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Fragments of the Sixteenth-Century Nahuatl Census from the Jagiellonian Library: A Lost Manuscript: Heterodoxia Iberica, cartea 4

Autor Julia Madajczak, Katarzyna Anna Granicka, Szymon Gruda, Monika Jaglarz, José Luis de Rojas
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 28 iul 2021
Fragments of the Sixteenth-Century Nahuatl Census from the Jagiellonian Library: A Lost Manuscript provides a missing chunk of the sixteenth century Marquesado census—one of the earliest known texts in Nahuatl. In the critical edition of this manuscript, Julia Madajczak, Katarzyna Granicka, Szymon Gruda, Monika Jaglarz, and José Luis de Rojas reveal how it traveled across the Atlantic only to be lost during World War II and then rediscovered at the Jagiellonian Library, Poland. When connected to other surviving fragments of the Marquesado census, now held in Mexico and France, the Jagiellonian Library manuscript sheds new light on pre-contact and early colonial Nahua society. The authors use it to discuss the concept of calpolli, family life, and the production of administrative documentation in the early colonial Tepoztlan of today’s Morelos.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9789004457102
ISBN-10: 9004457100
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Heterodoxia Iberica


Cuprins

Acknowledgments
List of Figures and Tables
Abbreviations
Introduction
Julia Madajczak

Part 1: The Manuscript


1 The Berlinka Collection
Monika Jaglarz

2 Manuscripta Americana and the Provenance of Mss. Amer. 3, 8, and 10
Monika Jaglarz and Julia Madajczak

3 Mss. Amer. 3, 8, and 10 in Relation to the Marquesado Census Corpus
Julia Madajczak

4 Mss. Amer. 3, 8, and 10: The Scribes
Szymon Gruda

5 The Creation and History of the Tepoztlan Census
Julia Madajczak, Szymon Gruda and Monika Jaglarz

Part 2: The People


6 The Jagiellonian Library Census Fragments in Numbers
José Luis de Rojas

7 Family Relations in Tepoztlan
Katarzyna Granicka

8 Administrative Structure and Social Groups in Tepoztlan
Julia Madajczak

9 Land and Tribute in the Jagiellonian Library Census Fragments
José Luis de Rojas

Part 3: Transcription and Translation of the Jagiellonian Library Census Fragments


10 Glossary of Nahuatl Terms
Julia Madajczak and José Luis de Rojas

11 Conventions for the Transcription of the Jagiellonian Library Census Fragments
Julia Madajczak and José Luis de Rojas

12 Transcription and Translation
Julia Madajczak and José Luis de Rojas

Index

Notă biografică

Julia Madajczak, Ph.D. (2015), University of Warsaw, is assistant research professor at the Faculty of "Artes Liberales" at that university. She has directed several research projects and published numerous articles and book chapters focused on Nahua history and culture.

Katarzyna Granicka, Ph.D. (2018), is researcher at the Center for Research and Practice for Cultural Continuity at the Faculty of "Artes Liberales," University of Warsaw. She is currently working on the critical edition of the 1548 Nahuatl-Spanish Dominican "Doctrina Christiana."

Szymon Gruda, Ph.D. (2018), University of Warsaw, is adjunct lecturer at that university. His Ph.D. thesis Language and Culture Contact Phenomena in the Sixteenth-Century Vocabulario trilingüe in Spanish, Latin and Nahuatl was published in 2018.

Monika Jaglarz, Ph.D. (2003), Jagiellonian University, is manuscripts librarian at the Department of Manuscripts at the Jagiellonian Library in Kraków (since 1999). She has participated in research projects and contributed to publications on Berlin collections at the Jagiellonian Library.

José Luis de Rojas (1984 UCM) is professor of History of America at the Universidad Complutense de Madrid. He has published many papers and books on the natives of Mesoamerica and New Spain, including Tenochtitlan: Capital of the Aztec Empire (UPF, 2012).