The Tainos, Irving Rouse
The Tainos, Irving Rouse
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The Tainos
Rise and Decline of the People Who Greeted Columbus

Author: Irving Rouse

Narrator: Adam Barr

Unabridged: 6 hr 53 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Tantor Media

Published: 05/14/2024


Synopsis

Drawing on archeological and ethno-historical evidence, Irving Rouse sketches a picture of the Tainos—the first people Columbus encountered when he arrived in the Americas—as they existed during the time of Columbus, contrasting their customs with those of their neighbors. He then moves backward in time to the ancestors of the Tainos—two successive groups who settled the West Indies and who are known to archeologists as the Saladoid peoples and the Ostionoid peoples. By reconstructing the development of these groups and studying their interaction with other groups during the centuries before Columbus, Rouse shows precisely who the Tainos were. He vividly recounts Columbus's four voyages, the events of the European contact, and the early Spanish views of the Tainos, particularly their art and religion. The narration shows that the Tainos did not long survive the advent of Columbus. Weakened by forced labor, malnutrition, and diseases introduced by the foreigners, and dispersed by migration and intermarriage, they ceased to exist as a separate population group.

As Rouse discusses the Tainos' contributions to the Spaniards—from Indian corn, tobacco, and rubber balls to art, artifacts, and new words—we realize that their effect on Western civilization, brief through their contact, was an important and lasting one.

About Irving Rouse

Irving Rouse is Charles J. MacCurdy Professor Emeritus of Anthropology at Yale University and curator emeritus of anthropology at the Peabody Museum of Natural History, Yale University.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Bean on January 06, 2018

Very good reference work on pre-Columbian Caribbean history. Rouse is very thorough and methodical, and frequently explains the reasons behind why or why not he comes to certain conclusions, which is important for reading a history of peoples who left very little behind for us to learn from. The onl......more

Goodreads review by Nathan on January 21, 2016

This book is one of those which was written in order to capitalize on the attention surrounding the 500th anniversary of Christopher Columbus' first voyage to the New World [1], although this is not the sort of book that would appear to immediately appeal to a mass reading audience. This is not a fa......more

Goodreads review by Antonio on May 04, 2021

This book is quite dry and reporting on a terribly under-researched people. I found the book useful in understanding the Caribbean from an anthropological perspective.......more

Goodreads review by john on November 01, 2021

I saw this book at the library. THE TAINOS. I remembered that the Tainos were the natives in Cuba, Dominican Republic, etc. They were there when Columbus showed up. When we've been to the DR there was artwork that was supposed to be similar to what Tainos created. The book is an anthropoloical study......more

Goodreads review by Seven on June 10, 2008

Very good history book to have.......more