-
Azcalxochitzin after the
death of her
first husband, King
Cuahcuauhtzin of
Tepechpan.
According to Motolinia,
Nezahualcoyotl practiced his
strict laws judiciously...
-
Nezahualcoyotl after the
death of her
first husband, King
Cuahcuauhtzin of
Tepechpan. Like his father, he was a poet, was
considered a sage, and had the re****tion...
- 1410–1443) was an
Aztec poet,
composing in the
Nahuatl language, and lord of
Tepechpan. Born
around the year 1410,
Cuacuauhtzin became lord when his father,...
-
conquest of the
Aztec Empire Diel, Lori Boor****an (2009). The Tira de
Tepechpan:
Negotiating Place under Aztec and
Spanish Rule. Austin:
University of...
- Press. ISBN 978-0-8061-4175-6. Diel, Lori Boor****an (2009). The Tira de
Tepechpan:
Negotiating Place under Aztec and
Spanish Rule. Austin:
University of...
- such as Nezahualcoyotl,
tlatoani of Texcoco, and Cuacuauhtzin, Lord of
Tepechpan, but
whether these attributions reflect actual authorship is a matter...
- Asunción
Selden Roll Mapa Sigüenza
Codex Telleriano-Remensis Tira de
Tepechpan Anales de
Tlatelolco Codex Tlatelolco Mapa
Tloztin Historia Tolteca-Chichimeca...
-
papel de maguey,
Codex Mexic****, Mapa Quinatzin, Mapa Sigüenza, Tira de
Tepechpan, Mapa Tloztin,
Codex Xolotl. From
Central Mexico:
Codices of
Azoyu 1 and...
- Tlatelolco, Macuilxochitzin,
Tlaltecatzin of Cuauhchinanco,
Cuacuauhtzin of
Tepechpan,
Nezahualcoyotl and
Nezahualpilli of Texcoco. Nezahualcoyotl,
after the...
-
Chalco (altépetl): 225–237
Cuacuauhtzin (1410-1443),
tlatoani (ruler) of
Tepechpan wrote a poem
about his
betrayal by Nezahualcoyotl.: 77–87 Macuilxochitzin...