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Painting a Map of Sixteenth-Century Mexico City: Land, Writing, and Native Rule (Hardcover)

Painting a Map of Sixteenth-Century Mexico City: Land, Writing, and Native Rule Cover Image
By Mary Miller (Editor), Barbara E. Mundy (Editor)
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Description


In 1975, the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library of Yale University acquired an exceptional mid-16th-century map of Mexico City, which, until 1521, had been the capital of the Aztecs, the Nahua-speaking peoples who dominated the Valley of Mexico. This extraordinary six-by-three-foot document, showing landholdings and indigenous rulers, has yielded a wealth of information about the artistic, linguistic, and material culture of the Nahua after the Spanish invasion. This book marks the first publication of both the complete map and the multi-disciplinary research that it spurred.

A distinguished team of specialists in history, art history, linguistics, and conservation science has worked together for nearly a decade; the scientific analysis of the map's pigments and paper in 2007 marks the most thorough examination of a pictorial document from early colonial Mexico to date. The result of their work, the essays in Painting a Map of Sixteenth-Century Mexico, not only focuses on the map but also explores the situation of the indigenous people of Mexico City in the 16th century and their interactions with Europeans.

Distributed for the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library

About the Author


Mary E. Miller is Dean of Yale College and Sterling Professor of History of Art. Barbara E. Mundy is associate professor of art history at Fordham University.

Product Details
ISBN: 9780300180718
ISBN-10: 0300180713
Publisher: Beinecke Rare Book Library
Publication Date: January 22nd, 2013
Pages: 232
Language: English