2S6 
GENERAL INDEX TO 
Colhuans, a Nation of Mexico, subdue the Aztecks, xiii, 
216 } restore them their Liberty, 217. 
Collection of Mendoza, History of this Collection of Mexi- 
can Paintings, xiii, 182 3 the Original does not exist 
at Paris, 183 ; Description of the Collection, 183 ; 
farther Particulars of it, xiv, 177. 
Combeima, lliver, xiii, 69. 
Comets of 1490 and 1529, represented on a Mexican Paint- 
ing, xiv, 171. 
Conchocando, Title of the King of Lican, xiv, 8. 
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. 
Corazpn, Llanos del, a Plain situate above Popayan, xiv, 
51. 
Cordilleras, Reflections on their Form, xiii, 115 5 comparison 
of these Mountains with those of the aneient 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 
Quauhtimoain to be hung up by the Feet, 139. 
Cosmogony of the Mexicans, xiii, 196; xiv, 247 ; its Ana- 
logy with that of the Tibetans, xiv, 31. See Elenmits^ 
Ages of the Worlds Mankind. 
Cotcitepetl, Volcano of, Hieroglyphic by which it is repre- 
sented, xiv, 32, 
Cotopaxi, 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. 
