VOLUMES XIII AND XIV. 



289 



Door, a Name given by the Muyscas to the Human Victim 

 that was sacrificed at the beginning of a Cycle of a 

 Hundred and Eighty-five Months, xiv, 134. 



Doors. Their particular Form in the Peruvian and Egyp- 

 tian Buildings, xiii, 258. 



Dove distributing Tongues to Men born after the Deluge, 

 xiv, 66. 



Dragon-tree of Orotava described, xiv, 209. 



Drawing, Improvement of the Art among the Aztecks since 

 the Arrival of the Spaniards, xiv, 61, 62. 



Dress of the Mexican Priests, represented on a Painting, 

 xiv, 36 j of a Warrior of Guatimala, xiii, 132 ; of the 

 common People in the Time of Montezuma, 202, 

 204 ; of the Generals and Kings, 202, 203. 



Drunkenness permitted to old Men, and to old Women, if 

 Grandmothers, according to the Laws of the Aztecks, 

 xiii, 186 ; xiv, 190. 



Dupre, M., Captain in the Service of the King of Spain, his 

 Cabinet contains the Bust of an Azteck Priestess, 

 xiii, 43; his Opinion on the Bas-relief of the Stone 

 of Sacrifice, 261. 



Duquesne (Don Jose Domingo), has made known the Ca- 

 lendar of the Muysca Indians, xiv, 104. 



Duration of the World, according to the Mexicans, xiv, 23, 

 24, 27. 



E. 



* 



Eagle, the Mexicans erected Chapels in honour of this 

 Bird, xiv, 48. 



Eagle tearing a Captive, Figures represented on an Ameri- 

 can Stone, xiii, 113. 

 VOL. XIV. U 



