The library of Daniel Garrison Brinton

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Interdisciplinary Centers, Units and Projects::Penn Libraries::Scholarship at Penn Libraries
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Anthropology
American Languages, Literatures, and Cultures
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Ethnological museums and collections
Books--private collections
Brinton, Daniel G. (Daniel Garrison), 1837-1899
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2002
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library of Daniel Garrison Brinton
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Abstract

This book includes an introductory essay and item-by-item catalog for the personal library of Daniel Garrison Brinton. First a professor of Ethnology and Anthropology at the Academy of Natural Sciences, then later Penn’s first Professor of Archaeology and Linguistics, Brinton (1837-1899) is considered one of the fathers of American anthropology. He built a substantial personal library of over 4000 items, mainly focused on the languages and culture of indigenous peoples of North and Central America. It included several early-modern manuscripts, modern transcriptions, and early printed books from the estate of ethnologist and linguistic scholar, Carl Hermann Berendt (1817-1878), and from the Mayanist, Charles Etienne Brasseur de Bourbourg (1814-1874). After his death, Brinton’s library passed to the Penn Museum for the creation of the Penn Museum Library in 1900.

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University of Pennsylvania. Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology.
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