Neha Patil (Editor)

Codex Waecker Gotter

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Material
  
Animal skin

Created
  
16th-18th Centuries AD

Present location
  
British Museum

Size
  
4.42 metres in length

Registration
  
Egerton 2895

Codex Waecker-Gotter httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

The Codex Waecker-Gotter, also known as the Code Sanchez-SolĂ­s or Codex Egerton, is a Pre-Conquest-style manuscript from Mexico that since 1911 has been in the British Museum's collection.

Contents

Description

The codex is made of animal skin and consists of 16 leaves, each measuring approximately 27 x 21 cm; the total length of the manuscript is 4.42 m. Both sides of the codex are painted, but over time the condition of the paint has deteriorated, and one page seems to have been deliberately effaced, perhaps by a colonial official, as it bears a Spanish stamp.

The manuscript was probably first drawn in the 16th century, with later additions made in the 17th or 18th centuries. Most experts consider the style of the artwork to be Mixtec with some Aztec elements.

Content

The document is an important witness to the transition between Pre-Columbian times and the early colonial period in Mexico. It describes a genealogy that comprises 26 different generations that have been estimated to have lived between 970 and 1490 AD; the men are shown wearing masks and crowns while the women are in general depicted in the kneeling position. On one page the town of Cuquila Santa Maria in Tlaxiaco is illustrated, along with its first king 'Lord One Alligator Tlaloc' and his wife 'One Alligaor Sun', who may have been the founding member of the dynasty.

Provenance

The manuscript was probably made over a period of time by different hands in the Mixteca Baja region. In 1869, it came in the possession of Felipe Sanchez Solis who sold it to Freiherr von Waecker-Gotter, a member of the German diplomatic corps in Mexico between 1880 and 1888. It was bought by the British Museum in 1911 from funds bequeathed by France Henry Egerton.

References

Codex Waecker-Gotter Wikipedia