03646mpc 2200517 a 4500001000800000005001700008008004100025035002400066035002200090040001900112100003200131245006400163300001800227351001300245520125200258546002501510561071501535555002302250524014502273650002602418650002502444650002702469650002802496650003302524650003602557650003502593650001402628650002402642650002602666650002502692650002602717650002502743651003702768651003802805651003402843651003502877651003802912651003602950651003602986651001903022651002003041655001503061655002203076905002103098998000903119208535919990825120000.0870727q19001970nyu fre d a(CStRLIN)NYCV87A125 a(NIC)notisAKS3438 aNICcNICeappm1 aHartmann, Paul,ecollector.00aPaul Hartmann, collector, Hartmann collection on Indochina. a7.5 cubic ft. bTopical. aThe Hartmann Collection is a compilation of photographs, illustrations from books and magazines, and a few printed articles. The main focus of the collection is Vietnam, but there is material on Cambodia and Laos, as well as a few items on Burma and Thailand. There are numerous scenes of all parts of Indochina, with particular attention to various important architectural sites (in Hue and Angkor, for example) and to the Saigon area. Included are pictures of various stores and factories in South Vietnam during the post-1954 period. Historical materials emphasize the colonial period; there are a number of illustrations taken from books and periodicals about the colonization of Vietnam and Cambodia by the French in the 19th century. Numerous photographs of individuals can be found; of particular interest are an extensive collection of portraits of Vietnamese and Cambodian monarchs from the colonial period and a wide and (generalyy) well-labelled selection of pictures showing the many different ethnic groups in Vietnam. There are a considerable number of maps, especially numerous are road maps, including some produced by the Vietnamese government, and street/tourist guides to Saigon. Also, catalogs of Hartmann's collections. aPrimarily in French. aThe Hartmann Collection on Indochina originally included the materials described above as well as numerous books and maps. The books remain in the Echols Collection on Southeast Asia, and the modern maps have been transferred to the Department of Maps, Microtexts, and Newspapers. The Materials which were transferred to the Deprtment of Manuscripts and University Archives have been reduced from ten to seven cubic feet during processing by Bruce Lockhart, a graduate student in the Southeast Asia Program at Cornell. These records are currently arranged by geographic region within fourteen subject series, followed by a miscellaneous series which includes a catalogue to the original Hartmann Collection.0 aUnpublished guide. aPaul Hartmann, collector, Hartmann collection on Indochina, #4298. Division of Rare and Manuscript Collections, Cornell University Library. 0aAgriculturezVietnam. 0aArchitecturexChams. 0aArchitecturezVietnam. 0aArchitecturezCambodia. 0aArt, Southeast AsianxChams. 0aArt, Southeast AsianzCambodia. 0aArt, Southeast AsianzVietnam. 0aCaodaism. 0aEthnologyzVietnam. 0aEthnologyzIndochina. 0aMinoritieszVietnam. 0aMonarchy, Vietnamese. 0aMonarchy, Cambodian. 0aVietnamxDescription and travel. 0aCambodiaxDescription and travel. 0aLaosxDescription and travel. 0aBurmaxDescription and travel. 0aThailandxDescription and travel. 0aVietnamxHistoryy19th century. 0aVietnamxHistoryy20th century. 0aVietnamxMaps. 0aCambodiaxMaps. 7aMaps.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat a19990825120000.0 s9554