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Miguel León Portilla

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Name
  
Miguel Leon-Portilla


Role
  
Author

Miguel Leon-Portilla BOMB Magazine Miguel LenPortilla by Jean Meyer

Education
  
National Autonomous University of Mexico (1956)

Awards
  
Guggenheim Fellowship for Social Sciences, Latin America & Caribbean

Books
  
The Broken Spears, Aztec Thought and Cultu, Bernardino de Sahagun, Time and reality in the thoug, Pre‑Columbian literatures of Mexico

Similar People
  
Eduardo Matos Moctezuma, Francisco Javier Clavijero, Adrian Recinos, Jose Lopez Portillo y Pacheco

Miguel le n portilla en grandes maestros unam primera sesi n 1 2


Miguel León-Portilla (born February 22, 1926 in Mexico City) is a Mexican anthropologist and historian, and a prime authority on Nahuatl thought and literature.

Contents

Miguel León-Portilla Miguel Len Portilla Nuvia Mayorga

El templo mayor en el pensamiento nahua miguel le n portilla


Career

Miguel León-Portilla Miguel Leon Portilla Alchetron The Free Social Encyclopedia

He wrote his doctoral thesis on Nahua philosophy under the tutelage of Fr. Ángel María Garibay K., a notable researcher and translator of primary Nahuatl source documents, whose publications in the 1930s and 1940s first brought Nahuatl literature to widespread public attention. With Garibay, León-Portilla made contributions to the study of nineteenth-century Mesoamerican historian Manuel Orozco y Berra. He established his reputation as an expert through translating, interpreting and publishing several recompilations of Nahuatl works.

Miguel León-Portilla httpsblogslocgovlocfiles201311MLPjpg

León-Portilla has spearheaded a movement to understand and reevaluate Nahuatl literature, not only from the pre-Columbian era, but also that of the present day – Nahuatl is still spoken by 1.5 million people. He has contributed to establishing bilingual education in rural Mexico.

Miguel León-Portilla Miguel Leon Portilla Alchetron The Free Social Encyclopedia

León-Portilla was also instrumental in bringing to light the works of Fr. Bernardino de Sahagún, a 16th-century primary source on the Aztec civilization and whose works have become one of the major references for cultural and historical information on Postclassic central Mexico. León-Portilla was the first to acclaim Sahagún as the "Father of Anthropology in the New World", an appellation which has since become a commonplace, although by no means universally held, viewpoint.

Sahagún recorded the knowledge of three independent groups of Nahuatl elders (tlamatini), in their own language, he compared the different versions and then he questioned again to resolve the differences, then he arranged, so the Aztec Tlacuilos (codex painters) made the illustrations of his work. At the request of Spanish authorities, he wrote a bowdlerized version in Spanish (the Historia general de las cosas de Nueva España), but his original work, the Florentine Codex, was never published. Before León-Portilla, it had only been translated once (into German), and even that was incomplete.

As a historian, León-Portilla gives us an understanding of the figure of Tlacaelel. Originally, an obscure name in some chronicles, Tlacaelel is now seen by many as the architect of the Aztec empire.

A subordinate but important interest of León-Portilla has been the early history and ethnography of the Baja California Peninsula. He has addressed this region in more than 30 books and articles, including a 1995 volume collecting several of his earlier publications.

Through his work, León-Portilla has obtained several academic degrees and decorations including the Belisario Domínguez Medal of Honor. In 1995, he was elected to membership of the National Academy of Sciences. On December 12, 2013, León-Portilla received the Living Legend Award from the U.S. Library of Congress.

References

Miguel León-Portilla Wikipedia