Primary Source: Alonso de Molina, "Aquí comienza un vocabulario en la lengua castellana y mexicana," 1555
Description....
- Anales de Tlatelolco (Anonymous, 1540-1560)
- Historia tolteca-chichimeca (Anales de Cuauhtinchan. Anonymous, 1550-1560)
- Anales de Cuauhtitlán (Anonymous, c. 1570)
- Codex Aubin (Anonymous, c. 1576)
- Anales de Tecamachalco (Anonymous, c. 1590)
- Clendinnen, I: “‘Fierce and Unnatural Cruelty’: Cortés and the Conquest of México"
- Lockhart, J: The Nahuas After the Conquest: A Social and Cultural History of the Indians of Central Mexico, Sixteenth Through Eighteenth Centuries
- Lockhart, J.: We People Here. Nahuatl Accounts of the Conquest of Mexico
- McDonough, K.: The Learned Ones. Nahua Intellectuals in Postconquest Mexico
- McDonough, K.: “‘Love’ Lost: Class Struggle among Indigenous Nobles and Commoners of Seventeenth-Century Tlaxcala”
- Megged, A. & Wood, S.: Mesoamerican Memory. Enduring Systems of Remembrance
- Restall, M.: “The New Conquest History” in History Compass 10:12
- Schroeder, S. (Ed): The Conquest All Over Again. Nahuas and Zapotecs Thinking, Writing, and Painting Spanish Colonialism
- Townsend, C.: Here in This year. Seventeenth-Century Nahuatl Annals of the Tlaxcala-Puebla Valley
- Wood, S.: Transcending Conquest. Nahua Views of Spanish Colonial Mexico