Pradeau, Alberto Francisco, 1894-
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Pradeau, Alberto Francisco, 1894-
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Pradeau, Alberto Francisco, 1894-
Pradeau, Alberto Francisco, 1894-1980
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Pradeau, Alberto Francisco, 1894-1980
Pradeau, Alberto Francisco
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Pradeau, Alberto Francisco
Pradeau y Avilés, Alberto Francisco 1894-
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Pradeau y Avilés, Alberto Francisco 1894-
Pradeau Avilés, Alberto Francisco, 1894-
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Pradeau Avilés, Alberto Francisco, 1894-
Avilés, Alberto Francisco Pradeau y, 1894-
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Avilés, Alberto Francisco Pradeau y, 1894-
Avilés, Alberto Francisco Pradeau y, 1894-1980
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Avilés, Alberto Francisco Pradeau y, 1894-1980
Pradeau, Alberto F.
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Pradeau, Alberto F.
Avilés, Alberto Francisco Pradeau y, 1894-
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Avilés, Alberto Francisco Pradeau y, 1894-
Avilés, Alberto Francisco Pradeau y 1894-1980
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Avilés, Alberto Francisco Pradeau y 1894-1980
Pradeau Avilés, Alberto Francisco 1894-
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Pradeau Avilés, Alberto Francisco 1894-
Pradeau y Avilés, Alberto Francisco, 1894-
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Pradeau y Avilés, Alberto Francisco, 1894-
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Biographical History
Dentist, historian and numismatist.
Scholar and historian.
Alberto Francisco Pradeau, dentist, historian and numismatist, was born in Guaymas, Sonora, Mexico on May 15, 1894 to French parents Albert Antoine Pradeau and Guadalupe Aviles Rochin. His father was born on January 7, 1866 in Issoudin, Indre, France and died in France on October 4, 1939. His mother was born on December 24, 1870 in Alamos, Sonora, Mexico and died in Los Angeles California on December 18, 1935.
He received his primary education in his home town, and secondary in Alamos, Sonora, Mexico. He migrated to the United States in 1916, attended high schools in San Francisco and Los Angeles. He graduated from the University of Southern California College of Dentistry in 1923, specializing in oral diseases.
Although Dr. Pradeau maintained a highly successful and lucrative office of dentistry near Los Angeles, California he spent much of his life investigating and writing the history of northern Mexico. His interest in the territory ceded to the United States by the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo on February 2, 1848 began in 1908 with the reading of Samuel Woodworth Cozzens' book, The Ancient Cibola, the Marvelous Country .
Since 1928 Dr. Pradeau had published a number of books on the spiritual conquest of the northwest of New Spain by the Jesuits and the numismatic history of Mexico from pre-Columbian days to 1950. His work on the expulsion of the Jesuits, La Expulsion de los Jesuits de Sonora, Ostimuri y Sinaloa en 1767 published in Mexico in 1959, is the standard and most recognized work on the subject. His interest in Mexican history also resulted in the 1976 publication of his most important and translated version from Spanish to English of Father Juan Nentuig's Rudo Ensayo .
A second specialty and all-consuming hobby of Dr. Pradeau's was numismatics. He was awarded the American Numismatic Association's Medal of Merit in 1969 for his contribution to the American Numismatic Association and to numismatics. The prestigious Medal of Merit read: "There can be no separation of your name from the study of coins from our neighbor to the south, Mexico . . .. Your Numismatic History of Mexico, published in 1938, has been and still is recognized as a standard in the field."
At the age of 82 and recognized nationwide as the Dean of Mexican Numismatics, Dr. Alberto Francisco Pradeau was summoned to Florida in 1976 to authenticate the 1971 Mel Fisher discovery of the cargo of the sunken Spanish galleon, the Nuestra Senora de Atocha .
When the Atocha sank of the Florida keys in 1622 during a fierce and violent hurricane, it was on its way from Cuba to Spain. According to the manifest found in an archive in Seville, Spain the Atocha carried 901 silver ingots, 250,000 silver coins, and 161 pieces of gold bullion, plus an unknown quantity of contraband, and some gold and silver coins and personal belongings of some very wealthy merchants who were passengers. "It was on the of the most exciting events of my life to see and test the find from the Atocha ", said Dr. Pradeau. His painstaking 10-day efforts were rewarded when the treasure was authenticated. It's worth was said to be in the millions and millions of dollars.
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External Related CPF
https://viaf.org/viaf/6214532
https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n79096709
https://id.loc.gov/authorities/n79096709
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Languages Used
spa
Zyyy
eng
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Subjects
Fraternal organizations
Missions
Numismatics
Nationalities
Activities
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Places
Mexico
AssociatedPlace
Sonora (Mexico : State)
AssociatedPlace
United States
AssociatedPlace
Mexico
AssociatedPlace
Sonora (Mexico : State)
AssociatedPlace
Sonora (Mexico : State)
AssociatedPlace
Mexico--Sonora (State)
AssociatedPlace
New Spain
AssociatedPlace
Convention Declarations
<conventionDeclaration><citation>VIAF</citation></conventionDeclaration>