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Decoding the Codex Borgia

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This book explores the rich symbolism of the Codex Borgia, a masterpiece of Precolumbian art dating to the fifteenth century, one of the few surviving books from before the Spanish conquest of Mexico. Susan Milbrath uses information from the fields of art history, anthropology, ethnohistory, natural history, and cultural astronomy to show how the manuscript’s intricate and colorful imagery conveys complex ideas related to Mesoamerican myths and religion. Milbrath sets the work in historical context, establishing its provenance in the Puebla-Tlaxcala Valley of Central Mexico and pinpointing the date it was painted based on rain almanacs found in its pages. She offers a new interpretation of a unique narrative section that has long intrigued scholars, arguing that the ceremonial variations depicted in it are related to the solar cycle. Overall, this book opens new doors in the study of the Codex Borgia by identifying seasonal imagery in the narrative and associated astronomical events, especially those that involve the three brightest objects in the sky: the sun, the moon, and Venus. Decoding the Codex Borgia is an illuminating journey into the culture and cosmology of the Aztecs and their neighboring communities.
University Press of Florida
Title: Decoding the Codex Borgia
Description:
This book explores the rich symbolism of the Codex Borgia, a masterpiece of Precolumbian art dating to the fifteenth century, one of the few surviving books from before the Spanish conquest of Mexico.
Susan Milbrath uses information from the fields of art history, anthropology, ethnohistory, natural history, and cultural astronomy to show how the manuscript’s intricate and colorful imagery conveys complex ideas related to Mesoamerican myths and religion.
Milbrath sets the work in historical context, establishing its provenance in the Puebla-Tlaxcala Valley of Central Mexico and pinpointing the date it was painted based on rain almanacs found in its pages.
She offers a new interpretation of a unique narrative section that has long intrigued scholars, arguing that the ceremonial variations depicted in it are related to the solar cycle.
Overall, this book opens new doors in the study of the Codex Borgia by identifying seasonal imagery in the narrative and associated astronomical events, especially those that involve the three brightest objects in the sky: the sun, the moon, and Venus.
Decoding the Codex Borgia is an illuminating journey into the culture and cosmology of the Aztecs and their neighboring communities.

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Setting the Stage for Study of the Codex Borgia
Setting the Stage for Study of the Codex Borgia
Chapter 1 discusses where the Codex Borgia was created in Central Mexico and how it arrived in Europe. This chapter then examines the format of different almanacs in the Codex Borg...
Improving Decodability of Polar Codes by Adding Noise
Improving Decodability of Polar Codes by Adding Noise
This paper presents an online perturbed and directed neural-evolutionary (Online-PDNE) decoding algorithm for polar codes, in which the perturbation noise and online directed neuro...
Lunar Phases and Eclipses in the Borgia Group Codices
Lunar Phases and Eclipses in the Borgia Group Codices
Chapter 6 explores the importance of solar and lunar cycles in rain almanacs of the Codex Borgia, which record Calendar Round dates that coincide with the new moon and the full moo...
Calendar Round Almanacs in the Codex Borgia
Calendar Round Almanacs in the Codex Borgia
Chapter 4 analyzes the chronology of Calendar Round dates in the Codex Borgia to show a relationship with seasonal cycles and specific astronomical events. The first section analyz...
How Can the Codex Borgia Be Decoded?
How Can the Codex Borgia Be Decoded?
Chapter 8 summarizes the main points in the volume and suggests specific iconographic patterns that could be studied in the future. The Codex Borgia narrative is especially importa...
Celestial Cycles in the Codex Borgia Narrative
Celestial Cycles in the Codex Borgia Narrative
Chapter 7 discusses three different Venus almanacs in the Codex Borgia that incorporate dates in the 260-day count to plot the 584-day Venus cycle. These almanacs play an important...
Lucrezia Borgia
Lucrezia Borgia
Lucrezia Borgia (b. 1480–d. 1519) is well known as the much-loved daughter of Pope Alexander VI (see Oxford Bibliographies in Renaissance and Reformation article Alexander VI, affe...

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