BIBLIOGRAPHY
Humboldt, Alex, von: Vues des Cordilleres. Paris, 1816. English translation by Mrs. Williams.
Ixtlilxochitl, F. de Alva: Historia Chichimeca; Relaciones. Edited by A. Chavero. Mexico, 1891-92.
Kingsborough, Lord: Antiquities of Mexico. London, 1830.
Lumholtz, C.: Unknown Mexico. 1903,
MacNutt, F. C.: Letters of Cortes to Charles V. London, 1908.
Nadaillac, Marquis de: Prehistoric America. Translation. London 1885.
Noll, A. H.: A Short History of Mexico. Chicago, 1903.
Nuttall, Zelia: The Fundamental Principles of Old and New World Civilisations. 1901.
Payne, E. J.: History of the New World called America. London, 1892-99. By far the best and most exhaustive work in English upon the subject. It is, however, unfinished.
Penafiel, F.: Monumentos del Arte Mexicano Antiguo. Berlin, 1890.
Prescott, W. H.: History of the Conquest of Mexico. Of romantic interest only. Prescott did not study Mexican history for more than two years, and his work is now quite superseded from a historical point of view. Its narrative charm, however, is unassailable.
Sahagun, Bernardino de: Historia General de las Cosas de Nueva España. Mexico, 1829.
Seler, E.: Mexico and Guatemala. Berlin, 1896.
Serra, Justo (Editor): Mexico, its Social Evolution, &c. 2 vols, Mexico, 1904.
Spence, Lewis: The Civilization of Ancient Mexico. A digest of the strictly verifiable matter of Mexican history and antiquities. All tradition is eliminated, the author's aim being to present the beginner and the serious student with a series of unembellished facts.
Starr, F.: The Indians of Southern Mexico. 1899.
Thomas, Cyrus, and Magee, W. J.: The History of North America 1908.
Torquemada, Juan de: Monarquia Indiana. Madrid, 1723. Bulletin 28 of the Bureau of American Ethnology contains trans-