, includes a very interesting, brief description of Franz Boas' first visit to the Kwakwaka'wakw community of Fort Rupert by the daughter of George Hunt in a folder labled Ronald Rohmer. There is also a letter from Edward Sapir detailing Nuu-chah-nulth bear hunting and face painting as well as sketches of netting needles.
Collection: Alfred Irving Hallowell Papers (Mss.Ms.Coll.26)
Culture: Acjachemen | Cahuilla | Luiseño
Alternate forms: Payómkawichum, Juaneño
Language(s): English
Date: 1993-1995
Contributor: Lobo, Anna Elizabeth | Saubel, Katherine Siva | Thorne, Tanis C.
Type:Text
Extent: 37 pages
Description: The Mission Indian materials in the Phillips Fund collection consist of 1 items. Materials in this collection are listed alphabetically by last name of author. See materials listed under Thorne. Consists of report (3 p.) on research between May 1993 and January 1995 at various Californian archives and in private collections to reveal Indigenous perspectives on the Mission Indian Federation, Southern California, in the early 20th century. Inventory of the private papers of Clarence Lobo, former leader of the Juaneno, at the time in possession of Anna Elizabeth Lobo, Oroville, CA (15 p.). "The Mission Indian Federation: Defining Sovereign Rights" (19 p.), paper presented at the American Historical Association, January 1995, with maps and images.
Collection: Phillips Fund for Native American Research Collection (Mss.497.3.Am4)