書誌事項

Book 4 -- The soothsayers, and, Book 5 -- The omens

translated from the Aztec into English, with notes and illustrations by Charles E. Dibble, Arthur J.O. Anderson

(Florentine codex : general history of the things of New Spain / Bernardino de Sahagún, pts. 5-6)

University of Utah Press, 2012, c1981

2nd ed. rev

  • : pbk

タイトル別名

The soothsayers & The omens

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注記

Originally published: School of American Research, 1979. (Monographs of the School of American Research and Museum of New Mexico ; no. 14, pts. 5-6)

"First paperback edition 2012"--T.p. verso

内容説明・目次

内容説明

Two of the world's leading scholars of the Aztec language and culture have translated Sahagun's monumental and encyclopedic study of native life in Mexico at the time of the Spanish Conquest. This immense undertaking is the first complete translation into any language of Sahagun's Nahuatl text, and represents one of the most distinguished contributions in the fields of anthropology, ethnography, and linguistics. Written between 1540 and 1585, the Florentine Codex (so named because the manuscript has been part of the Laurentian Library's collections since at least 1791) is the most authoritative statement we have of the Aztecs' lifeways and traditions-a rich and intimate yet panoramic view of a doomed people. The Florentine Codex is divided by subject area into twelve books and includes over 2,000 illustrations drawn by Nahua artists in the sixteenth century. Book Four delves into the Aztec's complex astrological beliefs. The date of birth was so significant that it ultimately determined one's personality and future; for example, almost all born on the second day sign called One Ocelot became slaves. Book Five explains the meaning of the many evil omens Aztecs believed in, which usually take the form of animals and insects. It describes the consequences of each omen, and the remedies, if any, that will reverse these effects.

目次

Table of Contents:BOOK FOUR 1. Telleth of the first sign, which was named One Crocodile, and of the good fortune which they merited who were born then 2. Telleth of the second [day] sign, which was named One Ocelot, and was not a good sign day for those who were born on it 3. Telleth of the third sign, named One Deer and the good forune which those then born merited 4. Telleth of the second house, when it was the time of this sign, named Two Rabbit and those then born in it did nothing but drink wine 5. Telleth how many kinds of drunkards there were 6. Telleth of still another house on the sign [One Deer], called Three Water 7. Telleth of the fourth sign, named One Flower 8. Telleth of the fifth sign, named One Reed. And it was not a good day.... 9. Telleth of the sixth sign, called One Death, and of the good fortune belonging to it 10. Telleth of still other houses, which were called in part good, and in part evil and miserable 11. Telleth of the seventh sign, named One Rain, and of the evil day signs which belonged with it 12. Telleth of still other houses. Some were only indifferent and some were in no way good 13. Here is told and mentioned what was an evil manifestation for him who stumbled or fell at this time 14. Telleth of the good day signs which correspond to the four houses in this sign 15. Telleth of the eighth sign, called One Grass, and the evil day signs with it 16. Telleth of the ninth sign, called One Serpent 17. Telleth of the admonitions of the old merchants when they counseled their sons as they were about to depart 18. Here are told [what] the talk and discourse were of these same old merchants which they repeated to their sons who already knew distant lands 19. Here are told the offerings, which they made for the sake of those who traveled to far places, and how respect was paid for the sake of those who died 20. Telleth of the remaining houses belonging to the sign mentioned 21. Telleth of the tenth sign, called One Flint Knife 22. Telleth of the eleventh sign, called One Monkey, and of its fortune 23. Telleth of the twelfth sign, called One Lizard 24. Telleth of the thirteenth sign, called One Motion 25. Telleth of the fourteenth sign, called One Dog 26. In which it is told how these rulers (upon the day sign mentioned) proclaimed war 27. In which it is mentioned the fifteenth sign, named One House 28. Telleth still more of the nature and condition of women born in this sign 29. Telleth of the sixteenth sign, called One Vulture 30. Telleth of the seventeenth sign, called One Water 31. Telleth of the eighteenth sign, named One Wind, and the evil, the bad, which was with it 32. Telleth of the tears, the lamentations, and the misery of those who had been robbed, whom those who danced with the dead forearm had plundered 33. In which is mentioned the nineteenth sign, named One Eagle 34. In which are told and mentioned what they did when they visited women recently delivered 35. Here is told what was done when they bathed their children, and how food was eaten when they gave them their names 36. Telleth how a feast was held, and what the order of service was, and how there was drinking of wine 37. In which is mentioned how they festivity was performed 38. Telleth of the twentieth and closing sign, called One Rabbit 39. Speaketh of all the day signs 40. Telleth of the rest [of the day signs] which formed a part of the day count those still remaining, belonging to the day sign [One Rabbit] Appendix of the Fourth Book, in the Spanish vernacular, which is justification in defense of the truth contained herein * Introduction and explanation, newly made, of the calendar of the Indians of Anauac, that is, of New Spain * Refutation of the above * The treatise by that member of a religious Order proceedeth * Refutation of the above * To the reader * Here followeth the reckoning of all the time-counts which these natives had BOOK FIVE 1. Here are related the omens in which they believed when at night, someone heard some wild animal cry out, or when it seemed as if some old woman wept 2. In which is related the evil omen which they regarded in two ways: so it was when they heard that the white hooded hawk cried out.... 3. In which it is told the omen taken as a portent when at night they heard as if someone shot iron arrows into something or as if he chopped wood.... 4. In which is told the omen taken as a portent when the horned owl hooted 5. In which is told what was the omen of the screech owl 6. In which it told what the omen was, so that they took it as a portent, when someone saw a weasel which crossed in front of him 7. In which is told the omen so taken as a portent concerning the rabbit when they saw that now it entered one's house 8. In which is told the omen which all took as a portent when they saw the chafer 9. In which is related the omen which they regarded as a portent when an animal of strong stench, called a skunk, now entered one's home or else sprayed and loosed an odor 10. In which is related the omen, by which a portent was drawn, of ants or frogs, and mice 11. In which is told the omen from which a portent was drawn when, at night, they saw the towering men, the giants 12. In which is related what was another omen, whose name was "bundle of ashes" 13. In which are told the rest of the omens which showed themselves at night Appendix to the Fifth Book 1. First Chapter, which telleth of the white amaryllis 2. Second Chapter, which telleth of the poinsettia 3. Third Chapter, which telleth of flowers artificially arranged 4. Fourth Chapter, which telleth of dried grains of maize 5. Fifth Chapter, which telleth of stepping over one 6. Sixth Chapter, which telleth of drinking 7. Seventh Chapter, which telleth of him who dipped into the cooking pot 8. Eighth Chapter, which telleth of tamales stuck [to the cooking pot] 9. Ninth Chapter, which telleth of the umbilical cord 10. Tenth Chapter, which telleth of the pregnant woman 11. Eleventh Chapter, which telleth of the woman lately delivered 12. Twelfth Chapter, which telleth of earthquakes 13. Thirteenth Chapter, which telleth of the [three] hearth stones 14. Fourteenth Chapter, which telleth of the tortilla doubled over on the griddle 15. Fifteenth Chapter, which telleth of small children who licked the surface of the grinding stone 16. Sixteenth Chapter, which telleth of him who leaned against a square pillar 17. Seventeenth Chapter, which telleth of the maidens who ate standing 18. Eighteenth Chapter, which telleth how maize cobs were burned 19. Nineteenth Chapter, which telleth of the woman with child 20. Twentieth Chapter, which telleth of the monkey's hand 21. Twenty-first Chapter, which telleth of the pestle and griddle 22. Twenty-second Chapter, which telleth of mice 23. Twenty-third Chapter, which telleth of turkey hens 24. Twenty-fourth Chapter, which telleth of turkey chicks 25. Twenty-fifth Chapter, which telleth of her wove with yarn 26. Twenty-sixth Chapter, which telleth of hail 27. Twenty-seventh Chapter, which telleth of sorcerers 28. Twenty-eighth Chapter, which telleth of the gnawed leavings of a mouse 29. Twenty-ninth, which telleth of nails 30. Thirtieth Chapter, which telleth of sneezing 31. Thirty-first Chapter, which telleth of small children 32. Thirty-second Chapter, which telleth of green stalks of maize 33. Thirty-third Chapter, which telleth of creaking roof beams 34. Thirty-fourth Chapter, which telleth of grinding stones 35. Thirty-fifth Chapter, which telleth of drilling a new fire in the house 36. Thirty-seventh Chapter, which telleth of the time when the teeth of small children dropped Conclusion

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