VOLUMES XIII AND XIV. 
275 
Tradition of the Natives concerning its former 
Height, xiv, 13. 
Alva Ixtilzochitl, a Mexican Writer. His System of the 
duration of the Four Ages, xiv, 27. 
Alvarado (Fernando de) Tczozomoc, Author of a History of 
Mexico in the Azteck Language, xiii, 278. 
Alvarado (Pedro de). Hieroglyphic by which the Mexicans 
have denoted him, xiii, 14! ; his Slaughter of the 
Mexican Nobility, 291 ; his Death, represented on a 
hieroglyphical Painting, xiv, 17 1 . 
Alyattes, King of Lydia. His sepulchral Monument, xiii, 
102 . 
Amarsingh, a Hindoo Poet, mentions two Divisions of the 
Ecliptic, xiii, 330. 
Anahuac, Country of, its first Inhabitants were in the Cutlal- 
tecks, the Olmecks, the Zacatecks, and the Tarascks, 
xiii, 208, 214 ; occupied by the Toltecks, 81, 208, 
214; after them by the Chichimecks, 81, 214; the 
Nahuatlacks, the Acolhuans, 81, 214 ; the Tlascal_ 
tecks, 81, 214 f and the Aztecks, 81, 214. See all 
ihese ivords. Chronological History of this Country, 
xiv, 248 ; enumeration of the People by whom it was 
primitively inhabited, 249. 
Anahuacatzin, king of Azcapozalco, xiii, 139. 
Anahuatlacs, a People composed of Seven Tribes, xiii, 82. 
Andes. Their Summits exhibit Three leading Forms, xiii, 
238. 
Andrade-Motezuma, a Spanish Family. Its Origin, xiv, 
253, 
Animals sacred among the Mexicans, xiv, 48. 
Annals of the Toltecks go back to the Seventh Century after 
Christ, xiii, 298 ; those of the Aztecks begin in the 
Eleventh, 299 ; representation of these Annals on a 
hieroglyphic Painting, xiv, 170. 
Apachihuiliztii, a great Inundation, which took place accord- 
T 2 
