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Buried Cities, Forgotten Gods: William Niven's Life of Discovery and Revolution in Mexico and the American Southwest

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07/1999. xiii, 318 pages.
089672414X
978-0-89672-414-3

$39.95 cloth



Coming soon: online ordering! In the meantime, please call 800.832.4042 or 806.742.2982 to order.

Buried Cities, Forgotten Gods: William Niven's Life of Discovery and Revolution in Mexico and the American Southwest

By Robert S. Wicks and Roland H. Harrison

"I will go no further," William Niven’s Indian guide declared. "Beyond on every ridge, as far as you can see is all a part of one great City of the Dead . . . the gods will permit no man to go further and from here I return."

Niven, however, did continue on and discovered a remarkable expanse of ruins in the rugged state of Guerrero along Mexico’s western coast. During the early 1890s, Niven’s explorations were sponsored by the American Museum of Natural History. Later, he continued to explore on his own. His photographs, letters, diaries, and newspaper accounts are now the only source of information on many sites that were later destroyed by grave robbers, neglect, and the turmoil of the Mexican Revolution in 1911.

His later discovery of twenty-six hundred inscribed stone tablets in the Valley of Mexico aroused considerable controversy, and inspired James Churchward to put forth an occult interpretation of the origins of the Native Americans in The Lost Continent of Mu (1926). They remain controversial to this day.

The writer Katherine Anne Porter frequented Niven’s excavations in the Valley of Mexico and based her first published short story, "María Concepción," on her experiences there. She would write that the "Old Man never carried a gun, never locked up his money, sat on political dynamite and human volcanoes and never bothered to answer his slanderers. He bore a charmed life. Nothing would ever happen to him."

Niven was planning a book about his experiences, but was unable to complete it because of ill health. Buried Cities, Forgotten Gods is based upon his surviving manuscripts and personal papers.


To America--1865-1879
The Land of Snow and Silver--1879-1889
New York Ciy and Llano County--1886-1889
Unknown Guerrero--1890-1900
Guerrero Uprising-May 1901
The Chilpancingo Earthquake--January 1902
Cacahuamilpa Caves--February 1902
600 Miles through Guerrero with Governor Mora--October 1903
Placeres del Oro--1904-1905
Mother Lode of the Rio del Oro: La Lucha Mine--May-August 1906
The Death of Dr. Nevin--1906-1907
Down the Balsas--1908-1909
Placeres del Oro--June 1910
The Arrest of William A. Niven--May 1911
Atzcapotzalco--1909-1912
Down the Balsas to the Pacific--November-December 1911
Arrest--September 3, 1913
Invasion--May 26, 1914
Charlatan--November 12, 1916
Atzcapotzalco 1919
The Volcano--1920-1921
Mongoloide, Tlachichique, and Tecpaneca--1921
Buried Cities of Mexico--1921-1923
Inscribed Tablets and Partitioned Skulls--1921-1924
Tampico--1924-1926
Ludovic Mann and J.H. Cornyn--1926-1927
The Lost Continent of Mu--1927-1928
Dudley R. Hooper and the Tampico Shuffle--1929-1930
Austin and Atzcapotzalco--1931-1932
The End--1933-1937
Legacy
Views of Rural Mexico: A Selection of William Niven's Photographs




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