VOLUMES XIH AND XIV. 
315 
Tolsa (Don Manuel), Director of the Class of Sculpture of 
the Academy of Fine Arts at Mexico, made the 
Equestrian Statue of Charles the Fourth, xiii, 50. 
Toltecks, a Mexican Nation, speaking the same Language 
as the Cicimecks, the Acolhuans, the Tlascaltecks, 
and the Aztecks, xiii, 81 ; the Traditions of the 
Aztecks attribute to them several Pyramidal Monu- 
ments, found in New Spain, 83 j their Civil Calendar, 
94 j their Country, 94 3 Epocha of their Arrival at 
Mexico^ 169 j they had Annals and Flieroglyphical 
Writing, ibid } the Hurons and the Iroquois perhaps 
descend from them, 171 ; they migrate as far as the 
Lake Nicaragua, 172 j a Fact which seems to indi- 
cate, that they penetrated into the Southern Hemis- 
phere, 173 ; were they the first who introduced 
Painting ? 208 ; they were unacquainted with Hu- 
man Sacrifices, 215 j Name and Image of their prin- 
cipal Divinity, ibid 5 Epocha when they disappeared 
from M-exico, 83, 298 j Names of the Twenty Days 
of their Month, xiv, 222 3 Analogies between their 
Calendar and some Egyptian Institutions, 224; ra- 
vaged by a Pestilence, 251 3 Union of their Eemains 
with the Acolhuans and the Chichimecks, 262. 
Tonacacihua, or Tenantzin, the Eve of the Mexicans, repre- 
sented sitting on a royal Seat, xiii, 195, 226 ; xiv, 83, 
84. 
Tonacajohua, the Ceres of the Mexicans, xiii, 220. 
Tonacateuctli, the Adam of the Aztecks, xiii, 195 3 repre- 
sented on a Hieroglyphic Painting, 226. 
Tonalamatl, the Ritual Calendar of the Aztecks, xiii, 194. 
Tonalpohualli, the Civil Calendar of the Mexicans, xiiij 
281. 
Tonatiuh, or the Sun, Surname given to Pedro Alvarado, 
xiv, 171. 
