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The Three Pillars of the Indigenous Household: Buildings, Land, and Saints in Colonial Mexico

The Three Pillars of the Indigenous Household: Buildings, Land, and Saints in Colonial Mexico

Update: 2013-11-19
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Institute of Historical Research

Caterina Pizzigoni (Columbia University)

The talk will address a new interpretation of the indigenous household composition and its changes over time, comparing it to the Spanish house structure as well as to what is known of indigenous pre-conquest traditions. The role of sacred images in the household will be discussed extensively, opening paths of future research yet to be explored. The analysis will be based primarily on testaments in Nahuatl and Spanish and inventories from the early seventeenth to the early nineteenth century. Many of the ideas presented come from the monograph The Life Within: Local Indigenous Society in Mexico’s Toluca Valley, 1650-1800, while also introducing a new project.

Latin American History
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The Three Pillars of the Indigenous Household: Buildings, Land, and Saints in Colonial Mexico

The Three Pillars of the Indigenous Household: Buildings, Land, and Saints in Colonial Mexico

School of Advanced Study, University of London