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  1. 12. Juli 2019 · Barbeau, Marius, 1883-1969. Publication date 1960 Topics Indians of North America -- Legends Publisher Ottawa : [Queen's Printer] Collection inlibrary ; printdisabled; trent_university; internetarchivebooks Contributor Internet Archive La ...

  2. A pioneer in the fields of anthropology and folk culture, Marius Barbeau's (1883-1969) work won international acclaim. In 1985 he was recognized as a "person of national historic importance" by the Historic Sites and Monuments Board of Canada. Barbeau's first research interest was the Native peoples of Eastern Canada, especially the Huron. His ...

  3. In 1914, I was sent by the Geological Survey to Washington for a meeting of the Anthropological Association. There I was delighted to hear the reputed Dr. Franz Boas of Columbia University. During the meeting, he invited me to lunch. He asked me: "Barbeau, you are a French Canadian, you can tell me a thing we have been wondering about for many ...

  4. Marius Barbeau was born on 5 March 1883 in St-Georges-de-Beauce, Quebec, Canada. He was a writer, known for Animal, Vegetable, Mineral? (1952), False Faces (1963) and Marius Barbeau et l'art totémique (1959). He was married to Marie Ernestine Larocque . ...

  5. Marius Barbeau s'intéresse au patrimoine culturel de plusieurs nations autochtones comme les Amérindiens de l'Est, de l'Ouest et des Prairies. Il se passionne également pour les contes et légendes, les chansons, l'art populaire et l'art traditionnel du Canada français. En 1914, à l'aide de son phonographe Edison, Marius Barbeau recueille des contes populaires et des chansons folkloriques ...

  6. Charles Marius Barbeau (1883-1969) was a pioneer in the study of North American Indian and French Canadian art and folk culture. He was ethnologist at the National Museum of Canada from 1911 to 1949.

  7. In 1911-1912, French-Canadian anthropologist Marius Barbeau spent a year recording forty texts in the Wyandot language as spoken by native speakers in Oklahoma. Though he intended to return and complete his linguistic study, he never did. More than a century later Forty Narratives in the Wyandot Language continues Barbeau's work. John Steckley ...