286 



GENERAL INDEX TO 



Colhuans, a Nation of Mexico, subdue the Aztecks, x\i\ f 

 216 ; restore them their Liberty, 217. 



Collection of Mendoza, History of this Collection of Mexi- 

 can Paintings, xiii, 182 $ the Original does not exist 

 at Paris, 183 ; Description of the Collection, 183 ; 

 farther Particulars of it, xiv, 177. 



Combeima, River, xiii, 69. 



Comets of 1490 and 1529, represented on a Mexican Paint- 

 ing, xiv, 171. 



Conchocando, Title of the King of Lican, xiv, &. 



Condemnation to death, how it was pronounced at Mexico, 

 xiii, 142. 



Copilli, or Diadem, Sign of Sovereignty, xiii, 140. 

 Cock, introduced into Mexico by the Spaniards, xiv, 81. 

 Corozon, a Mountain of Quito, described, xiv, 160. 

 Corazon, Llanos del, a Plain situate above Popayan, xiv, 

 51. 



Cordilleras, Reflections on their Form, xiii, 115 j comparison 

 of these Mountains with those of the ancient Conti- 

 nent, 117; their Division into two Chains, in New 

 Grenada, 120 ; form of these Mountains in the King- 

 dom of Quito, 231 ; their principal Summits in that 

 Country, 234. 



Cortez builds Mexico on the Ruins of Tenochtitlan, xiii, 49 ; 

 Name which his Family bears, 50 ; causes King 

 Quauhtimoein to be hung up by the Feet, 130. 



Cosmogony of the Mexicans, xiii, 196 ; xiv, 247 ; its Ana- 

 logy with that of the Tibetans, xiv, 31. See Elements^ 

 Ages of the TVurld, Mankind. 



Cotcitepetl, Volcano of, Hieroglyphic by which it is repre- 

 sented, xiv, 32. 



Ootopaxi, the loftiest of the Volcanoes of the Cordilleras, 

 xiii, 118 ; instances of its Eruptions in the Eighteenth 

 Century, 118, 129; form of this Mountain, 120, 

 238. 



f 



