File name: Broken Spears Pdf
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Publication dateEPUB and PDF access not available for this item. The book is available for free download from Internet Archive, but requires a library card to access In the case examined herein, the Popollocan elites of Tepexi de la Seda, headed by the ruling native lord Matzatzin Teuhctli, endeavored to reassert, explain, and represent one particular version of the circumstances surrounding their encounter with the Spanish and the establishment of an alliance with Cortés The Broken Spears: The Aztec Account of the Conquest of Mexico (Spanish title: Visión de los vencidos: Relaciones indígenas de la conquista; lit.Vision of the Defeated: Indigenous relations of the conquest) is a book by Mexican historian Miguel León-Portilla, translating selections of Nahuatl-language accounts of the Spanish conquest of the Aztec Empire history of the A-mericas. $ BEACON PRESSBeacoli Street Boston 8, Mass. To sell your back numbers The Duke University Press will purchase individual back. Write to the Sales Manager, Duke University Press, Box., College Station, Durham, N. C., listing the issues the broken spears: miguel leon-portilla: Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming: Internet Archive numbers, long runs, and complete sets of the HAHR. history of the A-mericas. Then the ground is pitted and scarred where they set down their hooves. The line appears in a description of Tlatelolco A book by León Portilla and Miguel Leon-Portilla that translates the Nahuatl text Visión de los vencidos, which recounts the Aztec perspective of the Spanish invasion. $ BEACON PRESSBeacoli Street Boston 8, Mass. It opens wherever their hooves touch it. Any undergraduate student who has taken a course in Latin American history, literature, or anthropology has in all likelihood come across the line. IN COLLECTIONS Books for People THE AZTEC ACCOUNT OF THE SPANISH CONQUEST OF MEXICO Get any book for free on: y make a loud noise when they run; they make a great din, as if stones were raining on the earth. The indigenous documents Arguably the line “Broken Spears” is the most famous in Nahuatl. It, of course, comes from the title of Miguel Leon-Portilla's book of the same name. To sell your back numbers The Duke University Press will purchase individual back Created Date/20/PM The broken spears: the Aztec account of the conquest of Mexico.