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Mitos y leyendas de las Islas Canarias (Myths and Legends of the Canary Islands). Todo sobre el libro (All about the Book), essay. Iballa, roman. El libro de Barbuzano (Barbuzano's Book), Biography. La conversación (The Chat), fiction. El libro de los guachinches (The secret Routes of the Wine), ethnography. El libro del gofio, ethnography.
El libro de la mitología de chiloé (1998) Renato Cárdenas historias leyendas y creencias mágicas obtenidas de la tradición oral, Editorial ATELÍ, Vicente Reyes Nº 1290 Punta Arenas "El Millalobo " Tomo # 2, Zona de Chiloé colección mitos y leyendas de Chile (2009) publicado por Icarito La Tercera
Trasgu's pranks are told with variations in numerous towns of the Iberian peninsula, and his adventures are evoked in classical works of Spanish literature, like the anonymous 1554 novella Lazarillo de Tormes, the short farces of Miguel de Cervantes and the comedies of Lope de Vega.
Leyendas de Guatemala (Legends of Guatemala, 1930) was the first book to be published by Nobel-prizewinning author Miguel Ángel Asturias. The book is a re-telling of Maya origin stories from Asturias's homeland of Guatemala. It reflects the author's study of anthropology and Central American indigenous civilizations, undertaken in France, at ...
Javier Ocampo López (born 19 June 1939) is a Colombian historian, writer, folklorist and professor. He has been important in the fields of Colombian folklore and history of Latin America and Colombia, especially contributing on the department of Boyacá, the homeland of the Muisca and their religion and mythology.
The earliest records of the Classic of Mountains and Seas can be found in Sima Qian's "Records of the Grand Historian - Biography of Dawan". [7] The author of the book was first clearly identified in "The table of the Classic Mountains and Seas" written by Liu Xiu in the Western Han dynasty.
Elvira Roca Barea in 2017. María Elvira Roca Barea [n. 1] (born 1966) is a Spanish academic and writer. She studied philology, and specialized in the literature of the Middle Ages and early modern Europe.
Chalchiuhtlicue in Codex Borgia, page 65.Chalchiuhtlicue pictured at right. Chalchiutlicue is depicted in several central Mexican manuscripts, including the Pre-Columbian Codex Borgia (plates 11 and 65), the 16th century Codex Borbonicus (page 5), the 16th century Codex Ríos (page 17), and the Florentine Codex (plate 11).