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Augusto Jiménez Seminario

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people were killed not because Jimenez was frightened and wanted to run away, but only because the 'manguaré' was beating and calling the Indians-only for that reason." Two muchachos de confianzas, Dubago Boras and Jose Maria Boras later testified to judge Valcarcel information regarding this raid, and they corroborated Mapp's information. Jose Maria explained that the bodies of the victims were burned along with the hut. Jose Maria did not clarify that he interpreted the signals for Jimenez in his deposition. Instead, he stated Jimenez assumed that it was a signal that the natives wanted to kill him. Jose Maria declared that Jimenez stated "before they kill me, we are going to kill them". Dubago Boras stated Jiménez led a correria towards the Pamá River in order to find a group of natives that Jiménez declared had wanted him dead. Jiménez's group descended upon a hut that was inhabited by forty natives which were dancing at the time, and these natives were killed by bullets and machetes. Another testimony from a Colombian named Juan Villota may recount the same incident, however, Villota did not provide many details in his deposition. Villota stated that he was on a raid with Jiménez near the banks of the Cahuinari River and they found twenty-nine natives at a hut. These natives were massacred by machetes after they were tied up. Jose Maria also reported that he had accompanied Jiménez on a separate raid which claimed the lives of fifty natives.
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his subordinates and muchachos de confianza during this massacre. The deposition of Isais Ocampo to judge Valcárcel stated that the "bones of Jiménez's victims cover the road that leads from Abyssinia to the Morelia section." An employee named Rodolfo Rodriguez may have recounted the same incident in his testimony to Valcarcel, and Rodriguez stated that over one hundred natives were killed through whips and hunger under the orders of Agüero. This was done because of a dispute between Agüero and Armando Normand over who had the rights to possess these indigenous workers. Since there was no agreement on the matter, Agüero decided to have this group killed. This incident later became a factor in the rebellion of Katenere, a Bora chief. Katenere was initially working for Normand before he fled with his people. This group was captured and interred at the cepo of Abisinia. While Katenere was imprisoned, Bartolome Zumaeta raped Katenere’s wife in front of him, and this became another reason for Katenere rebelling. Zumaeta had joined Agüero and Jimenez in their raids against the Boras natives after he was forced to flee from El Encanto's agency due several crimes he committed in that area. Jiménez's involvement in suppressing this rebellion is not well documented, however there were numerous raids sent from Abisinia and Morelia to capture Katenere after he killed Zumaeta in May of 1909.
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Jimenez and Agüero, including the incident where he was ordered to shoot the native man who was burning. A muchacho de confianza found a boat shortly after which Jimenez used to cross with a portion of his group, excluding the Barbadian men. Six days later Jimenez and this group returned with three canoes, and fifty captured natives which were taken back to Morelia as prisoners. The Barbadians Stanley Sealy and James Chase were on this slave raid and reported this incident in their depositions to Casement. Casement believed that "othing in the Hardenburg book exceeds in horror the account given by the two Barbados men of Jimenez burning alive the old Boras woman and the young Boras man in June 1908..." Sealy stated that these natives received rice and beans, and that he was not a witness to further brutal-treatment of this group. "They were to be kept in confinement until they became 'tamed' and agreed to work rubber." When Roger Casement interviewed Sealy in 1910 and questioned why he did not report these crimes to Macedo, Sealy stated it was because Macedo was already aware. Another Colombian implicated in the Putumayo genocide, named Aquileo Torres agreed to enter the Peruvian Amazon Company's service, and he accompanied Jimenez and this group on the commission across the Caqueta in June of 1908.
584:, a traitor to his country and of working with the Germans. This pursuit of Jiménez ended after these accusations. The grave of Alberto Jiménez Seminario which contained the words eaving his brother Augusto inconsolable" was used as supporting evidence by author Oscar Paredes Pando that Augusto Jiménez had stayed around the Brazilian border as late as 1919. Paredes Pando emphasized that this proximity to the border ensured that whenever authorities pursued Jiménez, he could flee towards Brazil where he would not be extradited. While searching for information regarding Jiménez, Paredes Pando interviewed a man referred to as Don Alberto. Alberto stated that there was a man at Puerto Carlos named Augusto Seminario, who was feared by the local population because they believed he was a murderer. Alberto described one incident, where there were two boats passing each other and Augusto was on one of these boats. Augusto challenged the owner of the other boat, who was travelling with a native woman, and Augusto asked how could he travel with an indigenous female. After asking that question, Augusto shot the woman in the head. 258: 254:
peoples in the area. These photographs were later used as evidence of crime in the Putumayo, and became the subject of rumors that Robuchon was murdered and then disappeared. It took fifty-eight days before this expedition, which was composed of twenty-five men, including John Brown, arrived at Robuchon's last known location. In an interview decades later, Brown stated that this expedition was just a "simulation" for him, because he believed that Arana had given an order for Robuchon to disappear, and Brown thought Robuchon had died before the relief group was sent. After searching the area, the relief expedition split up into two different groups, one of which became lost in the forest for five months. Brown was a part of the group that was lost, and several of his companions died. This would eventually influence Brown to leave the company, and report the incidents he had witnessed, including several crimes committed by Jiménez. Brown reported information regarding crime in the Putumayo in 1908 to Thomas William Whiffen and later Roger Casement in 1910.
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that recently escaped the Peruvian Amazon Company's custody, and demanded this knowledge from the elderly woman, who then promised to lead Jimenez to a house. They arrived at the location where the woman stated they would find the house, however there was no house there, so Jimenez had her lifted between two posts, and started a fire under her. She was released from the posts after she suffered from burning, and then a muchacho de confianza decapitated her under Jimenez's orders. Jimenez and his group came across another indigenous woman who had a child, and after the woman stated she did not know where the escaped natives had fled to, Jimenez called her a liar and decapitated her child. Near the banks of the Caqueta the group came across a young indigenous man, who Jimenez had raised onto posts before lighting a fire under him since the man did not tell Jimenez where he could find a boat. After a certain period of time Jimenez ordered the muchacho José María to shoot this native man who was still burning.
20: 229: 588: 338: 419: 28: 485: 509:. Prior to his departure from the Putumayo, Agüero had several of the native crop fields around Abisinia burned in an attempt to rouse the Boras natives into rebellion. The muchacho Jose Maria stated that Agüero wanted to take him to Brazil to continue working in the rubber industry, however Jose refused. Jose stated Agüero was taking eighteen natives with him from the Putumayo, including six of his concubines and four brother-in-laws of Jose, however Jose did not clarify if Jiménez was travelling with this group. According to Paredes's information, Agüero was travelling with as many as seventy natives. In 1911, it was reported that Agüero was travelling around the 270:"The Abyssinia section has also been the theatre of horrific scenes of all kinds of crimes. There the head of that section, Abelardo Agüero, in company with his second Augusto Jiménez, when they want to test marksmanship with firearms, they take out one or more of the Indians that they unjustly have in the stocks and make them leave the house under the pretext of brining yuccas; once these unfortunate people in the patio of the house receive the volley of rifle fire from theirs murderers in the back. Other times, wanting to improve their aim, they look for children, since their parents have already been murdered, so that they can serve as a smaller target..." 448:. Crichlow stated that the correria left Ultimo Retiro on the March 7, 1910 and this commission arrived at the banks of the Caqueta on March 22 in pursuit of natives that ran away from Entre Rios. Twenty one natives and three Colombians were captured by Jiménez's group. Casement later found out the raid was ordered by Victor Macedo, La Chorrera's general manager. Macedo had also offered a monetary bonus to the members of this group that Jiménez believed had performed satisfactory during the raid. Another Barbadian named Reuben Philips was also a part of this expedition and provided a testimony to Casement which corroborated Crichlow's deposition. 334:
author of various violations, arsons, floggings, and homicides." The Barbadian Adolfo Gibbs witnessed a young muchacho de confianza decapitate a thin, sick man that had managed to get out of the cepo and was attempting to run away. Jimenez sent the muchacho to catch this man as well as execute him. The murdered man was an indigenous Bora chief that had previously ran away with his people, at the time of his death he had been in chains for three weeks and he had not been fed properly. Gibbs also witnessed the flagellation of two old indigenous women because they were caught pulling sweet potatoes during Jimenez's management of Morelia.
395: 288: 172: 322:, and helped to shed light on the situation. Brown stated that he had seen Jimenez kill many natives prior to his departure from Abisinia in 1907. At Morelia, he witnessed Jiménez execute twelve natives, males and females, because they had previously "run away and were bad and were not wanted again." Brown had also reported an incident where Jimenez and Agüero had a shooting competition aimed at an indigenous chief's genitals. Mapp was not a witness to this crime however he had heard many of the other Barbadians talk about it. 427:
Morelia as early as June of 1909. At the time, there were only ten natives working rubber for the station, the other natives had run away. This term of management may have occurred while Jiménez was on an expedition to hunt down a group of natives. There was a payment issued to Jiménez on October 12 of 1909 which was issued for Jiménez spending four days searching for natives. The payment, which was recorded in a ledger at La Chorrera, was later used as evidence of the Peruvian Amazon Company engaging in the slave trade.
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and many other crimes. In his report, Valcárcel mentioned that Jiménez employed a method of torture to extract a confession where he cut the feet of natives and had them whipped after stabbing them. A Colombian named Simón Muñoz testified to Valcárcel that another torture method used by Jiménez, consisted of having the natives hanged by their limbs and then flogging them. Afterwards, these victims were interred in the stocks; where Muñoz stated he had seen ten natives die from their wounds. One
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who were put in stocks. When on the point of dying of hunger, one of the victims told the chief that it would be better to kill them at once and not make them suffer such cruel agonies, whereupon he took a machete, cut off the man's leg, and then ordered him to be dragged away, killed, and burned" Rosa documented another correria led by Jimenez which he stated occurred in 1903, and he declared that there were multiple killings of natives during that incident.
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blood of their victims, were the last to abandon the gruesome scenes, leaving behind a record of more than a hundred murders." Tizon dismissed Jimenez along with Normand, Agüero, Fonseca, Montt, and Velarde. Jimenez and Agüero were aboard the Liberal when judge Paredes was returning to La Chorrera upon the completion of his investigation, and he was the last source to mention Jimenez and Agüero together until 1914. One rumor stated that Jiménez fled to
209:." Another witness named Daniel Collantes also included Jiménez among his list of the worst criminals in the Putumayo. Casement would later include Jiménez in a similar list in 1910 after carrying out his own investigation. During his investigation, Casement wrote that the "evidence against him is overwhelming", as well as "he has committed appalling crimes upon the Boras Indians in the section Abisinia." In reference to Jiménez, the editor of 549:, where they escaped on September 24th, 1914 at 5:20 in the morning along with two other criminals from the Putumayo. There were shots fired and one guard was killed during the escape. Jiménez was never captured again, however Agüero was recaptured on a later date and sent to Guadalupe Prison in Lima at the end of February in 1915. Agüero remained there until at least June 17 of 1916 when he issued a writ of 580:, there was an English captain sent to the Acre River basin on a special mission from an Indian Defense Committee with orders to arrest Jiménez for murdering indigenous people. This captain managed to find Jimenez and his brother Alberto however they both escaped to a border town named San Lorenzo, and several police officers were killed during this incident. Jimenez later accused this captain of being a 250:
from a trip to Iquitos. Agüero asked Jimenez where a certain group of native prisoners had come from, and Jimenez stated that they had recently been caught. Agüero ordered this group of eight natives to be sent towards the native crop fields and executed by the muchachos de confianza one by one. Mapp's testimony was later corroborated by another Barbadian named John Brown.
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site could not determine the number or the genders of the victims. The other burn pits were in a similar condition. A muchacho de confianza named Bushico Boras provided his testimony to Valcarcel and reported multiple crimes that were perpetrated by Jimenez and Agüero at Abisinia. Jiménez also shot one of his indigenous concubines out of apparent jealousy.
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eyewitness reports to crimes occurring in the Putumayo, several of these witnesses implicated Jiménez with perpetrating crimes against the local natives. Jimenez's name was included in a list of men implicated with the Putumayo genocide, reported by Marcial Gorries to Benjamin Saldana Rocca. "he least criminal like Jimenez ten in two months".
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interview, Circhlow declared that while he had not seen natives flogged at Ultimo Retiro during his employment there, he stated natives "were sometimes confined in the stocks by Señor Jiménez, but not for any length of time." Crichlow mentioned a company "commission" led by Jiménez into the Caqueta, which would have been an invasion of
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natives to Braga, Jimenez and Agüero had eight natives tied to a post then executed because they had tried to run away. Around three months later, Agüero ordered Braga to execute thirty-five imprisoned natives because they had also attempted to run away. When Braga refused to do so, Agüero got Jimenez to do this.
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Jimenez stated "the blancos did go out to the house of the capitanes and 'advise' them of when the rubber was due, and bring them in - this was twice in the fabrico". The term fabrico refers to a period of time, usually around seventy five days, during the year when there were ideal conditions to extract rubber.
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Mapp, Stanley Sealy, Edward Crichlow, Alfred Hoyte, Reuben Phillips, Joseph Minggs and John Brown reported several crimes perpetrated by Jiménez in their depositions to Cacsement. One of these Barbadians reported an incident where Jimenez told his indigenous wife to kill a man who was imprisoned at Morelia.
541:. The Bolivian minister that reported their arrest stated Macedo had left the area before these arrest were made. The Peruvian supreme court of justice requested the extradition of Jimenez, Agüero and Macedo from Bolivia after they received news about the arrests. Jiménez and Agüero were both sent to the 426:
Jimenez was later transferred to Ultimo Retiro where he was placed in charge. Another Peruvian Amazon Company employee implicated in the Putumayo genocide named Armando Blondel assumed leadership over Morelia after Jimenez left. According to Evelyn Batson's statement to Casement, Blondel was managing
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An ex-employee of the J.C. Arana y Hermanos firm named Juan Rosa sent his own testimony to Hardenburg on June 6, 1908. Rosa declared that "n the 20th of September I began work at the section Morelia, where Jiménez was the chief, and on the 30th a commission arrived, bringing fifteen Indian prisoners,
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Sealy and Chase refuted a claim in Braga's testimony which stated that Jimenez had burned a chief named Tiracahuaca alive in July of 1908. Sealy stated that Tiracahuaca was alive and that he was on the run still. Tiracahuaca's wife was later beaten to death by Armando Blondel, the subchief of Morelia
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Braga's testimony was later used by a man named Walter Ernest Hardenburg, an American engineer in Iquitos who was collecting evidence of crimes perpetrated by the Peruvian Amazon Company. Hardenburg had previously witnessed a massacre carried out by that company, and he was also held as a prisoner on
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The Barbadian John Brown had relayed information about this incident to Captain Thomas Whiffen prior to Casement's investigation in 1908, and he corroborated Mapp's information. Mapp stated that Brown's information was correct except for the facts that only one native was burned during that incident,
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Valcarcel mentioned that there were four different "burn pits" used to cremate the victims of Jimenez, Agüero and their subordinates at Abisinia. The judge and his commission investigated the first burn pit and found a large quantity of burned human bones that were so deteriorated that the experts on
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In 1911, there were two judges sent to the Putumayo to search for further evidence and eyewitness testimony in regards to the Putumayo genocide. Judge Valcárcel and the depositions he collected implicated Jiménez with the decapitation of fifty-five natives, innumerable killings, the rape of children,
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In reference to Jimenez and another criminal implicated in the Putumayo genocide, Casement wrote "hose men were murderers and torturers by profession - as their crimes swelled so should their fortunes. Whole tribes were handed over to them by a lawless syndicate which had no title-deed to one yard of
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Saldaña's information was later given to an American named Walter Ernest Hardenburg, and he collected further depositions and evidence which further exposed the crimes perpetrated by J.C. Arana y Hermanos as well as Jiménez. One witness who made a report to Hardenburg was named Celestino Lopez and he
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According to Jiménez, the natives were paid with the advance system, and since they don't understand prices or quantity, he decided the quantity, prices and advances on the books. Casement stated "t was clear there was no intention of paying these people, for there was nothing in the store to do it."
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This information comes from a native named Michechenibe Boras. This native also declared that Jiménez sent his muchachos after a woman named Quejiche because she fled, and the muchachos brought her severed head back. Her corpse was skinned afterwards and the skin was hung in the same room the cepo,
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Casement included part of a conversation he had with Juan A. Tizon in his 1910 journal, and quoting Tizon, Casement wrote "Jimenez said they were good people and if properly dealt with would be far more useful - but they had been outraged beyond words. Jimenez he says is a humble man. He did what he
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natives calling for Boras reinforcements in order to attack the slave raiding group. Jimenez ordered the thirty native men and women his group had captured to be taken out of the cepo, and killed. Mapp declared that this occurred in Bora territory, six hours away from Morelia. Mapp stated that "hese
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There were seven natives from the Huarunas tribe that were shot by Jiménez. A native named Ubatipa Boras declared that this was done in his presence and in his own hut. Ubatipa was later able to point out the location where these seven victims were buried. Five of the victims' bones were burned and
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indigenous population, primarily around Abisinia and Morelia. An arrest warrant was issued against Jiménez and 236 other employees of the Peruvian Amazon Company in 1911, but he managed to evade authorities until 1914. He was arrested in April of 1914, and managed to escape near the end of September
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In 1924, Jiménez published an anthropological paper on the Boras people of the Putumayo containing eleven pages of information based on some of the knowledge he obtained in the Putumayo. In 1929, a document published by the Peruvian ministry of House and Commerce listed an "Augusto Jiménez S." as a
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On June 27, 1911, Paredes issued an arrest warrant for Jiménez and over two hundred other Peruvian Amazon Company employees, including Agüero. Judge Valcarcel later issued an arrest warrant against La Chorrera's general manager and the boss of Jiménez, Victor Macedo. On June 27, 1912 an extradition
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Jiménez approached Roger Casement at La Chorrera on November 14, 1910 for an interview in what Casement viewed as an attempt to get a statement "that would have whitewashed him" from Braga's accusations. Jiménez had learned through the translator he brought to the interview that he was incriminated
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Crichlow stated that no one was killed during the 1910 commission, however a Peruvian named Pinedo testified to Casement that Torres had killed a native boy in front of Jimenez and the rest of the group. Pinedo also stated that Torres "had also killed two women, for sheer brutality sport - all this
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A Colombian named Simón Muñoz testified to Valcárcel and stated that José María had killed many natives under the orders of Jiménez and Agüero. María acted as an interpreter on these raids, and he later gave a testimony to judge Valcarcel. He confessed to killing multiple people under the orders of
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At the beginning of a slave raid in June of 1908, Jimenez and his group encountered an elderly indigenous woman along a path and they interrogated her. Jimenez's indigenous wife was with him and as she spoke Spanish, she translated for them. Jimenez wanted to know the location of a group of natives
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Joao Baptista Braga escaped from Morelia on July 28th, 1908 with several natives and three canoes while Jimenez at La Chorrera. The Barbadian Stanley Sealy aided Braga in his escape, and prevented another Barbadian named James Chase from intervening. Sealy stated that Jimenez was furious that Braga
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A Peruvian Amazon Company employee named Isais Ocampo declared to Valcárcel that Jiménez had around one hundred natives from the Morelia section executed because they he was not satisfied with the amount of rubber they had brought in for the collection period. Ocampo noted that Jiménez was aided by
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In May of 1908 Celestino Lopez stated that he witnessed the flagellation of seven natives occur at Morelia because they did not meet the rubber weight quota. Lopez emphasized that "Two of these victims were mere boys". In his deposition, Lopez referred to Jimenez as "the famous Augusto Jiménez, the
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In 1906, Jiménez led a relief expedition around the Cahuinari River in search of Eugène Robuchon, who was a French explorer that was hired by Arana to map out his property in the Putumayo River basin. Robuchon took several photographs, which were incriminating and depicted the enslavement of native
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men sent to Abisinia in 1905 that were employed on slave raids under Agüero and later Jimenez's management. Some of these Barbadians, like James Mapp, would later report and testify the crimes of Jiménez as well as Agüero. Mapp reported one incident in 1906, which occurred after Agüero had returned
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In the words of Walter Ernest Hardenburg, "s he is known to have taken several photographs of the horrible crimes committed there, it is thought by many that he was victimised by the employees of Arana. Considering the character of these miserable criminals and certain other peculiar circumstances
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Roger Casement to an investigatory commission to the Putumayo in 1910. Casement's investigation was limited to the conditions of employment Barbadian men employed by the Peruvian Amazon Company were subjected to, and their involvement with the Putumayo atrocities. The Barbadians James Chase, James
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against eighteen members of the J.C. Arana y Hermanos firm. When he received no response from the courts in Iquitos, Saldaña resorted to publicly attacking this firm through two different newspapers titled La Sancion and La Felpa. Saldaña published the contents of his original petition, as well as
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Judge Paredes stated that Jiménez and Agüero were pressured into leaving the Peruvian Amazon Company due to Tizon's influence. "I can certify that the last who left Abisinia-Agüero and Jimenez-did so because of the attitude of the said manager. These repugnant fiends, as if still attracted by the
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Ocampo implicated Jimenez with the killing of forty-five natives at Abisinia in one incident through the use of whip and hunger. Ocampo stated that this was because some of them had fled, while the others had delivered what Jiménez deemed to be an unsatisfactory amount of rubber. The natives that
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Agustin Pena declared that one day at Abisinia Jimenez went down into the holding cell and shot one native five times. Pena also declared that while he had witnessed Agüero kill more than sixty natives he believed that Jiménez had perpetrated more murders. The muchacho de confianza Bushico Boras
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Joao Baptista Braga was one of the first deponents to incriminate Jimenez and Agüero in the Putumayo genocide. Braga's information dates back to 1904 and he was originally hired by the J.C. Hermanos firm to direct a group of sixty-five Peruvian men. In order to demonstrate their treatment of the
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who was receiving 100 Peruvian sols per month. During its prime, Ultimo Retiro had two thousand workers on the company ledger and by the time of Casement's investigation in 1910 the population consisted of "260 workmen".In 1911, Casement stated that Jimenez was around the age of twenty six. The
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Jimenez approached Edward Crichlow before and after his interview with Casement on October 8, Jimenez stated that the company would cover Crichlow's debts and increase his pay if he did not report anything else to Casement. Jimenez also offered Crichlow an additional 20 Peruvian soles. In his
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claimed that Jiménez had personally murdered one hundred and thirty-seven natives at Abisinia, and he declared that the Machivare nation disappeared due to Jimenez’s actions. PAC employee Ezequiel Zarate estimated that during his employment at Abisinia Jiménez had flogged one hundred natives.
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the group did not run away after the massacre as stated in Brown's story, and that it was a muchacho de confianza who interpreted the signals for Jimenez and not a captive like Brown reported. Brown's information was one of the first reports of crime in the Putumayo that reached the
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published an article which implicated station managers of the J. C. Arana and Hermanos firm with the perpetration of atrocities against the Putumayo's indigenous population. Saldaña's article was one of the first documents that publicly implicated Jiménez in the Putumayo genocide.
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The distance between Santa Julia and Abisinia could be traversed in around twelve hours of walking according to Hardenburg's information. The Barbadian John Brown stated that a native carrying a load of rice from Santa Julia to Abisinia could take two days to complete the
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During Casement's investigation at Ultimo Retiro, one man, in the presence of Casement and Jimenez, had declared that in the previous year, during Montt's management, many natives had been either flogged or starved to death in the cepo at Ultimo Retiro. While passing the
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The Barbadian James Mapp relayed information regarding a correria led by Jimenez and a massacre in January of 1906. At night during the journey to return to Abisinia the expedition heard a native drum sounding a signal, which a muchacho named Jose Maria interpreted as
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estimated that the rubber delivered to Ultimo Retiro in 1910 may have yielded around 25 tons of rubber, about £5,000, and Jimenez would have received a portion of that through commission. A copy of La Chorrera's paylist dated to 1910 stated that Jiménez was paid 3
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charges and the Government of Peru, and he also stated that Jiménez should pursue a libel case if he felt that he was wronged. Casement later wrote "e begged me to listen to his statement, and said he could prove that one of the charges against him in
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of the local indigenous population, which was exploited as a workforce to extract and transport rubber under the threat of death. He became the manager of the Santa Julia station, which was the shipping port for Abisinia, located on a tributary of the
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published in 1938 mentioned that Jiménez, using his full name, was a member of a departmental geographic society however the document does not clarify which department in Peru. The circumstances and date of his death are not public knowledge.
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articles. In response to the public reaction towards Hardenburg's information, the British Foreign Office opened a file on the Putumayo atrocities in October of 1909, and this would eventually lead to the Foreign Office's decision to attach
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custom agent on the Tahuamanu River. Jiménez published another paper based on the Bora people in 1933, titled Breve estudio sobre la tribu» Bora» de la comarca de los tíos Putumayo y Caquetá in Revista Universitaria. A document from the
682:"Tizon, himself has again and again warned us that these agents of his are 'dangerous', are 'pirates', that Jimenez is a 'bandit', and that they have their cut-throat muchachos and the Indians entirely at their bidding and their mercy." 929:
The Peruvian Supreme court of Justice's information from 1917 stated that Jiménez escaped, while Agüero was sent to Lima at the end of February. Their information does not specify if Agüero also escaped for a short period of time in
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A muchacho de confianza named Dubago Boras gave his testimony to Valcarcel, and declared that he had helped Agüero and Jimenez kill thirty natives on one occasion. This was because Agüero and Jimenez feared that this group would
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station apparently brought in 25 tons of rubber per annum supplied by the "260 workmen" who were enslaved to the Company. Casement mentioned Jiménez drew a "fine percentage" of profit from the rubber brought to Ultimo Retiro.
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This is the Peruvian day of independence, and Jimenez was celebrating with his coworkers. Braga also escaped with a Colombian prisoner named Felipe Cabrera who later reported several crimes he witnessed Jimenez and Agüero
358:, and gave testimony to several crimes that he had witnessed while in the Putumayo district, including crimes committed by Jimenez and Agüero. His deposition was witnessed and signed by a lieutenant on October 6, 1908. 844:
Casement stated that this may have been the beginning of Torres' employment with the PAC. Celestino Lopez stated in his deposition that Torres was still a prisoner at the time of his departure from Abisinia in May of
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This may have been the brother in law of Abisinia's head muchacho de confianza, Jose Maria Boras. Jose stated he did not know the reason for the killing; however, he knew that Jimenez had shot him five times with a
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Jimenez is the fourth name in the list mentioned, following Armando Normand, José Inocente Fonseca and Abelardo Agüero. Gorries may have arranged the list in order of which station managers he viewed to be most
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quite recently." Jimenez later had Torres transferred away from Ultimo Retiro and sent to Occidente. Torres later transferred away from Ultimo Retiro by Jimenez because his actions were "too much for Jiménez".
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and they began to run a series of articles which would expose the crimes of the Peruvian Amazon Company, and the Putumayo genocide to the English speaking world. Jiménez was mentioned in at least one of the
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so deteriorated that their gender could not be determined. The last two bodies were preserved and the commission determined that they belonged to young males, which corroborated Ubatipa's statement.
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Slavery in Peru: Message from the President of the United States Transmitting Report of the Secretary of State, with Accompanying Papers, Concerning the Alleged Existence of Slavery in Peru
369:. Hardenburg managed to obtain the depositions and evidence collected by Benjamin Saldaña Rocca, which implicated Jiménez and other employees of the Peruvian Amazon Company with genocide. 553:
that eventually led to his release. An official document from the prefecture of Madre de Dios published in 1916 listed two Peruvian patrons, referred to as Jimenez and Agüero on the
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The journey from Santa Julia to La Chorrera could be completed in around twenty four hours by the Comsopolita and Liberal steamships, which belonged to the Peruvian Amazon Company.
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land or one sapling rubber tree, and they were supplied with the armaments necessary to reduce these people to a terrified obedience and given a wholesale interest in the terror."
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was got to do - because he is (a cholo) obedient and will obey good orders when they are given him." Tizon was a senior manager of the Peruvian Amazon Company at La Chorrera.
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After the interview, this translator told Casement that each of the Peruvian Amazon Company managers had flogged natives, and they were lying if they claimed otherwise.
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Joseph Minggs did not witness the killings however he did see the native corpses. Alfred Hoyte was also on this raid, and corroborated Sealy and Chase's statements.
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beat a Barbadian named Westerman Leavine while at La Chorrera because he wanted did not want to stay employed with the company. Braga successfully made his way to
3030: 136: 96:. Abisinia, Morelia, and two other stations sent their rubber towards Santa Julia, and from there the rubber was transported up the Igara-Parana River towards 2981: 714:
Valcárcel mentions Jiménez raping children twice. The deponent Isais Ocampo declared that Jiménez had perpetrated more instances of rape than his boss Agüero.
87:
Augusto Jiménez Seminario was employed by a rubber exporting firm named J.C. Arana y Hermanos as early as 1904. This company was later implicated with the
132: 911:
Paredes returned from his investigation on the Putumayo with over 1,300 pages of information including evidence of crimes and atrocities in the region.
437: 19: 807:
Katenere was later shot and killed by a muchacho de confianza at Abisinia while he was trying to communicate with his wife, who was recently captured.
789:
Brown later stated that the information relayed by Mapp was factual, and that he, Brown, was reporting information to Whiffen based on his own memory.
3125: 2339: 566: 705:
The muchachos Dubago Boras, Huacuchi Boras, Bushico Boras and Jose Maria declared that they had witnessed many killings carried out by Jiménez.
3106:
The Putumayo, the Devil's Paradise; Travels in the Peruvian Amazon Region and an Account of the Atrocities Committed Upon the Indians Therein
854:"In May of 1908 he had been dispatched from La Chorrera to Abisinia to assist Agüero and Jimenez in the terrorisation of the Boras Indians." 513:
with Miguel Flores, Armando Blondel, Filomeno Vasquez and "a large number of Indians with them" however the report did not mention Jiménez.
663:
These eyewitness reports usually come from ex-employees of the J.C. Arana y Hermanos firm, or Colombians who had interacted with that firm.
319: 529:
In April of 1914, Jiménez was captured along with Agüero, at the time, they were both working on a rubber producing estate belonging to
228: 163:
per arroba of rubber, which equals 15 kilograms or 33 pounds. The list also documented ten other employees at Ultimo Retiro, including
105: 296:
extracted and delivered rubber to Abisinia were not provided food by the Peruvian Amazon Company, and many of them died from hunger.
3358: 636:
Jimenez was referred to as the second chief of Abisinia under Agüero, and he was in charge of the station when Agüero was absent.
587: 3081: 3348: 3259:
Explotación del caucho-shiringa Brasil - Bolivia - Perú: economías extractivo-mercantiles del Alto Acre - Madre de Dios
942:
escaped from that prison in 1915 "with other henchmen of Arana to Brazil" however Agüero was not a part of this group.
440:
near Ultimo Retiro, Crichlow mentioned that "his section used to have plenty of Indians - they've been killed mostly".
3308: 3267: 3223: 3164: 798:
Rodolfo Rodriguez was also implicated in the Putumayo genocide, and had an arrest warrant issued against him in 1911.
337: 123:
in London, and this new company acquired the assets of J.C. Arana y Hermanos. Jimenez was listed as the chief of the
591:
Grave of Alberto Jiménez: “He died on December 2, 1919 at the age of 39. Leaving his brother Augusto inconsolable.“
893:
La Chorrera's agency later sent Torres to Abisinia, "where the commission of crime is easiest and most recurrent."
261:“The conscience of Arana.” The illustration is based on rumors that Julio Cesar Arana had Eugène Robuchon murdered 3202: 115:, and he later became the manager of Morelia, which was a substation that delivered rubber to Abisinia. In 1907, 112: 27: 780:
Zarate stated that he had also witnessed Jimenez shoot a child with a revolver while in the hands of its mother.
761:"Jiménez forced the Indians to give him large quantities of rubber and did not give them food..." - Isais Ocampo 468:
articles through Braga's information. Casement declared that he had no say in Jiménez's own affairs between the
418: 164: 3353: 3185: 3114: 151: 597: 3278: 530: 484: 222: 3363: 723:
Valcárcel's information states that these were eight indigenous women, who were mutilated with machetes.
3246: 835:"he had believed Señor Macedo knew all about the wrong things done, and there was no use telling him.” 3213: 394: 326: 275: 189: 63: 39:. Chorrera, Abisinia and Morelia are underlined. Santa Julia is also on the map, marked as S. Julia. 3301:
The Devil and Mr Casement: One Man's Struggle for Human Rights in South America's Heart of Darkness
2348:, p. 303-304,317,323,327,328,329-331,337-339,342-344,349,382-385,389,391-392,401,404,408-420. 502: 387: 120: 47: 3135: 864: 523: 97: 36: 3291:
John Brown reconstrucción e interpretación de una historia de vida en la Amazonía colombiana
3104: 2928: 2926: 2924: 2922: 2920: 2892: 2890: 93: 398:
Illustration on the first issue of 'LA FELPA', a newspaper owned by Benjamin Saldaña Rocca.
128: 188:
Jiménez’s role in the Putumayo genocide was first exposed by a criminal petition filed by
150:
In March of 1910, Jiménez became the manager of Ultimo Retiro after the previous manager,
116: 55: 8: 3331:
The Putumayo Red Book with an Introduction on the Real Scandal of the Putumayo Atrocities
2917: 2887: 743:
that are said to have taken place, it would not be strange if such were really the case."
546: 422:
An indigenous youth carrying a load of rubber at another station of La Chorrera's agency.
363: 287: 171: 376:
in 1909, and in September he gave his story to a financial watchdog publication named
3304: 3263: 3219: 3181: 3160: 3110: 225:
believed that Jimenez's actions had caused an entire indigenous nation to disappear.
59: 3289: 108:
shortly after the first detachment of Barbados men arrived to that station in 1905.
875:
This payment was listed under a section titled "The recapture of fugitive indians".
3236: 2303: 213:
in 1909, Sidney G. Paternoster, stated that "his record of cruelty is appalling"
3329: 3318: 3257: 3175: 3154: 3065: 3048: 939: 554: 534: 140: 124: 752:
Ubatipa also provided the names of these natives in his deposition to Valcarcel.
451: 232:
Flogging of a Putumayo native, carried out by the employees of Julio César Arana
1121: 310: 155: 71: 51: 3342: 884:
At the time, Crichlow had an outstanding debt of at least 120 Peruvian soles.
550: 506: 351: 144: 2943: 2941: 1109: 477:
was not true. On the other hand, the evidence against him is overwhelming."
139:. The Cahuinari section refers to the Palmera and Morelia stations near the 202: 160: 3050:
Memoria que presenta al Congreso de ... el Ministro de Hacienda y Comercio
961: 3245: 2938: 2932: 2896: 577: 510: 101: 75: 3280:
The North-West Amazons; Notes of Some Months Spent Among Cannibal Tribes
3031:"Bemerkungen über den Stamm der Bora oder Meamuya am Putumayo, Amazonas" 654:"There are surely more concubines than saleable articles in this store." 2569: 920:"Victor Macedo, it appears, had previously left the Bolivian territory. 570: 542: 246: 2637: 2635: 1066: 100:. The local natives around Santa Julia and the Abisinia district were 2004: 2002: 985: 973: 645:
This population would fall down to around two hundred and one by 1912
1526: 2875: 2737: 2632: 2581: 2477: 2450: 2402: 2375: 2222: 2101: 2089: 445: 206: 88: 2664: 2662: 2622: 2620: 2508: 2506: 2504: 2467: 2465: 2239: 2237: 2161: 2159: 2157: 1999: 341:
Stanley Sealy standing next to two Putumayo natives for comparison
3248:
Anales judiciales de la Corte Suprema de Justicia de la Republica
3067:
Musical and Other Sound Instruments of the South American Indians
2392: 2390: 1759: 1757: 1755: 1742: 1740: 1727: 1725: 1184: 1182: 1138: 1136: 693: 581: 562: 538: 373: 2964: 2962: 2960: 2958: 2956: 1026: 1024: 497:. Casement heard another rumor that Jiménez had made his way to 2659: 2617: 2557: 2501: 2462: 2414: 2234: 2154: 1938: 1936: 1934: 1041: 1039: 558: 494: 355: 3152: 2793: 2791: 2426: 2387: 1832: 1752: 1737: 1722: 1319: 1179: 1133: 1127: 1115: 3053:. Peru. Ministerio de Hacienda y Comercio. 1929. p. 186. 3010: 2998: 2953: 2438: 2256: 2254: 2252: 2144: 2142: 2140: 2053: 1674: 1367: 1218: 1194: 1021: 350:
had gotten away. During that same month in 1908, Jimenez and
198: 2863: 2839: 2749: 2698: 2647: 2605: 2518: 2176: 2174: 2125: 2043: 2041: 2026: 1931: 1907: 1859: 1810: 1808: 1778: 1776: 1774: 1772: 1635: 1538: 1437: 1435: 1433: 1396: 1394: 1309: 1307: 1305: 1036: 2907: 2905: 2788: 2766: 2764: 2725: 2715: 2713: 2674: 2547: 2545: 2315: 2281: 2279: 2277: 2275: 2273: 2271: 2269: 2186: 1977: 1975: 1849: 1847: 1664: 1662: 1589: 1587: 1574: 1572: 1559: 1557: 1555: 1553: 1516: 1514: 1512: 1510: 1254: 1242: 1230: 1167: 1099: 1097: 1095: 1093: 1056: 1054: 498: 3215:
Sir Roger Casement's Heart of Darkness: The 1911 Documents
2363: 2327: 2291: 2249: 2198: 2137: 2065: 2014: 1987: 1710: 1686: 1611: 1471: 1078: 197:
referred to Jimenez as the "author of various violations,
3317: 3063: 3028: 2947: 2815: 2171: 2113: 2038: 1805: 1769: 1623: 1599: 1459: 1430: 1418: 1406: 1391: 1302: 1157: 1155: 1153: 1151: 1009: 488:
Photograph taken at the Ultimo Retiro station, circa 1912
2902: 2851: 2827: 2803: 2776: 2761: 2710: 2686: 2593: 2542: 2530: 2489: 2351: 2266: 2210: 1972: 1960: 1948: 1919: 1895: 1844: 1698: 1659: 1647: 1584: 1569: 1550: 1507: 1355: 1090: 1051: 997: 522:
order against Jimenez and another station manager named
2077: 1871: 1820: 1795: 1793: 1791: 1495: 1483: 1379: 1331: 1290: 1278: 1266: 1206: 696:
like device, was kept. The rest of her body was burned.
3204:
Parliamentary Papers: Select Committee on the Putumayo
3130:. The International Work Group for Indigenous Affairs. 1447: 1148: 1883: 1343: 291:
Bushico Boras (left) and Carlos Quinto Nonuya (right)
3201: 3064:
Gustav Izikowitz, Karl; Ljunggren, Florence (1935).
2881: 2587: 2575: 1788: 3207:. House of Commons or House of Lords Papers. 1913. 561:families with them. Jiménez had also sent a local 325:On January 5 1908 a journalist from Iquitos named 3262:. Editado e impreso en JL Editores. p. 204. 3340: 3320:The Anti-slavery Reporter and Aborigines' Friend 3153:Robuchon, Eugène; Rey de Castro, Carlos (1907). 3127:El proceso del Putumayo y sus secretos inauditos 183: 3294:(in Spanish). Universidad Nacional de Colombia. 3212:Casement, Roger (2003). Mitchell, Angus (ed.). 3134: 2743: 2668: 2641: 2626: 2563: 2512: 2483: 2471: 2456: 2420: 2408: 2381: 2345: 2243: 2228: 2165: 2107: 2095: 2008: 1838: 1763: 1746: 1731: 1325: 1224: 1200: 1188: 1142: 1072: 1030: 991: 62:. His role in the genocide was investigated by 2933:Corte Suprema de Justicia de la Republica 1917 2897:Corte Suprema de Justicia de la Republica 1917 111:There, Augusto Jiménez was a submanager under 3255: 3016: 3004: 2968: 2986:. Longmans, Green, and Co. 1916. p. 352 3287: 3234: 3082:"Boletín de la Sociedad Geográfica de Lima" 2797: 2680: 2297: 2020: 1993: 1782: 1716: 1692: 1617: 1477: 1465: 1084: 1015: 3140:. United States. Department of State. 1913 3102: 2432: 2396: 2369: 2309: 2260: 2204: 2148: 2071: 1814: 1680: 1629: 1605: 1441: 1424: 1412: 1400: 1373: 1313: 1060: 1045: 1003: 967: 3123: 2821: 2444: 2180: 2059: 2047: 2032: 1981: 1966: 1954: 1942: 1925: 1913: 1901: 1877: 1865: 1853: 1704: 1668: 1653: 1641: 1593: 1578: 1563: 1544: 1532: 1520: 1337: 1103: 154:, was transferred to the Atenas station. 131:of this new company which was drafted by 3251:(in Spanish). Imprinta del Estado. 1917. 3211: 3173: 2911: 2869: 2857: 2845: 2833: 2809: 2782: 2770: 2755: 2731: 2719: 2704: 2692: 2653: 2611: 2599: 2551: 2536: 2524: 2495: 2357: 2333: 2321: 2285: 2216: 2192: 2131: 2083: 1501: 1489: 1453: 1385: 1296: 1284: 1272: 1260: 1248: 1236: 1212: 1173: 1161: 979: 586: 483: 450: 417: 393: 336: 286: 278:, El Proceso del Putumayo y sus secretos 256: 227: 170: 26: 18: 3327: 3298: 3276: 2119: 1889: 1826: 1799: 1361: 1349: 3341: 2312:, p. 234,237-240,242,247,260,262. 3159:(in Spanish). Imprenta La industria. 3177:The Amazon Journal of Roger Casement 557:and the document stated they had 18 16:Agent of the Peruvian Amazon Company 1128:En el Putumayo y sus afluentes 1907 1116:En el Putumayo y sus afluentes 1907 13: 3029:Augusto Jiménez Seminario (1924). 14: 3375: 3238:The Lords of the Devil's Paradise 23:Photograph of Jiménez, circa 1915 3218:. Irish Manuscripts Commission. 3074: 3057: 3041: 3022: 2974: 970:, p. 28-29,161,227-228,237. 933: 923: 914: 905: 896: 887: 878: 869: 857: 848: 838: 829: 820: 810: 801: 792: 783: 430: 774: 764: 755: 746: 736: 726: 717: 708: 699: 685: 676: 666: 657: 648: 639: 630: 620: 3359:Putumayo genocide perpetrators 3156:En el Putumayo y sus afluentes 3070:. Elanders boktr. p. 424. 2948:The Anti-slavery Reporter 1914 611: 58:from 1903 to 1911, during the 1: 3256:Paredes Pando, Oscar (2013). 982:, p. 53,128,183,215,505. 949: 516: 455:General view of Ultimo Retiro 184:Role in the Putumayo genocide 104:. Jimenez was transferred to 3288:Rojas Brown, Ramiro (2022). 3235:Paternoster, Sidney (1913). 954: 7: 3334:. N. Thomson & Company. 3283:. New York, Duffield, 1915. 3103:Hardenburg, Walter (1912). 3086:Sociedad Geográfica de Lima 598:Sociedad Geográfica de Lima 236: 10: 3380: 3349:20th-century slave traders 3124:Valcárcel, Carlos (2004). 3037:(in German). 55–57: 83–93. 3035:Zeitschrift für Ethnologie 1535:, p. 250-253,255,264. 303: 3109:. London: Fischer Unwin. 2882:Parliamentary Papers 1913 2588:Parliamentary Papers 1913 2576:Parliamentary Papers 1913 82: 44:Augusto Jiménez Seminario 3328:Thomson, Norman (1913). 3299:Goodman, Jordan (2009). 3277:Whiffen, Thomas (1915). 3241:. S. Paul & Company. 3174:Casement, Roger (1997). 3096: 604: 372:Hardenburg travelled to 68:Walter Ernest Hardenburg 863:Entre Rios, station of 121:Peruvian Amazon Company 48:Peruvian Amazon Company 1075:, p. 381-382,408. 994:, p. 161,434-435. 592: 489: 456: 423: 399: 342: 327:Benjamin Saldaña Rocca 320:British Foreign Office 292: 281: 276:Benjamin Saldaña Rocca 262: 245:There were twenty-one 233: 223:muchachos de confianza 190:Benjamin Saldaña Rocca 176: 175:“Embarking the rubber” 64:Benjamin Saldana Rocca 40: 24: 3354:Peruvian slave owners 3180:. Anaconda Editions. 590: 531:Nicolás Suárez Callaú 487: 454: 421: 397: 340: 290: 268: 260: 231: 174: 143:, a tributary of the 33:J.C. Arana y Hermanos 30: 22: 2744:Slavery in Peru 1913 2669:Slavery in Peru 1913 2642:Slavery in Peru 1913 2627:Slavery in Peru 1913 2564:Slavery in Peru 1913 2513:Slavery in Peru 1913 2484:Slavery in Peru 1913 2472:Slavery in Peru 1913 2457:Slavery in Peru 1913 2421:Slavery in Peru 1913 2409:Slavery in Peru 1913 2382:Slavery in Peru 1913 2346:Slavery in Peru 1913 2244:Slavery in Peru 1913 2229:Slavery in Peru 1913 2166:Slavery in Peru 1913 2108:Slavery in Peru 1913 2096:Slavery in Peru 1913 2009:Slavery in Peru 1913 1839:Slavery in Peru 1913 1764:Slavery in Peru 1913 1747:Slavery in Peru 1913 1732:Slavery in Peru 1913 1326:Slavery in Peru 1913 1225:Slavery in Peru 1913 1201:Slavery in Peru 1913 1189:Slavery in Peru 1913 1143:Slavery in Peru 1913 1073:Slavery in Peru 1913 1031:Slavery in Peru 1913 992:Slavery in Peru 1913 137:Carlos Rey de Castro 46:was an agent of the 2983:The Annual Register 501:and then boarded a 79:of that same year. 3364:Peruvian murderers 3017:Paredes Pando 2013 3005:Paredes Pando 2013 2969:Paredes Pando 2013 2872:, p. 317,383. 2848:, p. 244,263. 2758:, p. 396,400. 2746:, p. 276,343. 2707:, p. 234,244. 2656:, p. 195,215. 2644:, p. 337-338. 2614:, p. 190,197. 2527:, p. 217-218. 2486:, p. 389,404. 2459:, p. 329-330. 2447:, p. 254-255. 2435:, p. 327-329. 2411:, p. 328-329. 2399:, p. 241-242. 2384:, p. 317,357. 2231:, p. 279-280. 2134:, p. 225-228. 2110:, p. 409-410. 2098:, p. 408-409. 2062:, p. 252,254. 2035:, p. 252-254. 2011:, p. 382-383. 1945:, p. 248,251. 1916:, p. 256,258. 1868:, p. 258-259. 1683:, p. 238-239. 1644:, p. 100,445. 1547:, p. 248,249. 1376:, p. 234-240. 1263:, p. 198-199. 1251:, p. 190,207. 1239:, p. 206-207. 1176:, p. 207,209. 1048:, p. 193-194. 593: 573:around this time. 490: 457: 424: 400: 343: 293: 263: 234: 177: 94:Igara-Paraná River 41: 25: 3303:. London: Verso. 3088:. 55–57: 5. 1938. 2734:, p. 13,176. 2578:, p. XXXVII. 2324:, p. 60,400. 2195:, p. 44,303. 117:Julio Cesar Arana 60:Putumayo genocide 56:Julio César Arana 35:territory around 3371: 3335: 3324: 3323:. L. Wild. 1914. 3314: 3295: 3284: 3273: 3252: 3242: 3229: 3208: 3198: 3196: 3194: 3170: 3149: 3147: 3145: 3131: 3120: 3090: 3089: 3078: 3072: 3071: 3061: 3055: 3054: 3045: 3039: 3038: 3026: 3020: 3014: 3008: 3002: 2996: 2995: 2993: 2991: 2978: 2972: 2966: 2951: 2945: 2936: 2930: 2915: 2909: 2900: 2894: 2885: 2879: 2873: 2867: 2861: 2855: 2849: 2843: 2837: 2831: 2825: 2819: 2813: 2807: 2801: 2798:Paternoster 1913 2795: 2786: 2780: 2774: 2768: 2759: 2753: 2747: 2741: 2735: 2729: 2723: 2717: 2708: 2702: 2696: 2690: 2684: 2681:Paternoster 1913 2678: 2672: 2666: 2657: 2651: 2645: 2639: 2630: 2624: 2615: 2609: 2603: 2597: 2591: 2585: 2579: 2573: 2567: 2561: 2555: 2549: 2540: 2534: 2528: 2522: 2516: 2510: 2499: 2493: 2487: 2481: 2475: 2469: 2460: 2454: 2448: 2442: 2436: 2430: 2424: 2418: 2412: 2406: 2400: 2394: 2385: 2379: 2373: 2367: 2361: 2355: 2349: 2343: 2337: 2336:, p. 60-62. 2331: 2325: 2319: 2313: 2307: 2301: 2298:Rojas Brown 2022 2295: 2289: 2283: 2264: 2258: 2247: 2241: 2232: 2226: 2220: 2214: 2208: 2202: 2196: 2190: 2184: 2178: 2169: 2163: 2152: 2146: 2135: 2129: 2123: 2122:, p. 65-66. 2117: 2111: 2105: 2099: 2093: 2087: 2081: 2075: 2069: 2063: 2057: 2051: 2045: 2036: 2030: 2024: 2021:Paternoster 1913 2018: 2012: 2006: 1997: 1994:Paternoster 1913 1991: 1985: 1979: 1970: 1964: 1958: 1952: 1946: 1940: 1929: 1923: 1917: 1911: 1905: 1899: 1893: 1887: 1881: 1875: 1869: 1863: 1857: 1851: 1842: 1836: 1830: 1824: 1818: 1812: 1803: 1797: 1786: 1783:Rojas Brown 2022 1780: 1767: 1761: 1750: 1744: 1735: 1729: 1720: 1717:Paternoster 1913 1714: 1708: 1702: 1696: 1693:Paternoster 1913 1690: 1684: 1678: 1672: 1666: 1657: 1651: 1645: 1639: 1633: 1627: 1621: 1618:Paternoster 1913 1615: 1609: 1603: 1597: 1591: 1582: 1576: 1567: 1561: 1548: 1542: 1536: 1530: 1524: 1518: 1505: 1499: 1493: 1487: 1481: 1478:Paternoster 1913 1475: 1469: 1466:Paternoster 1913 1463: 1457: 1451: 1445: 1439: 1428: 1422: 1416: 1410: 1404: 1398: 1389: 1383: 1377: 1371: 1365: 1364:, p. 43-45. 1359: 1353: 1347: 1341: 1335: 1329: 1323: 1317: 1311: 1300: 1294: 1288: 1282: 1276: 1270: 1264: 1258: 1252: 1246: 1240: 1234: 1228: 1222: 1216: 1210: 1204: 1198: 1192: 1186: 1177: 1171: 1165: 1159: 1146: 1140: 1131: 1130:, p. 23,95. 1125: 1119: 1113: 1107: 1101: 1088: 1085:Paternoster 1913 1082: 1076: 1070: 1064: 1058: 1049: 1043: 1034: 1028: 1019: 1016:Paternoster 1913 1013: 1007: 1001: 995: 989: 983: 977: 971: 965: 943: 937: 931: 927: 921: 918: 912: 909: 903: 900: 894: 891: 885: 882: 876: 873: 867: 865:Andrés O'Donnell 861: 855: 852: 846: 842: 836: 833: 827: 824: 818: 814: 808: 805: 799: 796: 790: 787: 781: 778: 772: 768: 762: 759: 753: 750: 744: 740: 734: 730: 724: 721: 715: 712: 706: 703: 697: 689: 683: 680: 674: 670: 664: 661: 655: 652: 646: 643: 637: 634: 628: 624: 618: 615: 524:Andrés O'Donnell 279: 50:employed in the 3379: 3378: 3374: 3373: 3372: 3370: 3369: 3368: 3339: 3338: 3311: 3270: 3226: 3192: 3190: 3188: 3167: 3143: 3141: 3117: 3099: 3094: 3093: 3080: 3079: 3075: 3062: 3058: 3047: 3046: 3042: 3027: 3023: 3015: 3011: 3003: 2999: 2989: 2987: 2980: 2979: 2975: 2967: 2954: 2946: 2939: 2931: 2918: 2910: 2903: 2895: 2888: 2880: 2876: 2868: 2864: 2856: 2852: 2844: 2840: 2832: 2828: 2820: 2816: 2808: 2804: 2796: 2789: 2781: 2777: 2769: 2762: 2754: 2750: 2742: 2738: 2730: 2726: 2718: 2711: 2703: 2699: 2691: 2687: 2679: 2675: 2667: 2660: 2652: 2648: 2640: 2633: 2625: 2618: 2610: 2606: 2598: 2594: 2586: 2582: 2574: 2570: 2562: 2558: 2550: 2543: 2535: 2531: 2523: 2519: 2511: 2502: 2494: 2490: 2482: 2478: 2470: 2463: 2455: 2451: 2443: 2439: 2433:Hardenburg 1912 2431: 2427: 2419: 2415: 2407: 2403: 2397:Hardenburg 1912 2395: 2388: 2380: 2376: 2370:Hardenburg 1912 2368: 2364: 2356: 2352: 2344: 2340: 2332: 2328: 2320: 2316: 2310:Hardenburg 1912 2308: 2304: 2296: 2292: 2284: 2267: 2261:Hardenburg 1912 2259: 2250: 2242: 2235: 2227: 2223: 2215: 2211: 2205:Hardenburg 1912 2203: 2199: 2191: 2187: 2179: 2172: 2164: 2155: 2149:Hardenburg 1912 2147: 2138: 2130: 2126: 2118: 2114: 2106: 2102: 2094: 2090: 2082: 2078: 2072:Hardenburg 1912 2070: 2066: 2058: 2054: 2046: 2039: 2031: 2027: 2019: 2015: 2007: 2000: 1992: 1988: 1980: 1973: 1965: 1961: 1953: 1949: 1941: 1932: 1924: 1920: 1912: 1908: 1900: 1896: 1888: 1884: 1876: 1872: 1864: 1860: 1852: 1845: 1837: 1833: 1829:, p. 8,38. 1825: 1821: 1815:Hardenburg 1912 1813: 1806: 1798: 1789: 1781: 1770: 1762: 1753: 1745: 1738: 1730: 1723: 1715: 1711: 1703: 1699: 1691: 1687: 1681:Hardenburg 1912 1679: 1675: 1667: 1660: 1652: 1648: 1640: 1636: 1630:Hardenburg 1912 1628: 1624: 1616: 1612: 1606:Hardenburg 1912 1604: 1600: 1592: 1585: 1577: 1570: 1562: 1551: 1543: 1539: 1531: 1527: 1519: 1508: 1500: 1496: 1488: 1484: 1476: 1472: 1464: 1460: 1452: 1448: 1442:Hardenburg 1912 1440: 1431: 1425:Hardenburg 1912 1423: 1419: 1413:Hardenburg 1912 1411: 1407: 1401:Hardenburg 1912 1399: 1392: 1384: 1380: 1374:Hardenburg 1912 1372: 1368: 1360: 1356: 1348: 1344: 1336: 1332: 1324: 1320: 1314:Hardenburg 1912 1312: 1303: 1295: 1291: 1283: 1279: 1271: 1267: 1259: 1255: 1247: 1243: 1235: 1231: 1223: 1219: 1211: 1207: 1199: 1195: 1187: 1180: 1172: 1168: 1160: 1149: 1141: 1134: 1126: 1122: 1114: 1110: 1102: 1091: 1083: 1079: 1071: 1067: 1061:Hardenburg 1912 1059: 1052: 1046:Hardenburg 1912 1044: 1037: 1029: 1022: 1014: 1010: 1004:Hardenburg 1912 1002: 998: 990: 986: 978: 974: 968:Hardenburg 1912 966: 962: 957: 952: 947: 946: 940:Armando Normand 938: 934: 928: 924: 919: 915: 910: 906: 901: 897: 892: 888: 883: 879: 874: 870: 862: 858: 853: 849: 843: 839: 834: 830: 825: 821: 815: 811: 806: 802: 797: 793: 788: 784: 779: 775: 769: 765: 760: 756: 751: 747: 741: 737: 731: 727: 722: 718: 713: 709: 704: 700: 690: 686: 681: 677: 671: 667: 662: 658: 653: 649: 644: 640: 635: 631: 625: 621: 616: 612: 607: 555:Tahuamanu River 519: 503:Booth steamship 433: 306: 280: 274: 239: 186: 141:Cahuinari River 133:Eugène Robuchon 127:section on the 119:registered the 113:Abelardo Agüero 85: 17: 12: 11: 5: 3377: 3367: 3366: 3361: 3356: 3351: 3337: 3336: 3325: 3315: 3309: 3296: 3285: 3274: 3268: 3253: 3243: 3232: 3231: 3230: 3224: 3199: 3186: 3171: 3165: 3150: 3132: 3121: 3115: 3098: 3095: 3092: 3091: 3073: 3056: 3040: 3021: 3019:, p. 202. 3009: 3007:, p. 139. 2997: 2973: 2971:, p. 201. 2952: 2950:, p. 114. 2937: 2935:, p. 271. 2916: 2914:, p. 431. 2901: 2899:, p. 270. 2886: 2874: 2862: 2860:, p. 660. 2850: 2838: 2836:, p. 303. 2826: 2824:, p. 347. 2822:Valcárcel 2004 2814: 2812:, p. 105. 2802: 2800:, p. 312. 2787: 2785:, p. 318. 2775: 2773:, p. 400. 2760: 2748: 2736: 2724: 2722:, p. 251. 2709: 2697: 2695:, p. 161. 2685: 2683:, p. 207. 2673: 2671:, p. 339. 2658: 2646: 2631: 2629:, p. 338. 2616: 2604: 2602:, p. 199. 2592: 2580: 2568: 2566:, p. 357. 2556: 2554:, p. 175. 2541: 2539:, p. 216. 2529: 2517: 2515:, p. 330. 2500: 2498:, p. 255. 2488: 2476: 2474:, p. 404. 2461: 2449: 2445:Valcárcel 2004 2437: 2425: 2423:, p. 329. 2413: 2401: 2386: 2374: 2372:, p. 239. 2362: 2360:, p. 180. 2350: 2338: 2326: 2314: 2302: 2290: 2288:, p. 219. 2265: 2263:, p. 240. 2248: 2246:, p. 280. 2233: 2221: 2219:, p. 179. 2209: 2207:, p. 323. 2197: 2185: 2183:, p. 262. 2181:Valcárcel 2004 2170: 2168:, p. 304. 2153: 2151:, p. 246. 2136: 2124: 2112: 2100: 2088: 2076: 2074:, p. 330. 2064: 2060:Valcárcel 2004 2052: 2050:, p. 254. 2048:Valcárcel 2004 2037: 2033:Valcárcel 2004 2025: 2023:, p. 135. 2013: 1998: 1996:, p. 134. 1986: 1984:, p. 261. 1982:Valcárcel 2004 1971: 1969:, p. 252. 1967:Valcárcel 2004 1959: 1957:, p. 248. 1955:Valcárcel 2004 1947: 1943:Valcárcel 2004 1930: 1928:, p. 168. 1926:Valcárcel 2004 1918: 1914:Valcárcel 2004 1906: 1904:, p. 247. 1902:Valcárcel 2004 1894: 1882: 1878:Valcárcel 2004 1870: 1866:Valcárcel 2004 1858: 1856:, p. 256. 1854:Valcárcel 2004 1843: 1841:, p. 410. 1831: 1819: 1817:, p. 351. 1804: 1787: 1768: 1766:, p. 409. 1751: 1749:, p. 383. 1736: 1734:, p. 382. 1721: 1719:, p. 140. 1709: 1707:, p. 445. 1705:Valcárcel 2004 1697: 1695:, p. 119. 1685: 1673: 1671:, p. 253. 1669:Valcárcel 2004 1658: 1656:, p. 100. 1654:Valcárcel 2004 1646: 1642:Valcárcel 2004 1634: 1632:, p. 238. 1622: 1620:, p. 118. 1610: 1608:, p. 237. 1598: 1596:, p. 264. 1594:Valcárcel 2004 1583: 1581:, p. 250. 1579:Valcárcel 2004 1568: 1566:, p. 249. 1564:Valcárcel 2004 1549: 1545:Valcárcel 2004 1537: 1533:Valcárcel 2004 1525: 1523:, p. 255. 1521:Valcárcel 2004 1506: 1504:, p. 170. 1494: 1492:, p. 176. 1482: 1480:, p. 117. 1470: 1458: 1446: 1444:, p. 268. 1429: 1427:, p. 262. 1417: 1415:, p. 146. 1405: 1403:, p. 234. 1390: 1388:, p. 226. 1378: 1366: 1354: 1342: 1338:Valcárcel 2004 1330: 1328:, p. 284. 1318: 1316:, p. 327. 1301: 1299:, p. 246. 1289: 1287:, p. 190. 1277: 1275:, p. 192. 1265: 1253: 1241: 1229: 1217: 1215:, p. 207. 1205: 1193: 1191:, p. 411. 1178: 1166: 1147: 1145:, p. 337. 1132: 1120: 1108: 1106:, p. 251. 1104:Valcárcel 2004 1089: 1087:, p. 133. 1077: 1065: 1063:, p. 193. 1050: 1035: 1033:, p. 408. 1020: 1018:, p. 143. 1008: 1006:, p. 260. 996: 984: 972: 959: 958: 956: 953: 951: 948: 945: 944: 932: 922: 913: 904: 895: 886: 877: 868: 856: 847: 837: 828: 819: 809: 800: 791: 782: 773: 763: 754: 745: 735: 725: 716: 707: 698: 684: 675: 665: 656: 647: 638: 629: 619: 609: 608: 606: 603: 518: 515: 438:Meretas nation 432: 429: 388:Consul-General 305: 302: 272: 238: 235: 185: 182: 165:Aquileo Torres 161:Peruvian soles 156:Roger Casement 84: 81: 72:Roger Casement 52:Putumayo River 15: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 3376: 3365: 3362: 3360: 3357: 3355: 3352: 3350: 3347: 3346: 3344: 3333: 3332: 3326: 3322: 3321: 3316: 3312: 3310:9781844673346 3306: 3302: 3297: 3293: 3292: 3286: 3282: 3281: 3275: 3271: 3269:9786124644702 3265: 3261: 3260: 3254: 3250: 3249: 3244: 3240: 3239: 3233: 3227: 3225:9781874280989 3221: 3217: 3216: 3210: 3209: 3206: 3205: 3200: 3189: 3183: 3179: 3178: 3172: 3168: 3166:9785880223091 3162: 3158: 3157: 3151: 3139: 3138: 3133: 3129: 3128: 3122: 3118: 3112: 3108: 3107: 3101: 3100: 3087: 3083: 3077: 3069: 3068: 3060: 3052: 3051: 3044: 3036: 3032: 3025: 3018: 3013: 3006: 3001: 2985: 2984: 2977: 2970: 2965: 2963: 2961: 2959: 2957: 2949: 2944: 2942: 2934: 2929: 2927: 2925: 2923: 2921: 2913: 2912:Casement 2003 2908: 2906: 2898: 2893: 2891: 2884:, p. 20. 2883: 2878: 2871: 2870:Casement 2003 2866: 2859: 2858:Casement 2003 2854: 2847: 2846:Casement 2003 2842: 2835: 2834:Casement 2003 2830: 2823: 2818: 2811: 2810:Casement 2003 2806: 2799: 2794: 2792: 2784: 2783:Casement 1997 2779: 2772: 2771:Casement 1997 2767: 2765: 2757: 2756:Casement 1997 2752: 2745: 2740: 2733: 2732:Casement 2003 2728: 2721: 2720:Casement 1997 2716: 2714: 2706: 2705:Casement 1997 2701: 2694: 2693:Casement 2003 2689: 2682: 2677: 2670: 2665: 2663: 2655: 2654:Casement 1997 2650: 2643: 2638: 2636: 2628: 2623: 2621: 2613: 2612:Casement 1997 2608: 2601: 2600:Casement 1997 2596: 2590:, p. 14. 2589: 2584: 2577: 2572: 2565: 2560: 2553: 2552:Casement 2003 2548: 2546: 2538: 2537:Casement 1997 2533: 2526: 2525:Casement 1997 2521: 2514: 2509: 2507: 2505: 2497: 2496:Casement 1997 2492: 2485: 2480: 2473: 2468: 2466: 2458: 2453: 2446: 2441: 2434: 2429: 2422: 2417: 2410: 2405: 2398: 2393: 2391: 2383: 2378: 2371: 2366: 2359: 2358:Casement 2003 2354: 2347: 2342: 2335: 2334:Casement 1997 2330: 2323: 2322:Casement 1997 2318: 2311: 2306: 2300:, p. 50. 2299: 2294: 2287: 2286:Casement 1997 2282: 2280: 2278: 2276: 2274: 2272: 2270: 2262: 2257: 2255: 2253: 2245: 2240: 2238: 2230: 2225: 2218: 2217:Casement 2003 2213: 2206: 2201: 2194: 2193:Casement 2003 2189: 2182: 2177: 2175: 2167: 2162: 2160: 2158: 2150: 2145: 2143: 2141: 2133: 2132:Casement 1997 2128: 2121: 2116: 2109: 2104: 2097: 2092: 2086:, p. 73. 2085: 2084:Casement 1997 2080: 2073: 2068: 2061: 2056: 2049: 2044: 2042: 2034: 2029: 2022: 2017: 2010: 2005: 2003: 1995: 1990: 1983: 1978: 1976: 1968: 1963: 1956: 1951: 1944: 1939: 1937: 1935: 1927: 1922: 1915: 1910: 1903: 1898: 1892:, p. 61. 1891: 1886: 1880:, p. 93. 1879: 1874: 1867: 1862: 1855: 1850: 1848: 1840: 1835: 1828: 1823: 1816: 1811: 1809: 1801: 1796: 1794: 1792: 1785:, p. 64. 1784: 1779: 1777: 1775: 1773: 1765: 1760: 1758: 1756: 1748: 1743: 1741: 1733: 1728: 1726: 1718: 1713: 1706: 1701: 1694: 1689: 1682: 1677: 1670: 1665: 1663: 1655: 1650: 1643: 1638: 1631: 1626: 1619: 1614: 1607: 1602: 1595: 1590: 1588: 1580: 1575: 1573: 1565: 1560: 1558: 1556: 1554: 1546: 1541: 1534: 1529: 1522: 1517: 1515: 1513: 1511: 1503: 1502:Casement 1997 1498: 1491: 1490:Casement 2003 1486: 1479: 1474: 1468:, p. 64. 1467: 1462: 1456:, p. 44. 1455: 1454:Casement 2003 1450: 1443: 1438: 1436: 1434: 1426: 1421: 1414: 1409: 1402: 1397: 1395: 1387: 1386:Casement 1997 1382: 1375: 1370: 1363: 1358: 1352:, p. 43. 1351: 1346: 1340:, p. 91. 1339: 1334: 1327: 1322: 1315: 1310: 1308: 1306: 1298: 1297:Casement 1997 1293: 1286: 1285:Casement 1997 1281: 1274: 1273:Casement 1997 1269: 1262: 1261:Casement 1997 1257: 1250: 1249:Casement 1997 1245: 1238: 1237:Casement 1997 1233: 1227:, p. 86. 1226: 1221: 1214: 1213:Casement 1997 1209: 1203:, p. 52. 1202: 1197: 1190: 1185: 1183: 1175: 1174:Casement 1997 1170: 1164:, p. 12. 1163: 1162:Casement 2003 1158: 1156: 1154: 1152: 1144: 1139: 1137: 1129: 1124: 1118:, p. 95. 1117: 1112: 1105: 1100: 1098: 1096: 1094: 1086: 1081: 1074: 1069: 1062: 1057: 1055: 1047: 1042: 1040: 1032: 1027: 1025: 1017: 1012: 1005: 1000: 993: 988: 981: 980:Casement 1997 976: 969: 964: 960: 941: 936: 926: 917: 908: 899: 890: 881: 872: 866: 860: 851: 841: 832: 823: 813: 804: 795: 786: 777: 767: 758: 749: 739: 729: 720: 711: 702: 695: 688: 679: 669: 660: 651: 642: 633: 623: 614: 610: 602: 599: 589: 585: 583: 579: 574: 572: 569:a map of the 568: 567:Emilio Delboy 564: 560: 556: 552: 551:Habeas corpus 548: 547:Madre de Dios 544: 540: 536: 532: 527: 525: 514: 512: 508: 505:destined for 504: 500: 496: 486: 482: 478: 476: 471: 467: 461: 453: 449: 447: 441: 439: 431:Ultimo Retiro 428: 420: 416: 412: 408: 404: 396: 392: 389: 384: 379: 375: 370: 368: 366: 359: 357: 353: 352:Victor Macedo 347: 339: 335: 331: 328: 323: 321: 315: 312: 301: 297: 289: 285: 277: 271: 267: 259: 255: 251: 248: 243: 230: 226: 224: 218: 214: 212: 208: 204: 200: 194: 191: 181: 173: 169: 166: 162: 157: 153: 152:Alfredo Montt 148: 146: 145:Caqueta River 142: 138: 134: 130: 126: 122: 118: 114: 109: 107: 103: 99: 95: 90: 80: 77: 73: 69: 65: 61: 57: 53: 49: 45: 38: 34: 29: 21: 3330: 3319: 3300: 3290: 3279: 3258: 3247: 3237: 3214: 3203: 3193:16 September 3191:. Retrieved 3176: 3155: 3142:. Retrieved 3136: 3126: 3105: 3085: 3076: 3066: 3059: 3049: 3043: 3034: 3024: 3012: 3000: 2988:. Retrieved 2982: 2976: 2877: 2865: 2853: 2841: 2829: 2817: 2805: 2778: 2751: 2739: 2727: 2700: 2688: 2676: 2649: 2607: 2595: 2583: 2571: 2559: 2532: 2520: 2491: 2479: 2452: 2440: 2428: 2416: 2404: 2377: 2365: 2353: 2341: 2329: 2317: 2305: 2293: 2224: 2212: 2200: 2188: 2127: 2120:Goodman 2009 2115: 2103: 2091: 2079: 2067: 2055: 2028: 2016: 1989: 1962: 1950: 1921: 1909: 1897: 1890:Thomson 1913 1885: 1873: 1861: 1834: 1827:Whiffen 1915 1822: 1802:, p. 8. 1800:Whiffen 1915 1712: 1700: 1688: 1676: 1649: 1637: 1625: 1613: 1601: 1540: 1528: 1497: 1485: 1473: 1461: 1449: 1420: 1408: 1381: 1369: 1362:Goodman 2009 1357: 1350:Goodman 2009 1345: 1333: 1321: 1292: 1280: 1268: 1256: 1244: 1232: 1220: 1208: 1196: 1169: 1123: 1111: 1080: 1068: 1011: 999: 987: 975: 963: 935: 925: 916: 907: 898: 889: 880: 871: 859: 850: 840: 831: 822: 812: 803: 794: 785: 776: 766: 757: 748: 738: 728: 719: 710: 701: 687: 678: 668: 659: 650: 641: 632: 622: 613: 594: 575: 528: 526:was issued. 520: 491: 479: 474: 469: 465: 462: 458: 442: 434: 425: 413: 409: 405: 401: 382: 377: 371: 364: 360: 348: 344: 332: 324: 316: 307: 298: 294: 282: 269: 264: 252: 244: 240: 219: 215: 210: 195: 187: 178: 149: 110: 86: 43: 42: 32: 578:World War I 511:Purus River 98:La Chorrera 37:La Chorrera 3343:Categories 3187:1901990052 3116:1372293019 950:References 930:September. 571:Acre River 543:prefecture 517:Later life 129:prospectus 3144:14 August 955:Citations 771:revolver. 367:steamship 247:Barbadian 207:homicides 203:floggings 125:Cahuinari 54:basin by 673:abusive. 627:journey. 507:New York 446:Colombia 273:—  237:Abisinia 106:Abisinia 89:genocide 2990:22 July 817:commit. 733:revolt. 694:pillory 582:fascist 576:During 563:Prefect 559:Huitoto 539:Bolivia 464:in the 374:England 365:Liberal 311:Andoque 304:Morelia 31:Map of 3307:  3266:  3222:  3184:  3163:  3113:  565:named 495:Callao 356:Brazil 205:, and 199:arsons 83:Career 3097:Books 845:1908. 605:Notes 475:Truth 470:Truth 466:Truth 383:Truth 378:Truth 211:Truth 102:Boras 3305:ISBN 3264:ISBN 3220:ISBN 3195:2023 3182:ISBN 3161:ISBN 3146:2023 3111:ISBN 2992:2023 535:Beni 499:Lima 362:the 135:and 76:Bora 545:of 533:in 3345:: 3084:. 3033:. 2955:^ 2940:^ 2919:^ 2904:^ 2889:^ 2790:^ 2763:^ 2712:^ 2661:^ 2634:^ 2619:^ 2544:^ 2503:^ 2464:^ 2389:^ 2268:^ 2251:^ 2236:^ 2173:^ 2156:^ 2139:^ 2040:^ 2001:^ 1974:^ 1933:^ 1846:^ 1807:^ 1790:^ 1771:^ 1754:^ 1739:^ 1724:^ 1661:^ 1586:^ 1571:^ 1552:^ 1509:^ 1432:^ 1393:^ 1304:^ 1181:^ 1150:^ 1135:^ 1092:^ 1053:^ 1038:^ 1023:^ 692:a 537:, 201:, 147:. 70:, 66:, 3313:. 3272:. 3228:. 3197:. 3169:. 3148:. 3119:. 2994:.

Index



La Chorrera
Peruvian Amazon Company
Putumayo River
Julio César Arana
Putumayo genocide
Benjamin Saldana Rocca
Walter Ernest Hardenburg
Roger Casement
Bora
genocide
Igara-Paraná River
La Chorrera
Boras
Abisinia
Abelardo Agüero
Julio Cesar Arana
Peruvian Amazon Company
Cahuinari
prospectus
Eugène Robuchon
Carlos Rey de Castro
Cahuinari River
Caqueta River
Alfredo Montt
Roger Casement
Peruvian soles
Aquileo Torres

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