This volume presents translations of essays by three German scholars who
were preeminent in the social and natural science study of Central
America in the early part of the twentieth century. Their research areas
included ethnology, archaeology, geography, linguistics, and epigraphy.
Their detailed observations of traditional cultures and archaeological
remains provide important primary data. Because their writings have been
available only in the original German-language journals, the work of
these scholars is unfamiliar to many researchers. The chapters report on
specific visits to parts of Central America but also include more
synthetic coverage of topics such as the influence of Bartolome de las
Casas on Indian life in Guatemala and food and drink as well as religion
of the Q'eqchi' in Guatemala. The visited places include Pacific coastal
and highland Guatemala, the Pech area of Honduras, and zones of Costa
Rica inhabited by the Guatuso, Chirripo, and Talamanca Indians.