trader, merchant," not "class of merchants." as Schott makes out in a note to Jagor's Reisen in den Philippinen (p. 272), nor "itinerant dealers.'' as Blumentritt (Chinesen auf den Philippinen, p. 18) explains after Barrantcs. country, to take it, and... Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections - Page 2571908 - 6 pagesAffichage du livre entier - À propos de ce livre
| 1868 - 472 pages
...and that if a fleet and men were given him, he offered, as a man who had been in Luzon and knew the country, to take it, and bring back the ships laden...the governor and the city, publicly and secretly, to look to its defence, because they held it as certain that a fleet from China would shortly come against... | |
| Antonio de Morga, Luis Vaez de Torres - 1868 - 484 pages
...and that if a fleet and men were given him, he offered, as a man who had been in Luzon and knew the country, to take it, and bring back the ships laden...much importance, especially so to Don Fray Miguel do Benavides, archbishop-elect of Manila, who knew the language, and that it went much further than... | |
| Emma Helen Blair, James Alexander Robertson - 1904 - 374 pages
...at the beginning, seemed very much to have more meaning than the mandarins had implied, especially to Don Fray Miguel de Benavides, archbishop-elect of Manila, who knew the language. Thereupon the archbishop and other religious warned the governor and the city, publicly and privately,... | |
| William Healey Dall - 1908 - 760 pages
...offered, as a man who had been in Luzon and knew the 1 The Chinese were called by the Spaniards Sangleycs. derived from a word of the Amoy-dialect. "seng-li,"...the governor and the city, publicly and secretly, to look to its defense, because theyheld it as certain that a fleet from China would shortly come against... | |
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