Cortes Map Of Tenochtitlan

Cortes Map Of Tenochtitlan. Tenochtitlan map hires stock photography and images Alamy Description: The map of Mexico City and the Gulf of Mexico included in Hernán Cortés' Praeclara Ferdina[n]di Cortesii de noua maris oceani Hyspania narratio, 1524 KEYWORDS: Aztec maps, Culhua-Mexica, New Spain, Hernan Cortes, Amerindian maps, Tenochtitlan [Tenochtitlan, Temistitan], Mexico, cartography, Pre-Columbian maps

The map of Tenochtitlan. Attributed to Hernán Cortés, 1524 Download Scientific Diagram
The map of Tenochtitlan. Attributed to Hernán Cortés, 1524 Download Scientific Diagram from www.researchgate.net

Built across a series of natural and artificial islands connected by causeways in the swamps of Lake Texcoco, it was to become one of the largest cities in the world, covering more than five square miles and with a population of perhaps 200,000. Friedrich Peypus (1485-1534), probably after drawing made by one of Cortez' men

The map of Tenochtitlan. Attributed to Hernán Cortés, 1524 Download Scientific Diagram

On the left, the Gulf of Mexico (South is at the top, part of Cuba left); on the right, Tenochtitlan with West at the top. and Cortes" from Bernardino de Sahagún, General history of the The source of this woodcut map is unknown, and the author argues here that it was based on an indigenous map of the city.

Detalle parcial del Plano de Tenochtitlan, atribuido a Hernán Cortés. Nuremberg, 1524 Hernán. Summary [edit] Title [Mexico City and the Gulf of Mexico] Friedrich Peypus (1485-1534), probably after drawing made by one of Cortez' men

Cortés finds Tenochtitlán on the map simonsimson. Permission (Reusing this file) This is a faithful. Over time the three were able to overpower all other societies in the Valley of Mexico.