Jump to content


- - - - -

The Florentine Codex online for free

ancient manuscript mexico medicea laurenziana library world digital library

  • Please log in to reply
1 reply to this topic

#1    Parsec

Parsec

    Alien Embryo

  • Member
  • Pip
  • 89 posts
  • Joined:15 Sep 2012
  • Gender:Male
  • Location:Italy

Posted 12 November 2012 - 11:08 PM

The Florentine Codex, a unique manuscript dating from 1577 preserved in the Medicea Laurenziana Library in Florence, is for the first time available online in digital format, the Library of Congress announced today. The codex, one of the most important sources for the history of pre-Columbian and early post-Columbian Mexico, is among recent additions to the World Digital Library (http://www.wdl.org), the Library of Congress’s flagship international digital collaboration. [...]

"Historia General de las Cosas de Nueva España" (General History of the Things of New Spain), as the Florentine Codex is formally known, is an encyclopedic work about the people and culture of central Mexico compiled over a period of 30 years by Fray Bernardino de Sahagún (1499–1590), a Franciscan missionary who arrived in Mexico in 1529, eight years after completion of the Spanish conquest by Hernan Cortés.
The text is in Spanish and Nahuatl, the language of the Aztecs. Its 12 books, richly illustrated by indigenous artists, cover the Aztec religion and calendar, economic and social life, Aztec history and mythology, the use of plants and animals and the Spanish conquest as seen through the eyes of the native Mexicans. [...]

http://www.loc.gov/t...012/12-194.html


Now, that's the way we should use our technology!

#2    Hilander

Hilander

    Majestic 12 Operative

  • Member
  • 6,222 posts
  • Joined:10 May 2011
  • Gender:Female
  • Location:USA-Midwest

  • Courage is being scared to death but saddling up anyway-John Wayne

Posted 13 November 2012 - 12:41 AM

Technology is great when it allows the average person to read documents they otherwise would never see.  They should put more of these old documents on line.




1 user(s) are reading this topic

0 members, 1 guests, 0 anonymous users