VOLUMES XIII AND XIV. 299 



Manuscripts found among the Indians of Ucayale, xiii, 174. 

 Manuscripts, Azteck, those of Boturini, preserved in the 

 Palace of the Viceroy, at Mexico, xiii, 137 5 Materials 

 on which they were written, 162 ; Manner of folding 

 them, 163 ; Contents of these Manuscripts, 164 j 

 Defects in the Art of drawing characteristic of them, 

 165 ; Azteck Manuscripts in the Escurial, 179 ; at 

 Bologna, ibid. ; at Vienna, 180, xiv, 148 ; at Berlin, 

 xiii, 191 ; xiv, 80, 88, 175 ; at Veletri, xiii, 191 5 xiv. 

 83 ; at Dresden, xiv, 144 ; in the Vatican, xiii, 191 ; 

 at Paris, xiii, 167; Collection of Azteck Manuscripts 

 made by Mendoza, See Collection of Mendoza ; Col- 

 lection made by Boturini, See Boturini; Collection 

 of Pichardo, See Pichardo. 



Manuscripts, Siamese, resemblance they bear to those of the 

 Aztecks, xiii, 163. 



Map, geographical, drawn at Mexico before the arrival of 

 the Spaniards, xiii, 112. 



Maquahuitl, a Sceptre terminated by a Hand, xiv, 84. 



Marin (Don Feliciano) Bishop of Monterey, gets again dug 

 up an Azteck Idol, which the Professors of the Uni- 

 versity of Mexico had interred in order to withdraw 

 it from the sight of the youth, xiv, 48. 



Marriage, how it was celebrated among the Aztecks, xiii, 186, 

 187 ' } its Ceremonies represented on a Hieroglyphic 

 Painting, xiv, 189. 



Martin (Don Luis) an Architect of Mexico, xiv, 154. 



Matemecatl, Mexican Bracelets, xiii, 203. 



Matlalcueje, the Goddess of Water, xiv, 23. 



Maxtlatl, a Mexican Girdle, xiii, 203. 



Mazatl, Name of the fifth Day of the Month among the 

 Mexicans, xiii, 313. 



Mechoacan, an ancient Kingdom comprehending the Pro- 

 vince of Valladolid, Dresses of its Inhabitants, xiv, 

 163. 



