id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt work_gx7krwawfja4xeoljni4bj5uxu José R. Oliver Taíno Indian Myth and Practice: the Arrival of the Stranger King, by William F. Keegan, 2007. Gainesville (FL): University Press of Florida; ISBN 978-0-8130-3038-8 hardback £36 & US$39.95; xxvi+230 pp., 25 figs., 11 tables 2009 3 .pdf application/pdf 2046 146 58 Taíno Indian Myth and Practice: the Arrival of the Stranger King, by William F. Cambridge Archaeological Journal,19, pp 274­275 doi:10.1017/S0959774309000407 the Northern Borderlands and Archaeology Without Borders The book, authored by Bill Keegan, takes as its central theme In this book, Keegan frames the 'facts' of Caonabó ― The Stranger King ― within the general Taíno culture, What is very distinct in this book, if not unique for Caribbean archaeological/academic texts, is that Keegan explicitly the historical person and legend that was Caonabó? archaeological evidence support Caonabó's Lucayan origin? Caonabó had a maternal uncle in Hispaniola. Las Casas, noted that Caonabó's brothers, in fact, lived in had to come from a site that archaeologically belongs to argument is that Caonabó was a stranger king, then belonging to another cultural tradition would make him even more then Caonabó was not a stranger at all. ./cache/work_gx7krwawfja4xeoljni4bj5uxu.pdf ./txt/work_gx7krwawfja4xeoljni4bj5uxu.txt