Borgia Group of Unknown Provenience

Borgia | Vaticanus B | Cospi
Fejervary-Mayer | Laud | Other Fragments

Borgia - from Dover cover

GBonline


Borgia inset A splendid digitized version of Page 59 of the Borgia can be found at Scriptorium, the IBM Digital Library manuscript collection. (The Scriptorium entry page is now missing, but the document is still there.) This Borgia page is about 380K of data, and well worth the wait if you're using a slow dial-up modem. The digitized photograph (which you can download directly from this link) is exquisite - compare the detail from the cover of the Dover Borgia publication found at the header of this page.

    First partial publication of the Borgia was by Alexander von Humbolt in 1810. Published in Kingsborough Antiguidades de Mexico Volume III. Also published by Duc de Lubat (Ehrle), 1898.

The definitive standard for the better part of this century has been the photographic facsimile and commentary published by Eduard Seler known as Codex Borgia, eine altmexikanische bilderschrift der Bibliothek der Congregatio de propaganda fide, hrsg. auf kosten Seiner Excellenz des herzogs von Loubat (1904-09 Berlin). While I've never seen this original German version, a Spanish translation title Comentarios al Codice Borgia published by Fondo Cultura Economica (Mexico 1963) is more widely available.

(A related posting on Seler can be found at
  http://copan.bioz.unibas.ch/meso/seler.txt)


    The Codex Borgia : A Full-Color Restoration of the Ancient Mexican Manuscript is a Dover publication that is highly recommended. This restoration by Gisele Diaz and Alan Rodgers attempts to reconstruct missing images from the manuscript in its current condition and is an inexpensive means of getting familiar with the document. The introduction and overview by Bruce Byland is up to date and in English.

There was a facsimile edition with German commentary by Karl Nowotny, published by the Akademische Druck und Verlagsanstalt (an unpronounceable household name for mesoamericanists) Graz 1974. This is presumably superceded by the latest volume in the Codices Mexicanos series (which I haven't yet seen). The facimiles that accompany the Mexican publications come from Graz and are superb. It might be obtained as an out of print book from Amazon


Vaticanus B
  • Vaticanus B

      Current location: Apostolic
      Library in the Vatican, Rome

    Skin screenfold. 49 leaves
    (48 painted on both sides).

    Codex Vaticanus #3773. Published in Kingsborough Antiguidades de Mexico Volume III. First partial publication by Humbolt, 1810. Also published by Duc de Lubat with description (Paso Y Troncoso) and history (Ehrle), 1896. Also extensive commentary by Seler.

Click here to see a sample page from the Vaticanus B codex.


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Cospi

  • Cospi

      Current location: Biblioteca Universitaria, Bologna

    Skin screenfold . 20 leaves (24 painted pages, 13 on obverse, 11 on reverse).

    Published in Kingsborough Antiguidades de Mexico Volume II.

PICTURE CREDIT

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Fejervary-Mayer
  • Fejervary-Mayer

      Current location: Free Public Museum, Liverpool, England

    Skin screenfold. 23 leaves (22 painted on both sides).


Pre-Conquest document. Published in Kingsborough Antiguidades de Mexico Volume III; superceded by Loubat (1901) and photographic color edition by Corona Nunez (1964-67). Seler commentary (1901a, English translation 1902-3) includes annotated line drawings. Nowotny (1961b) gives comparative exposition of all sections.

This is manuscript is well served by the commentary in the latest volume in the Codices Mexicanos series, again with an accompanying photographic facimile from Graz.

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Laud

  • Laud

      Current location: Bodlian Library, Oxford, England

    Skin screenfold . 24 leaves
    (22 painted on both sides).

    Published in Kingsborough Antiguidades de Mexico Volume II

The Fejervary-Mayer and the Laud are sometimes called
the Fejervary-Laud Sub-group because of their similarity.

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Other related fragments:

Aubin inset
  • Aubin Manuscript #20

    Skin folded in four sections, painted on one side.
    51 by 91 cm.

    Also known as Fonds Mexicaines 20 or Pintura No. 20 de la Colección Goupil Aubin.

  • Portfirio Diaz

    • Porfirio Diaz

      Skin screenfold painted on both sides.
      49 leaves; 15.5 by 421 cm (total length).

      I'm really kinda fuzzy on exactly what this is,
      but I think it's a 16th or 17th century document
      with images cognate with the Borgia Group.

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    Other sources of Borgia Group Information

    Borgia Panel 2

    Highly recommended:
    The Borgia Group pages at
    The Mystery of Quetzalcoatl

    Goddess from Borgia

    Also Highly Recommended:
    Goddesses in the Borgia Codex Group

    The scholarly article Goddesses in the Borgia Codex Group written by Marìa de los Angeles Ojeda Dìaz is available in English and in Spanish as Las Diosas en los Còdices del Grupo Borgia: Arquetipos de las mujeres del Postclàsico.

      This article, as well as the images on this page from the Cospi, Fejervary-Mayer & Laud come to us from the Arts and History - Virtual Forum of Mexican Culture site. Thanks to them for making their content available and for permission to use these images. (As you can see, I've converted a couple of these to transparent GIFs.)


    Also Highly Recommended:
    Lords of the Earth


    D.M.Urquidi has an article on
    Comets and Meteorites in the Borgia Codex
    at the constantly evolving Maya/Aztec/Inca
    Center of the Lords of the Earth web site,
    where you'll find many other interesting links,
    & subscription info on the newsletter HOPPCI.



    Other Sites
    "Borgian" Gallery


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