351
Bibliograpliy
Ogg, Frederick Austin Tlte Opmi11g of the 111ississippi; a Stmggle for Supremacy in the American Imcrior. New York, London, 1904. Pena, Juan Antonio de la Derrotero de la Expedicion en la Provi11cia de los Texas, Nuevo Rey110 de Philipinas, que de ordm del Excmo. Setror 11'/arques de Vafrro, Vi-Rey, y Capitan General de esta Nueva-Espaiia passa a executor el 1fuy /l/11stre Se,ior D. Joseph de Azlor . .. que escribe el Br. /11a11 Antonio de la Pe,ia. Mexico, Juan Francisco de Ortega Bonilla, 1722. (Photostat copy in possession of the author. A translation has been made by Peter P. Forrestal in Texas Catholic Historical Society, Preliminary Studies, Vol. II, No. 7, January, 1935. --Peiia's Diary of the Aguayo Ex,Pedition; Tramlated by Rev. Peter P. Forrestal. [Austin, Texas, 1935.] Texas Catholic Historical Society, Prelimi11ary Studies, Vol. II, No. 7, January, 1935. Pichardo, Jose Antonio Pichardo's Treatise on the Limits of Louisiana and Texas .•. Tram/ated into English, by Charles Wilson Hackett .. . Austin, Texas, 1931-1934. 2 Vols. Ramon, Domingo •.• Captain Do11 Domingo Ramon's Diary of His Expedition Into Texas in 1716 [translated] by Rev. Paul J. Foik. Austin, Texas, 1933. Texas Catholic Historical Society, Preliminary Studies, Vol. II, No. 5, April, 1933. St. Denis, Louis Juchereau . . . "St. Denis's Declaration Concerning Texas in 1717" [translated and edited by] Charmion Claire Shelby, in Southwestern Historical Association, The Quarterly, XXVI, No. 3, January, 1923. (Spanish text in A.G. I., Audiencia de 1Jfexico, 61-6-35. Dunn, Gulf Region, 1713-1721, pp. 34-50.) Shelby, Charmion Claire, tr. See St. Denis Thomas, Alfred "The Massacre of the Villasur Expedition at the Forks of the Red River," in Nebraska History a11d Records of Pioneer Days, Vol. VIII, No. 3. Tous, Gabriel, tr. "The Espinosa-Olivares-Aguirre Expedition of 1709." See Espinosa, Isidro Felix. LIST OF MANUSCRIPTS CITED In listing the manuscript materials used in the preparation of this volume, they have been placed in strict alphabetical order. This arrangement will make it easier for the reader to find the references given throughout the text. As few abbreviations as pos- sible have been used. In the citations A. G. I. means Archivo General de Indias, Sevilla, and A. G. M. means Archivo General y Publico, l\'lexico. In addition to the numerous transcripts from these two invaluable depositories of sources for the period covered, much pertinent information heretofore unknown has been found in the Archivo de San Francisco el Grande, the archive of the mother house of the Fran- ciscans in Mexico, only recently made available to the public in the Biblioteca Nacional de Mexico. All the documents concerning Texas in this rich archive were listed, cal- endared, and copied with a photostat machine by the author. Approximately ten thousand pages, covering the period from 1673 to 1800, \\'ere reproduced and bound in thirty-six volumes. The Saltillo Archives consist of approximately thirteen thou-
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