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Frances F. Berdan and Patricia Rieff Anawalt

Codex Mendoza

Four-Volume Set
(A Centennial Book)
Buy Hardcover
$575.00, £400.00 hardcover

9780520062344

Available Now
900 pages, 11 x 14 inches, 150 full-color facsimile pages, 35 photos, 897 line illustrations, 110 maps, 4 tables
September 1992, Available worldwide
Also in: Native American Studies; Latin American History
This four-volume hardcover facsimile edition of Codex Mendoza places the most comprehensive, most extensively illustrated document of Aztec civilization within reach of a broad audience. Compiled in Mexico City around 1541 under the supervision of Spanish clerics, the Codex was intended to inform King Charles V about his newly conquered subjects. The manuscript contains pictorial accounts of Aztec emperors' conquests and tribute paid by the conquered, as well as a remarkable ethnographic record of Aztec daily life from cradle to grave. This four-volume publication is an unsurpassed source of information about Aztec history, geography, economy, social and political organization, glyphic writing, costumes, textiles, military attire, and indigenous art styles.

Volume 1 contains interpretive essays by the authors and other leading specialists on every aspect of Codex Mendoza. Volume 2 offers a thorough description and discussion of each pictorial page, and Volume 3 is a complete color facsimile of the manuscript itself. Volume 4, a parallel image volume, is the most innovative and in some ways the most useful of the four. It provides an exact duplicate in black and white of the facsimile Volume 3, with the sixteenth-century Spanish text transcribed and then translated into English. In addition, all the glosses are translated and positioned exactly as on the original pictorial pages. The extensive and useful appendices add such things as pictorial charts of costumes and textiles, translations and discussions of all the glyphs in the codex, and a table of comparative chronologies.

In making this extraordinary sixteenth-century work accessible (the original manuscript resides in the Bodleian Library, Oxford, England), the authors have performed an invaluable service to Mesoamerican scholars and all those interested in pre-Columbian peoples.
"Endlessly fascinating. . . . A fine example of book design, printing, and production, a noble tribute to the Aztec artist who painted the great codex. . . . More than any other surviving Aztec artifact, this book makes you feel you know these people, have seen them smile."—New York Time Book Review

"[This] new Codex Mendoza, while applying rigorous standards of scholarship and employing a bevy of the finest specialists in the field, can actually be read, understood and used by anybody with the desire to know more about the vanished world of Tenochtitlan and the Aztec empire, recorded by the last generation to know it before it fell."—Antiquity

"Both the production standards and the intellectual quality of the commentary are so high that the book gives delight at all levels. . . . Anyone dipping into these volumes will learn to know the Aztecs as living people, not just as historical abstractions."—History Today
"A virtual treasure-trove of ethnographic detail on selected aspects of Aztec culture and society. . . . The new facsimile edition places this important source more directly in the mainstream of ethnohistorical research."—H. R. Harvey, University of Wisconsin-Madison

"By far the most complete source on the Mendoza ever published [with] a group of contributors of very high caliber. . . . No work I am aware of comes even close to combining a reproduction of the document with the various commentaries on its production, its historical background, authorship, and social context. These discussions make the work highly accessible to non-specialists."—Richard E. Blanton, Purdue University
Frances F. Berdan is Chair and Professor of Anthropology at California State University, San Bernardino. Her books include The Aztecs of Central Mexico (1982) and The Tlaxcalan Actas (with James Lockhart & Arthur J. O. Anderson, 1986). Patricia Rieff Anawalt is Director of the Center for the Study of Regional Dress, Fowler Museum of Cultural History, University of California, Los Angeles, and author of Indian Clothing Before Cortés (1981).
Winner, James R. Wiseman Book Award, Archaeological Institute of America
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