VOLUMES XIII AND XlV. 277 



50 j Hieroglyphic representing his Name, 159 ; his 

 Victory over the Matlatzincks, xiv, 173; Period when 

 he lived, 252. 



Azcapozalco, Kingdom of. Its Situation, xiii, 137 $ it be- 

 came tributary to the Aztecks, 138 ; Genealogy of its 

 Princes in Hieroglyphics, 136 and foil. 



Aztecks, a People of Mexico speaking the same Language as 

 the Acolhuans, the Toltecks, the Cicjmecks, and the 

 Tlascaltecks, xiii, 81 j Epoch of their Arrival in the 

 Equinoxial Region of New Spain, 82 ; when and 

 how human Sacrifices were introduced among them, 

 216—218 j they obtain Liberty from the Colhuans, 

 217 j ferocity shown by them in their Sacrifices, 222 > 

 Historians of the Aztecks, 277, 278 ; their Calendar, 

 281. See Year, Calendar, Month, Week, Cycle, 

 Days, Hours, Period. Their Annals go back to the 

 Eleventh Century, 299 $ their Mythology on Five 

 Ages of the World, and as many Creations of Man- 

 kind, xiv, 16, 17 5 their hieroglyph ical History, 57 

 their Arrival in Aztlan, 66 ; Towns which they built, 

 67 5 Epoch of their Departure from Aztlan, 69 $ Ob- 

 servations on the Manner in which were formed, in the 

 Azteck Language, the Substantive, the Plural, and 

 the Superlative, 245 3 Epochas of their Emigrations, 

 251, 252 ; Names of the Eleven Kings, who have 

 governed them, 252. 

 Aztlan, Country from which came the Toltecks, Tlascal- 

 tecks, the Cicimecks, the Acolhuans, and the Az- 

 tecks, xiv, 251. 



B. 



Bat«s of the Inoa, near the Ruins of the Town of Chulu- 

 canas, xiv, 201. 



