Tania: Conquest Histories in 16th-century Nahua annals
This project examines Nahua annals produced in the 16th century by anonymous authors in the Central Valley of Mexico. This region creates its own spatial corpus as it had the most contact with Spaniards, making it a central element to – though not the focus of – the production of annals. The published Nahua annals in this project are: the Anales de Tlatelolco (1540-1560), the Historia tolteca-chichimeca (1550-1560), the Anales de Cuauhtitlán (c. 1570), the Codex Aubin (c. 1576), and the Anales de Tecamachalco (c. 1590).
- 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
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- Space, Place, and Mapping Kelly McDonough