/
This library is built in the open.
If you spot an error, have a suggestion, or just want to say hello — we’d love to hear from you.

| PAGE | |
|---|---|
| EDITORIAL NOTE | v |
| HOW THE MANUSCRIPT WAS REDISCOVERED | 1 |
| DESCRIPTION OF THE MANUSCRIPT | 6 |
| DIRECTIONS FOR READING THE MANUSCRIPT | 7 |
| EXPLANATORY NOTES | 8 |
| RESEMBLANCE OF THE MANUSCRIPT TO THE VIENNA CODEX The Vienna Codex (Vindobonensis Mexicanus 1) is a primary Mixtec ritual-genealogical manuscript; it is one of the few to survive the Spanish Conquest. | 9 |
| DATE OF THE RELATED MANUSCRIPTS | 11 |
| LANGUAGE OF THE RELATED MANUSCRIPTS | 15 |
| OBSERVATIONS ON THE YEAR-SIGNS IN THE MANUSCRIPT | 16 |
| OBSERVATIONS ON THE DAY-SIGNS IN THE MANUSCRIPT | 17 |
| HISTORY OF THE CONQUEROR NAMED EIGHT-DEER The most famous Mixtec ruler, known as Iya Nacuaa Teyusi Ñaña (1063–1115 AD), who unified much of the Mixteca region., ALSO TIGER'S CLAW | 20 |
| LORD EIGHT-WIND original: "Eight-Ehecatl"; Ehecatl is the Nahuatl word for Wind. Scholars in 1902 often used Nahuatl names for Mixtec deities and calendar signs. | 27 |
| HISTORY OF THE LADY THREE-FLINT | 28 |
| REVIEW OF THE CONTENTS OF THE MANUSCRIPT | 33 |