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Judi Lynn

(162,379 posts)
Sat Oct 24, 2020, 04:29 AM Oct 2020

A unique pre-Columbian manuscript and the mystery behind its colors

OCTOBER 22, 2020

by Università di Bologna



The Nahuan (i.e. "Aztec" ) divinatory manuscript, also known as Codex Cospi, represents a rare example of a pre-Columbian "book". Credit: Luca Sgamellotti

The Codex Cospi is one of the few Aztec 'books' in the world and it is kept at Bologna University Library. A new research project will investigate with unprecedented detail the painting techniques and tools with which it was made.

There are very few pre-Columbian manuscripts in the world; the Codex Cospi is one of them. These days, this manuscript is being analyzed at Bologna University Library in collaboration with Palazzo Poggi Museum (University Museum System). Using cutting-edge non-invasive techniques, researchers will try to figure out the composition of the bright colors with which the codex was embellished between the end of the 15th century and the beginning of the 16th.

Carisbo Foundation provided the funding (Art and Culture grant) to the Department of History, Cultures, and Civilization of the University of Bologna. Thanks to this funding, these analyses will be carried out exploiting the MOLAB platform.

"We will employ fluorescence and hyperspectral imaging techniques to map the distribution of compositional material (both organic and inorganic) on every page of the manuscript," says Davide Domenici, Professor at the University of Bologna and head of the project. "The level of detail these techniques are able to provide is unprecedented and will shed new light on the pictorial and technological practices developed by pre-Columbian artists."

More:
https://phys.org/news/2020-10-unique-pre-columbian-manuscript-mystery.html

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A unique pre-Columbian manuscript and the mystery behind its colors (Original Post) Judi Lynn Oct 2020 OP
Thank you for posting science news items. myccrider Oct 2020 #1
Most definitely intend to add articles right here. Totally love finding them. Thank you, so much! Judi Lynn Oct 2020 #2
Good Trump gif. I'd call it wnylib Oct 2020 #3
RE: Scarcity of Aztec books wnylib Oct 2020 #4

myccrider

(484 posts)
1. Thank you for posting science news items.
Sun Oct 25, 2020, 03:18 AM
Oct 2020

I really enjoy them, even if I don’t always post a response. Please keep it up.

Judi Lynn

(162,379 posts)
2. Most definitely intend to add articles right here. Totally love finding them. Thank you, so much!
Tue Oct 27, 2020, 08:01 AM
Oct 2020


I wanted to add something funny to this post, went to find a trump lightning gif, and found this image, instead. Click for image:

https://tinyurl.com/yypnvo4s

This is the gif I was trying to find, but I adore the still image.

wnylib

(24,391 posts)
3. Good Trump gif. I'd call it
Fri Oct 30, 2020, 12:35 AM
Oct 2020

"Retribution of the Gods."

Thunder and lightning gods, e.g. Thor, Indra, Zeus, and the Thunderbird gods of the Lakota, Haudenosaunee, and several Algonquian tribes. Thunderbird creates thunder with its wings and lightning with a glance of its eyes. The Haudenosaunee Thunderbirds frighten evil people and protect good ones. My personal favorite for the Trump gif is the Ojibwe Thunderbird whose lightning bolts punish humans who break moral rules.

wnylib

(24,391 posts)
4. RE: Scarcity of Aztec books
Fri Oct 30, 2020, 12:53 AM
Oct 2020

The article doesn't say why Aztec books are so rare.

The reason is that Spaniards destroyed them. Aztec (and Mayan) books told the stories of their religious beliefs, gods, and the religious elements involved in their calendar calculations. They also had a literature of poetry and legends. The few that survived were hidden from the Spanish priests. In at least one case, I think it was actually a priest who hid a book because he recognized its cultural value.

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