268 Mexico: Relaciones E-xteriores 
Iturbide to Negrete concerning his voyage from Mexico. Tulancingo, 
Atel 3, Loses. 
The Iturbide revolution in California, 1822-1823. 
Statement of funds supplied Iturbide for his private expenses. 1822- 
1823. 
Conspiracies against Iturbide. 1822. 
“ Secretaria del Vireynato. Afio de 1817. Ynfidencias. No. 1675. Papel 
de John Williams”, etc. 88 mimeograph pages. See Asuntos 
Internacionales, p. 223. 
(In this expediente there are documents referring to Robinson, filibuster.) 
Establishment of Iturbide’s authority in New Mexico. Correspondence 
with the commandant. 1823-1834. (Original.) 
Caja “ Documentos Sueltos. 1821-1830.” 
“Commission to the Antilles Entrusted to the Sefior D. Fran®° Pizarro 
Martinez.” His commission, reports, correspondence with the 
minister of foreign relations, the President, etc. 1826-18209. 
Reserved correspondence of Francisco Pizarro Martinez, from New 
Orleans, and Sebastian Camacho. Part in cipher. 1826. 
(It discusses the affairs of Cuba, the Panama Congress, the revolution 
in Mexico, etc.) 
Correspondence of the minister of foreign relations with the minister of 
hacienda and the legation in Washington relative to Texas. 1830- 
1834. 
Mosca correspondence concerning the annexation of Texas. 1844- 
1845. 
Caja “ Documentos Sueltos. 1831-1845.” 
Miscellaneous correspondence with the consul in New Orleans and the 
legation in Washington. 
A bundle for 1837 marked “ Texas’. Correspondence with the Mexican 
legations in France and the United States. 
Centro Americano. Varios Asuntos. 
(Central American. Various Matters. 2 cajas.) 
Documents relating to the subject indicated by the title. 
ARCHIVO DEL IMPERIO. 
(ARCHIVE OF THE EMPIRE.) 
In a separate room adjacent to the general archive of the Secretariat of 
Foreign Relations there is housed a large collection of records of the govern- 
ment of Maximilian. It contains over sixty large legajos of loose papers and 
numerous bound volumes of indices and books of account. Though very 
important, the collection is altogether unclassified, and it is impossible to give 
anything but a general idea of its contents. 
The papers seem to be largely from the Department of Foreign Relations 
of the Imperial government, but there are also papers from his Private Secre- 
tariat, personal correspondence of the empress, etc. 
There are indices or registers of correspondence of the Ministerio de Gober- 
nacion, of the Secretaria de Estado y de Negocios Extrangeros, of the “ Cabi- 
net of His Excellency the Marshal of France, Sefior Bazaine ”’, of the “ Civil 
Cabinet of the Emperor”, of the Emperor’s correspondence, etc. 
