The Search for the Codex Cardona

by Arnold J. Bauer

On This Page

Description

The Codex Cardona is a Mexican "painted book" which may date from the 16th century and has been assessed inconclusively by such places as Sotheby's, the Getty, and Stanford University. This book describes the author's quest to determine the ori

Tags

Recommendations

Member Reviews

2 reviews
Of all the peoples of The Pre-Columbian Americas only the Mesoamericans (present-day central Mexico & Guatemala) produced books. They were known as amoxtli and tataah. They were painted books with words and pictures depicting myths, history, and every day life of the region. When Spain made its entrance into the region most of these ended up lost for all time. Some through plunder, others through neglect, but most were destroyed by bonfire around the same time Martin Luther was nailing his thesis to the door in Europe. Spain wanted to convert the region to Christianity and the painted books of the Nahua populations (Aztecs) were declared heresy and heathenish; thus they had to go even though some of the friars wanted to salvage some. It show more is estimated that only twelve remain. It makes me want to cry.

Not long after the originals were put into the flames, some works were commissioned to record the history of pre-Columbian times and also tell the story of the 'conversion' of the area. These became known as the Mexican Codices. Some of the pages of these books were done by scribes that still spoke the original languages and had some connections to the past of the region.

The Search for the Codex Cardona is the story of one of these codices. It appeared in 1982 along with many doubts about its authenticity and provenance. It was offered to several institutions of high renown but none actually pulled the trigger and acquired it. Bauer, a history professor in the University of California system, had seen the codex, knew it had disappeared again, got the urge to track it down and explain where it might of come from. If it was hoax. Or a high-quality forgery. This book is the tale of that search and the many players involved.

The writing style is personable not academic. It does have some disjointedness but does manage to get some of the Quixotic story told. There are still biblionuts out there that will devote a significant amount of their life to tracking a single book down. Or tracking it until the trail completely evaporates.
show less
½
Does the Codex exist or not. The question remains unanswered. The author has spent over 30 years on this question having traveled many miles and talked to many. The Codex is a painted book of the 16th century Mexico City area under the new Spanish rule.
A true mystery that keeps you reading to find the answer. Maybe someone will and the author will be able to finish the story.

Members

Recently Added By

Published Reviews

ThingScore 75
During his hunt Bauer manages to convey Mexico’s odd and powerful charisma.
Benjamin Moser, Harper's Magazine (pay site)
Apr 1, 2010
added by Shortride

Author Information

Picture of author.
7 Works 91 Members
Arnold J. Bauer is Professor Emeritus of History at the University of California, Davis.

Classifications

Genres
Nonfiction, History, General Nonfiction, Anthropology
DDC/MDS
972.01History & geographyHistory of North AmericaMexico, Central America, West Indies, BermudaMexico, Central America, West Indies, BermudaAncient civilization (-1516)
LCC
F1219.73 .B38Local History of the United States, Canada and Latin AmericaLatin America. Spanish AmericaMexicoAntiquities. Indians
BISAC

Statistics

Members
30
Popularity
925,179
Reviews
2
Rating
½ (3.63)
Languages
English
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
3