288 
GENERAL INDEX TO 
Cycle, Tartar, came from a more southern Country, xiii^ 
346. 
Cycles of the Mexicans, of Thirteen Years, xiii, 286 j of 
Fifty-two Years, ibid. 
Cycles of the Muyscas, xiv, 132. 
Cycles, the five, of the Age of the World, according to the 
Mexican Mythology, xiv, 16, and foil. 
Cypress-trees planted by the Aztech Kings, xiii, 261, 
D. ' 
Daneboda, Scandinavian Queen, her Sepulchre, xiii, 102, 
Danto, a Bridge near Totonilco, xiii, 60. 
Day, civil, began among the Aztecks at Sun-rise, xiii, 282 ; 
its Division into eight Parts,'«^ 2 d; Names of the Di- 
visions, ibid ; Hieroglyphic representing the Day, 
ibid; Names of the Days, 313, and foil.; they are 
perhaps those of a Zodiac used in Oriental Asia, 
328 ; Signs of the twenty Days of the Almanack, 
313, 355, 356 ; xiv, 34. 
Days complementary of the Azteck Year. See Nemontemi, 
Days, Mexican, Analogy between their Denominations and 
those of the Signs of the Tibetian, Chinese, Tartar, 
and Mongul Zodiac, xiii, 337. 
Days of the Muyscas, divided into Four Parts, xiv, 110, 
Days of the Toltecks, their Names, xiv, 222. 
Deluge of Anahuac, according to the Tradition of the Az- 
tecks, xiii, 96 ; it is represented on Hieroglyphic 
Paintings, xiv, 23, 63. 
Dispersion of the Nations after the Deluge of Coxcox, 
xiv, 66. 
Dogs, Mexican Marron, have retired into the most distant 
forests, xiii, 343. 
