Artículo

A catalogue of animals: the zoo in Molina’s vocabulario

Feldman, Lawrence H.; Majewski, Teresita

Instituto de Investigaciones Históricas, UNAM, publicado en Estudios de Cultura Náhuatl y cosechado de y cosechado de Revistas UNAM

Licencia de uso

La titularidad de los derechos patrimoniales de esta obra pertenece a las instituciones editoras. Su uso se rige por una licencia Creative Commons BY-NC-SA 4.0 Internacional, https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/legalcode.es, para un uso diferente consultar al responsable jurídico del repositorio por medio del correo electrónico nahuatl@unam.mx. Ver términos de la licencia

Procedencia del contenido

Entidad o dependencia
Instituto de Investigaciones Históricas, UNAM
Revista
Repositorio
Contacto
Revistas UNAM. Dirección General de Publicaciones y Fomento Editorial, UNAM en revistas@unam.mx

Cita

Feldman, Lawrence H., et al. (1976). A catalogue of animals: the zoo in Molina’s vocabulario. Estudios de Cultura Náhuatl; Vol. 12, 1976; 335-343. Recuperado de https://repositorio.unam.mx/contenidos/4145514

Descripción del recurso

Autor(es)
Feldman, Lawrence H.; Majewski, Teresita
Tipo
Artículo de Investigación
Área del conocimiento
Artes y Humanidades
Título
A catalogue of animals: the zoo in Molina’s vocabulario
Fecha
2022-10-31
Resumen
The sixteenth century vocabularies of the native languages of New Spain are valuable mines of information that have rarely been exploited by the modern investigator. In this short note, the authors wish to make more accessible the zoological data hidden in the Nahua to Spanish section of Alonso de Molina"s Vocabulario en Lengua Castellana y Mexicana. It ís not known where he collected his information. Since speakers of Nahua lived, during that time period, in a large portion of Central México, as well as elsewhere in Mesoamérica, there are many possible locations for the homelands of Molina"s informants. The fact that some of Molina"s animals did have spatially limited ranges may suggest the locations of his informant"s homes. To do this one needs information on the sixteenth century ranges of Mexican fauna. Feldman has prepared a computerized listing of the distribution of culturally significant fauna for all of Central México, and together we are extending this listing to other adjacent areas. When complete it will serve as a framework for testing hypotheses on the origin of Molina"s work.
Idioma
eng
ISSN
ISSN impreso: 0071-1675

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