Skip to main content

Main navigation

  • News
  • Events
    • Exhibitions
      • 1846: Inventing Americana at the John Carter Brown Library
      • Simon Bolivar, The Libertador
    • Upcoming Events
      • Past Events
  • Research
    • Using the Library
      • Instructional Support Guide
      • Requesting Materials
      • Resources and Publications
      • Image Permissions & Requests
    • Catalog
    • Fellowships
      • Opportunities
      • Fellows Directory
      • Life in Residence
      • Remote Fellowship Program
  • Visit
    • Visiting the JCB
      • Requesting Materials in the Reading Room
    • Collection Highlights
      • Places
      • Languages
      • Themes
      • Periods
      • Genres
  • About
    • Mission
      • Initiatives
      • History
    • People
      • Leadership
      • Staff Directory

Search Menu

  • Online Catalogue (BruKnow)

Language

Nahuatl

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Email

Featured Items

Detail of a printed book shows branding marks ("marca de fuego") on the outer edges. Leather binding also partially visible.

Aqui comiença vn vocabulario en la lengua castellana y mexicana,

Alonso de Molina
1555
Detail of brown book binding shows the embossed details.

La istoria de las Indias. y Conquista de Mexico

López de Gómara
1552

Related

Detail from the Tovar Codex, showing a bearded Spanish man atop the symbol for house (calli), while holding a book that points to the letters of the Roman alphabet.
Fellow's Talk

Translating Late Medieval Classics into Nahuatl: The Imitatio Christi and How to Think About Latin-Nahuatl translation

Wednesday, September 1 at 1:00pm
cover image of Códice Santa María Tetelpan

Códice Santa María Tetelpan: A JCB manuscript transcribed, translated, and published in facsimile in Mexico City

October 7, 2020
Image of Peruvian Print Shop
Lecture

Historia del libro en lenguas originarias de América

Tuesday, October 27 at 2:00pm
Native Americans of present-day Mexico dance around two drummers

Picturing the Past: Indigenous Expressions in Colonial Mexico

Spring 2020
detail of a page from a Mexican incunable book printed between 1539 to 1600
In House

64 Mexican incunables and counting

May 5, 2018
photograph of Barbara Mundy, professor of art history at Fordham university
Our Fellows

Barbara Mundy, R. David Parsons Fellow

December 5, 2017

See Also

Collecting History of the JCB Library

Latin

Back to top

Location

The John Carter Brown Library
94 George Street
Providence, Rhode Island 02906

contact@jcblibrary.org
Directions & Contact

Hours

Hours & Closings

Newsletter

Sign up to receive the latest news, events, and highlights from the JCB.

Sign Up

 

  • Accessibility
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
©2024 The John Carter Brown Library. A Message»Agency Site