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Linguistics and philology in subject [X]
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Algonquian (2)
Algonquin (1)
Apache (1)
Format
Correspondence (186)
Diaries (1)
Manuscripts (144)
Microfilm (14)
Recordings (7)
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1Author:  Voegelin, C. F. (Charles Frederick), 1906-1986
 Anthropologist, Structural Linguist. Assistant professor anthropology DePauw University, 1935-1940; lecturer Linguistic Institute, 1938-1941; associate professor anthropology Indiana University, 1941-1946, professor of anthropology, professor of linguistics, department chairman, 1947-1966, "Distinguished Professor of Anthropology and Professor of Linguistics", 1967-1976, professor emeritus, 1976-1986; visiting scholar University of Hawaii 


 Title:  Letters to Paul A. W. Wallace     
 Type:  Text items 
 Format:  Correspondence 
 Language:  English 
 Dates:  1940 
 Extent:  4 letters 
 Abstract:  Native American names 
 Source:  Wallace Family Papers, Subcollection II. Paul A. W. Wallace Papers (Ms. Coll. 64) 
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 Subjects:  Linguistics and philology 
2Author:  none
  


 Title:  Vocabularies and Miscellaneous Papers Related to Indian Languages     
 Type:  Collection 
 Format:  Manuscripts 
 Language:  Native American languages 
 Dates:  Circa 1784-1828 
 Extent:  3 volumes 
 Abstract:  Miscellaneous Manuscripts on North and Central American Indian Languages. Vocabulary lists and correspondence concerning Cherokee, Chippewa, Choctaw, Creek, Delaware, Lenni Lenape, Miami, Mohican, Osage, Shawano, and other Indian languages. Manuscripts and correspondence by James Barbour, Benjamin Smith Barton, Daniel Butrick, Peter S. Du Ponceau, Martin Duralde, George Gambold, George Gurley, Benjamin Hawkins, John Heckewelder, George Izard, Thomas Jefferson, Richard Kells, William V. Murray, Constantine Rafinesque, Daniel Smith, William Thornton, David Zeisberger, and others 
 Source:  American Philosophical Society Historical and Literary Committee American Indian Vocabulary Collection (497 V85) 
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 Subjects:  Linguistics and philology 
3Author:  Wood, John, 1775-1822
 Author, cartographer. Immigrated to U.S., 1800; tutor to Aaron Burr's daughter; political writer and pamphleteer; associated with Western World, Frankfort, Kentucky, 1806; cartographer, state of Virginia, 1819 to 1822; Professor of mathematics, College of William and Mary 


 Title:  Vocabulary of the Language of the Nottoway Tribe of Indians     
 Type:  Text items 
 Format:  Manuscripts 
 Language:  Nottoway 
 Dates:  Circa 1820 
 Extent:  1 volume (32 leaves) 
 Abstract:  Obtained from Edie Turner, "an old Indian Woman." This volume contains also John Heckewelder's English-Algonquian and Delaware comparative vocabulary and his "Names of various trees, shrubs, and plants in the language of the Lennape." 
 Source:  Vocabulary of the Language of the Nottoway Tribe of Indians (497.3 W85) 
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 Subjects:  Linguistics and philology 
4Author:  Zeisberger, David, 1721-1808
 Moravian missionary. Worked and lived among the Delaware and other Indian tribes; helped establish settlements in Pennsylvania, Ohio, and Canada. Student and recorder of Indian languages and customs 


 Title:  Letter to Josiah Harmar     
 Type:  Text items 
 Format:  Correspondence 
 Language:  Delaware 
 Dates:  13 January 1788 
 Extent:  1 letter 
 Abstract:  Photocopy. Delaware vocabularies. 
 Source:  Miscellaneous Manuscripts (Misc. Mss.) 
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 Subjects:  Linguistics and philology 
5Author:  Zeisberger, David, 1721-1808
 Moravian missionary. Worked and lived among the Delaware and other Indian tribes; helped establish settlements in Pennsylvania, Ohio, and Canada. Student and recorder of Indian languages and customs 


 Title:  Grammar of the Language of the Lenni-Lenape, or Delaware, Indians     
 Type:  Text items 
 Format:  Manuscripts 
 Language:  English | Delaware 
 Dates:  1816 
 Extent:  Approximately 210 leaves 
 Abstract:  Translated from the original German manuscript in the archives of the Society of United Brethren, Bethlehem, Pa., by Peter S. Du Ponceau, 1816. It is a description of the Delaware language and lists words and their corresponding meanings 
 Source:  Grammar of the Language of the Lenni-Lenape, or Delaware, Indians (497.3 Z3g) 
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 Subjects:  Linguistics and philology 
6Author:  Zeisberger, David, 1721-1808
 Moravian missionary. Worked and lived among the Delaware and other Indian tribes; helped establish settlements in Pennsylvania, Ohio, and Canada. Student and recorder of Indian languages and customs 


 Title:  On the prepositions of the Onondago language     
 Type:  Text items 
 Format:  Manuscripts 
 Language:  German | Onondago 
 Dates:  n.d. 
 Extent:  1 volume (36 leaves) 
 Abstract:  Records Onondaga words and their usages 
 Source:  On the prepositions of the Onondago language (497.3 Z3o) 
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 Subjects:  Linguistics and philology 
7Author:  Zeisberger, David, 1721-1808
 Moravian missionary. Worked and lived among the Delaware and other Indian tribes; helped establish settlements in Pennsylvania, Ohio, and Canada. Student and recorder of Indian languages and customs 


 Title:  Onondago-German vocabulary     
 Type:  Text items 
 Format:  Manuscripts 
 Language:  German | Onondago 
 Dates:  n.d. 
 Extent:  1 volume (98 leaves) 
 Abstract:  Lists Onondaga words with their German counterparts 
 Source:  Onondago-German vocabulary (497.33 Z3o) 
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 Subjects:  Linguistics and philology 
8Author:  Bunzel, Ruth Leah, 1898-1990
 Anthropologist. Associate director, Research in Contemporary Cultures, Columbia University, 1947-1951, lecturer, anthropology, Columbia University, 1954-1960, adjunct professor, 1960-1969, senior research associate, 1969-. 


 Title:  Zuni lexicon     
 Type:  Text items 
 Format:  Manuscripts 
 Language:  Zuni 
 Dates:  n.d. 
 Extent:  Approximately 7,000 slips 
 Abstract:  Arranged alphabetically and in terms of grammatical categories 
 Source:  American Council of Learned Societies. Committee on Native American Languages (497.3 B63c, Zu.2) 
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 Subjects:  Linguistics and philology 
9Author:  Cushing, Frank Hamilton, 1857-1900
 Ethnologist, archaeologist, member of the Bureau of American Ethnology (1879-1900). Cushing is best known for his studies of the Zuni Indians, including works on Zuni folkore and general ethnography. 


 Title:  Havasupai Language Notebook     
 Type:  Text items 
 Format:  Manuscripts 
 Language:  Havasupai 
 Dates:  1881 
 Extent:  1 notebook 
 Abstract:   none  
 Source:  Elsie Clews Parsons Papers (Ms. Coll. 29) 
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 Subjects:  Linguistics and philology 
10Author:  Cushing, Frank Hamilton, 1857-1900
 Ethnologist, archaeologist, member of the Bureau of American Ethnology (1879-1900). Cushing is best known for his studies of the Zuni Indians, including works on Zuni folkore and general ethnography. 


 Title:  Zuni [Vocabulary] Notebook     
 Type:  Text items 
 Format:  Manuscripts 
 Language:  Zuni 
 Dates:  1880-1881 
 Extent:  1 notebook 
 Abstract:  Recorded by Cushing 
 Source:  Elsie Clews Parsons Papers (Ms. Coll. 29) 
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 Subjects:  Linguistics and philology 
11Author:  Dixon, Roland B., 1875-1934
 Anthropologist. Member, Jesup North Pacific Expedition, 1898; instructor, anthropology, Harvard University, 1901-1906; assistant professor, 1906-1915, professor, 1915-1934. Curator, ethnology, Peabody Museum; member, National Research Council, 1922, Social Science Research Council, 1926-1929. 


 Title:  Shasta Texts     
 Type:  Text items 
 Format:  Manuscripts 
 Language:  Shasta 
 Dates:  n.d. 
 Extent:  6 notebooks 
 Abstract:  Shasta linguistics 
 Source:  American Council of Learned Societies. Committee on Native American Languages (497.3 B63c, H1c.2) 
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 Subjects:  Linguistics and philology 
12Author:  Dixon, Roland B., 1875-1934
 Anthropologist. Member, Jesup North Pacific Expedition, 1898; instructor, anthropology, Harvard University, 1901-1906; assistant professor, 1906-1915, professor, 1915-1934. Curator, ethnology, Peabody Museum; member, National Research Council, 1922, Social Science Research Council, 1926-1929. 


 Title:  Shasta Texts     
 Type:  Text items 
 Format:  Manuscripts 
 Language:  Shasta 
 Dates:  n.d. 
 Extent:  Approximately 150 leaves 
 Abstract:  Shasta texts edited and revised by Lucy S. Freeland 
 Source:  American Council of Learned Societies. Committee on Native American Languages (497.3 B63c, H1c.3) 
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 Subjects:  Linguistics and philology 
13Author:  Dixon, Roland B., 1875-1934
 Anthropologist. Member, Jesup North Pacific Expedition, 1898; instructor, anthropology, Harvard University, 1901-1906; assistant professor, 1906-1915, professor, 1915-1934. Curator, ethnology, Peabody Museum; member, National Research Council, 1922, Social Science Research Council, 1926-1929. 


 Title:  Zoque and Xinca compared with Penutian     
 Type:  Text items 
 Format:  Manuscripts 
 Language:  Zoque | Xinca | Penutian 
 Dates:  1924 
 Extent:  4 leaves 
 Abstract:  In English-Zoque-Penutian and English-Xinca-Penutian. Typed tabular lists of 60 and 45 items. Penutian languages identified by abbreviation 
 Source:  American Council of Learned Societies. Committee on Native American Languages (497.3 B63c, Mz.1) 
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 Subjects:  Linguistics and philology 
14Author:  Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844
 Lawyer, philologist. Du Ponceau was an emigre to the American colonies in 1777, and served as an aide to Baron von Steuben in the War for Independence. In 1781 he was appointed secretary to Robert Livingston, Secretary for Foreign Affairs. After the declaration of peace, Du Ponceau took up law, specializing in matters of international law and trade. A life-long student of languages, Du Ponceau took up the systematic study of American Indian languages while in Philadelphia. Much of his linguistic work was done under the auspices of the American Philosophical Society. He served the Society as councilor, from 1801-1816; vice-president, 1816-1827; and president, 1828-1844. See Murphy D. Smith, "Peter Stephen Du Ponceau and his Study of Languages," Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society, 127 (1983): 143-179. 


 Title:  Miscellanrous correspondence and manuscripts of Peter Stephen Du Ponceau     
 Type:  Text items 
 Format:  Manuscripts 
 Language:  English 
 Dates:  Circa 1801-1844 
 Extent:   none  
 Abstract:  Miscellaneous correspondence and manuscripts, primarily concerning the research and functioning of the APS 
 Source:  American Philosophical Society Archives (A.P.S. Archives) Miscellaneous Manuscripts (Misc. Mss.) 
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 Subjects:  Linguistics and philology 
15Author:  Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844
 Lawyer, philologist. Du Ponceau was an emigre to the American colonies in 1777, and served as an aide to Baron von Steuben in the War for Independence. In 1781 he was appointed secretary to Robert Livingston, Secretary for Foreign Affairs. After the declaration of peace, Du Ponceau took up law, specializing in matters of international law and trade. A life-long student of languages, Du Ponceau took up the systematic study of American Indian languages while in Philadelphia. Much of his linguistic work was done under the auspices of the American Philosophical Society. He served the Society as councilor, from 1801-1816; vice-president, 1816-1827; and president, 1828-1844. See Murphy D. Smith, "Peter Stephen Du Ponceau and his Study of Languages," Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society, 127 (1983): 143-179. 


 Title:  Peter Stephen Du Ponceau Papers     
 Type:  Collection 
 Format:  Manuscripts 
 Language:  English 
 Dates:  1781-1844 
 Extent:  0.5 linear feet 
 Abstract:  Correspondents include Samuel Coates, Citoyen Pinchon, William Tilghman, Edward S. Burd, Dr. Demme, Mr. Popham. Philology and miscellaneous topics. 
 Source:  Peter Stephen Du Ponceau Papers (B D92p) 
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 Subjects:  Linguistics and philology 
16Author:  Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844
 Lawyer, philologist. Du Ponceau was an emigre to the American colonies in 1777, and served as an aide to Baron von Steuben in the War for Independence. In 1781 he was appointed secretary to Robert Livingston, Secretary for Foreign Affairs. After the declaration of peace, Du Ponceau took up law, specializing in matters of international law and trade. A life-long student of languages, Du Ponceau took up the systematic study of American Indian languages while in Philadelphia. Much of his linguistic work was done under the auspices of the American Philosophical Society. He served the Society as councilor, from 1801-1816; vice-president, 1816-1827; and president, 1828-1844. See Murphy D. Smith, "Peter Stephen Du Ponceau and his Study of Languages," Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society, 127 (1983): 143-179. 


 Title:  Peter Stephen Du Ponceau Correspondence with John G. E. Heckewelder     
 Type:  Text items 
 Format:  Microfilm 
 Language:  English 
 Dates:  1816-1822 
 Extent:  18 letters 
 Abstract:  Indian languages 
 Source:  Du Ponceau Correspondence with John G. E. Heckewelder (Film 1162) 
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 Subjects:  Linguistics and philology 
17Author:  Heckewelder, John Gottlieb Ernestus, 1742-1823
 Moravian missionary, ethnographer, linguist. Heckewelder, a member of the Moravian community at Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, was active among the Indians of Pennsylvania and Ohio, from 1763 until 1810. He served as envoy and consultant for the U.S. government on Indian affairs and was correspondent with P. S. Du Ponceau on Indian linguistics. 


 Title:  Peter Stephen Du Ponceau Correspondence with John G. E. Heckewelder     
 Type:  Text items 
 Format:  Microfilm 
 Language:  English 
 Dates:  1816-1822 
 Extent:  18 letters 
 Abstract:  Indian languages 
 Source:  Du Ponceau Correspondence with John G. E. Heckewelder (Film 1162) 
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 Subjects:  Linguistics and philology 
18Author:  Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844
 Lawyer, philologist. Du Ponceau was an emigre to the American colonies in 1777, and served as an aide to Baron von Steuben in the War for Independence. In 1781 he was appointed secretary to Robert Livingston, Secretary for Foreign Affairs. After the declaration of peace, Du Ponceau took up law, specializing in matters of international law and trade. A life-long student of languages, Du Ponceau took up the systematic study of American Indian languages while in Philadelphia. Much of his linguistic work was done under the auspices of the American Philosophical Society. He served the Society as councilor, from 1801-1816; vice-president, 1816-1827; and president, 1828-1844. See Murphy D. Smith, "Peter Stephen Du Ponceau and his Study of Languages," Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society, 127 (1983): 143-179. 


 Title:  Indian Vocabularies     
 Type:  Text items 
 Format:  Manuscripts 
 Language:  English | Native American languages 
 Dates:  1820-1844 
 Extent:  253 leaves 
 Abstract:  Comparative American Indian vocabularies 
 Source:  Indian Vocabularies (497 In2) 
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 Subjects:  Linguistics and philology 
19Author:  Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844
 Lawyer, philologist. Du Ponceau was an emigre to the American colonies in 1777, and served as an aide to Baron von Steuben in the War for Independence. In 1781 he was appointed secretary to Robert Livingston, Secretary for Foreign Affairs. After the declaration of peace, Du Ponceau took up law, specializing in matters of international law and trade. A life-long student of languages, Du Ponceau took up the systematic study of American Indian languages while in Philadelphia. Much of his linguistic work was done under the auspices of the American Philosophical Society. He served the Society as councilor, from 1801-1816; vice-president, 1816-1827; and president, 1828-1844. See Murphy D. Smith, "Peter Stephen Du Ponceau and his Study of Languages," Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society, 127 (1983): 143-179. 


 Title:  Letters to Albert Gallatin     
 Type:  Text items 
 Format:  Microfilm 
 Language:  English 
 Dates:  1 February 1801 - 28 July 1843 
 Extent:  44 letters 
 Abstract:  43 letters to Gallatin + 1 letter to Mrs. O'Sullivan. Law, property; philology. 
 Source:  Peter Stephen Du Ponceau Letters to Albert Gallatin (Film 541) 
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 Subjects:  Linguistics and philology 
20Author:  Du Ponceau, Peter Stephen, 1760-1844
 Lawyer, philologist. Du Ponceau was an emigre to the American colonies in 1777, and served as an aide to Baron von Steuben in the War for Independence. In 1781 he was appointed secretary to Robert Livingston, Secretary for Foreign Affairs. After the declaration of peace, Du Ponceau took up law, specializing in matters of international law and trade. A life-long student of languages, Du Ponceau took up the systematic study of American Indian languages while in Philadelphia. Much of his linguistic work was done under the auspices of the American Philosophical Society. He served the Society as councilor, from 1801-1816; vice-president, 1816-1827; and president, 1828-1844. See Murphy D. Smith, "Peter Stephen Du Ponceau and his Study of Languages," Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society, 127 (1983): 143-179. 


 Title:  Philological Notebooks     
 Type:  Text items 
 Format:  Manuscripts 
 Language:  English 
 Dates:  1815-1834 
 Extent:  9 volumes 
 Abstract:  Languages of Americas, Asia, Africa, Pacific 
 Source:  Philological Notebooks (410 D92) 
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 Subjects:  Linguistics and philology 
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