The Borneo Post

Codices offer glimpse of centuries-old Mexican life

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MEXICO CITY: Centurieso­ld codices offering a glimpse into Mexico’s past will be added to the country’s national anthropolo­gy library, experts said recently.

The illustrate­d documents showing key events in Mexican history had been in the hands of a family that treasured them for generation­s before giving them up for a hefty sum, the anthropolo­gists announced.

Baltazar Brito, director of the National Library of Anthropolo­gy and History, hailed the discovery of the three codices as “unpreceden­ted.”

They reveal traditiona­l Indigenous script that “until today had remained hidden from public vision,” the historian said as he presented photograph­s and video of the documents to the media.

The codices were produced in the late 16th century and early 17th century by painters and illustrato­rs who served as scribes in pre-Hispanic Mexico and remained active during the colonial period, Brito added.

They narrate such events as the foundation of the Aztec capital Tenochtitl­an in the 14th century and the arrival of the Spanish conquistad­ors in 1519.

The pictograph­s are notable for their yellow, red, black and blue colors, and the “technical mastery” of the artists, said Maria Castaneda, a researcher at the National Autonomous University of Mexico.

“It’s as if a Rembrandt, a Murillo or a Velazquez appeared in Europe today,” added Castaneda, who first saw photograph­s of the codices 15 years ago when the owners wanted to confirm their authentici­ty.

The family, which asked to remain unnamed, were paid 9.5 million pesos ($569,000) for the codices, according to Altagracia Gomez Sierra, who chairs the board of trustees of the National Institute of Anthropolo­gy and History.

 ?? — AFP photo by Yuri Cortez ?? Brito shows a printed document with one of the three viceregal pictograph­ic documents known as ‘Los Codices de San Andres Tetepilco,’ recovered by the federal Ministry of Culture through the National Institute of Anthropolo­gy and History (INAH), and presented to the press at the Anthropolo­gy Museum, in Mexico City.
— AFP photo by Yuri Cortez Brito shows a printed document with one of the three viceregal pictograph­ic documents known as ‘Los Codices de San Andres Tetepilco,’ recovered by the federal Ministry of Culture through the National Institute of Anthropolo­gy and History (INAH), and presented to the press at the Anthropolo­gy Museum, in Mexico City.
 ?? ?? Pictograph­ic documents known as ‘Los Codices de San Andres Tetepilco’ are projected on a screen during their presentati­on at the Museum of Anthropolo­gy, in Mexico City.
Pictograph­ic documents known as ‘Los Codices de San Andres Tetepilco’ are projected on a screen during their presentati­on at the Museum of Anthropolo­gy, in Mexico City.
 ?? ?? The researcher, Michael Robert Oudijk, shows a printed document with one of the three pictograph­ic documents known as ‘Los Codices de San Andres Tetepilco.’
The researcher, Michael Robert Oudijk, shows a printed document with one of the three pictograph­ic documents known as ‘Los Codices de San Andres Tetepilco.’

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