Exhibits
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“Indigenous Farmers of Tultepec vs. Rancher Juan Antonio Covarrubias, showing lands in the Tultepec and Xaltocan regions adjacent to the Hacienda de Santa Inés.” Newberry Library Ayer MS 1801 map 1 |
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The Aztecs and the Making of Colonial Mexico
September 28, 2006 – January 13, 2007
The story of the Spanish conquest of the Aztec (Nahua) empire in 1521 is well known. Yet today in Mexico, there are 1.5 million native speakers of Nahuatl, the language of the Aztecs. How did the indigenous population preserve their language, culture, identity, and history? Drawing upon the Newberry Library’s extraordinary colonial Mexican materials, The Aztecs and the Making of Colonial Mexico used an awe-inspiring array of religious, historical, and legal documents produced by, for, and about the Nahua to posit answers to this question.
Informative and often highly decorative maps, manuscripts, and printed books tell us profound stories about the interaction and intersection of Spanish and Aztec cultures. They speak eloquently, and beautifully, of the richness and vigor of indigenous creativity and intellectual production in the colonial period and highlight the dynamic vitality and resilience of the Nahua descendants of the Aztecs throughout the colonial period and beyond.
Curators
- Ellen T. Baird (University of Illinois at Chicago)
- Cristián Roa-de-la-Carrera (University of Illinois at Chicago)
Related Public Programs, September 2006 – Janaury 2007 and October 2007
- Opening Event and Newberry Consort Performance.
Saturday, September 30 at 12:00 pm
SPEAKERS: Ellen Baird (University of Illinois at Chicago) and Cristián Roa-de-la-Carrera (University of Illinois at Chicago)
MODERATOR: Carla Zecher (The Newberry Library)
- Aztec Moments, Chicano Cosmovision: Imagining a Place for Aztlan
Saturday, October 14 at 11:00 am
SPEAKER: David Carrasco (Harvard University)
- Mapping the New World for the Spanish Kings
Thursday, October 19, 6:00 pm
SPEAKER: Barbara Mundy (Fordham University)
- War and Peace in the Halls of Montezuma. Presented by the Chicago Humanities Festival.
Sunday, November 5 at 1:30 pm
SPEAKER: Thomas Cummins (Center for Latin American Studies at Columbia University)
- Atltzatzilistli/Praying for Water Film Screening and Discussion. Lecture in Spanish with English translation.
Saturday, November 18 at 11:00 am
SPEAKER: José Luis Matías Alonso (Nahua documentary film director)
- The Invention and Re-Invention of Borders
Saturday, January 13 at 11:00 am
SPEAKER: Enrique Chagoya (Stanford University)
- Aztecs/Nahua/Mexicans: Living Documents Workshop
Friday, October 5, 2007 at 10:00 am
PRESENTERS: Ellen Baird and Cristián Roa-de-la-Carrera (University of Illinois at Chicago); Barry Sell (Independent scholar)
Resources