VOLUMES XIII AND XIV. 285 



Chalchiuhineja, the Goddess of Water, xiv, 23. 



Chalchiuhtepehua, the Azteck Priest who tore the Skull of 

 the Victims immolated to Huetzelipochtli, xiii, 

 267. 



Chalchiuchtlatonac, Chief of the Aztecks in the Eleventh 

 Century, xiii, 299. 



Chamaya, River, xiii, 55. 



Chambo, River, has a Rope Bridge over it, xiv, 72. 



Chantico, Chapels erected in Honor of the Wolf, xiv, 48. 



Chaplet of Beads, known to the Mexicans before the Ar- 

 rival of the Spaniards, xiii, 204 ; represented on a 

 Mexican Painting, xiv, 20. 



Charles V, the Emperor, founds the University of Mexico, 

 xiii, 143. 



Charles IV, King of Spain, his Equestrian Statue at Mexico, 

 xiii, 50. 



Chastisements of Children among the Aztecks, xiii, 185. 



Chiefs, Seven, of the Mexican Tribes, on a Painting, xiv, 

 32. 



Chia, Wife of Bochica, xiii, 74. 



Chiapanese, their Calendar, xiii, 319. 



Chibcha, Name of the Language of the Muyscas, xiv, 111 ; 

 Numbers in this Language and their Hieroglyphics, 

 112, 119 ; Relation of these Words to those that in- 

 dicate the Phases of the Moon, 121. 



Chichimecks, or Cicimecks, the second foreign Nation that 

 came and established itself at Mexico, xiv, 251 j their 

 Union with the Acolhuans and the Toltecks, 252. 



Chichiuhalquehuitl, Tree of Milk in the Azteck Mytho- 

 logy, xiv, 32. 

 Cbicomoztotl, the Place where the Aerolite, which gave 

 Birth to the Human Race, fell on the Earth, xiv, 

 247. 

 Child, New-born, represented on a hieroglyphic Painting* 

 xiii, 211. 



