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Historians and their Instruments in Mexico

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 April 2010

Raymond Buve
Affiliation:
(University of Leiden)

Extract

Until quite recently the majority of Mexican archives were not easily accessible and working conditions were sometimes appalling. Many collections were only poorly catalogued, or not at all. Documents were brought together n i annual legajos or following the particularist norms of a local archivist, often without proper training or schooling. Nineteenth-century revolutions, and the Mexican Revolution (1910-1940) provoked considerable havoc. In several state capitals or municipal seats archives were destroyed or documents were used as wrapping paper in drugstores. In other cases documents were sold to foreign collectors.

Type
Archives
Copyright
Copyright © Research Institute for History, Leiden University 1990

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References

Notes

1 Guia General de los fondos que contiene el Archivo General de la Nation (Mexico 1981).Google Scholar

2 Edited by Isidro and Josefina Fabela (28 vols.; Mexico 1961–68). See also Kalz, Friedrich, ‘Note on Archival Sources’ in: The Secret War in Mexico (Princeton 1981) 641642.Google Scholar

3 (2 vols.: Mexico D.F. 1964–78).

4 On the organisation of the archives, see Bolelin del Archivo Historico de Jalisco 2, 1 (1978).Google Scholar

5 See Peredo, Carlos Herrejon, ‘Toluca. La historiay sus instrumentos’, Bolelin del Archivo General de la Nation tercera serie, tomo III, 2, 8 (1979) 36–40.Google Scholar

6 See Sànchez, Beatrìz Cano, Arc.hivo Històrico de Tlaxcala. Cuademos de lā Biblioteca del INAH (Mexico 1981).Google Scholar