Description of the road leading to Louisiana, II, 279–Its towns, II, 282. San Luis Potosi, town, II, 282. San Luis Rey de Francia, village, II, 353. San Miguel (Don Antonio de)—Bishop of Walladolid—Memoir presented by him to the king in favour of the Indians, I, 189. San Miguel el grande, town of the intendancy of Guadalaxara, II, 207–Its manufactures, III, 460. San Pedro, a river which disappeared, II, 212, 217. San Pedro de Batopilas, town, II, 295. San Pedro de Jorullo, hacienda, II, 212. San Pedro de Tlahua, a village built on the dike which separates the Lakes of Chalco and Xochimilco, II, lll. San Roman (Marquis de), director of the mint of Mexico. III, 479. - San Saba, river, II, 27 l. Sandoval (Gonzales de)—Conquers the province of Tehuante- pec, IV, 19. Sandoval (Sebastian) y Guzman—His works on the produce of the mines of Potosi, III, 361. Sandwich—Political observations on these islands, IV, 85. - - Sanpueltepec, mountain, II, 236. Santa Ana, mines, II, 206. Santa Ana, mission of California, II, 333. Santa Barbara, village, II, 353. Santa Cruz, village, II, 355. Santa Cruz de la Cañada y Taos—See Taos. Santa Cruz de Nootka—Description of that port, II, 371.1. Santa Fe (Aqueduct of) brings fresh water to Mexico, II, 45. Santa Fe, capital of New Mexico, II, 317. Santa Fe, in the valley of Mexico, a royal powder manufactory. III, 470. -
Santa Fe de Bogota—Quantity of gold coined there from 1789 to 1795, III, 380. a Santa Fe de Goanajoato-See Guanazuato. Santa Maria (Compuerta)—Lock of the Desague de Hue- huetoca, II, 151. Santa Maria d'Aorne, port, II, 305. Santa Maria de las Charcas, town, II, 282. Santa Rosa de Cosiguiriachi, town, II, 295. Santiago (River of) formed the limit between Mexico and Mechoacan, and the Otomites and Cicimecs, I, 12– 73; II, 227. Santiago de Buena Esperanza—See Purificacion. Saragates—Inhabitants of Mexico who have no domicile- See Guachinangos. Sarmientos, a rich Indian family at Cholula, I, 186 Sarsaparilla— Its harvest, III, 36—Amount annually exported from Vera Cruz, IV, 30; from all Mexico in 1802, IV, 37; in 1803, IV, 48; in 1804, IV, 364. Sausages—Amount imported into Vera Cruz in 1802, IV, 33; in 1803, IV, 44 and 46. Sea (South) —Is it higher than the Atlantic Ocean? I, 32. School of mines at Mexico, I, 212–216; II, 51. Sciences (Physical and exact) — Progress which they have made in Mexico, I, 218. Segura de la Frontera—See Tepeadca. Sein (Don Salvador) professor at Mexico, III, 243. Serge—Quantity exported from Mexico in 1803, III, 49. Serris, a tribe of Indians, II, 299. Serra (Junipero)—His voyage to California, II, 340. Sesse (M.) one of the heads of the botanical expedition to New Spain, 1,216. Sharping stones (Dalles) — Amount imported into Mexico in 1803, IV, 45, 46. Sheep—Their rearing is neglected, III, 50. Vol. iv. G. G.
Sheep-skins (tanned) — Influence which the edict of free trade had on the exportation, IV, 100. w Shoes, amount imported into Vera Cruz in 1802, IV, 36. Sierra (Provinces of the)—Produce of their mines of gold and silver, III, 353. Sierra Madre, part of the Cordillera of Mexico, I, 63. Sierra de los Mimbres, I, 63. Sierra Nevada. — Signification of these words, II, 191 (*). Sierra de Santa Rosa-Description of that chain of moun- tains, III, 163. - Signiorage (Duty of) paid by the proprietors of mines, III, 328. - - Siguenza (Carlos de)—How he fixed the longitude of Mexico, I, xxvi. —His maps of New Spain, I., lxxvii, xcvi. His hypothesis respecting the antiquity of the pyramids of Teotihuacan, II, 64 (*). Silks manufactured in the country, 1 II, 465–Amount annually imported into Vera, Cruz IV, 31; in 1802, IV, 33–35; in 1803, IV, 45, 46; in 1804, IV, 364. Silver—Quantity annually extracted from the mines of Mexico, III, 146—Veins which contain it, III, 153– See Mines—Quantity absorbed by the commerce with India, IV, 339. Silver in Ingots—Quantity exported annually at an average from Vera Cruz, IV, 29. silver (Coined)—Amount exported from Mexico on account of individuals for Spain in 1802, IV, 37; in 1803, IV, 48; for other parts of Spanish America, in 1802, IV, 38; in 1803, IV, 47 — On account of the king, IV.” 41. - Silver (wrought)—How much there is in Europe, III, 451, and IV, 342 – Amount exported from Mexico for Spain in 1802, IV, 37— For other parts of Spanish America, IV, 38. - sing.iluacan, Indian village—Table of births and deaths
from 1750 to 1799, to serve as an example of the method in which the parish priests keep their registers, IV, 289. Sinaloa — See Cinaloa. - Sinu, a river of the kingdom of New Grenada—Its branches serve as an emporium for the contraband trade in gold of Choco and Antioquia, III, 391. Sisas, impost on the consumption of commodities originally destined to complete the Desague of Nochistongo, If, 140. Situados, supplies sent from Mexico to the other Spanish colonies—Their annual amount and distribution, IV, 234. Skins of goats, stags, and bears—Influence which the edict of free trade had on their exportation, IV, 100. Skins of Beaver — Importance of the trade in this production, IV, 89. Slaves—ln small number in Mexico, I, 14, 230– Species - of Indian slaves there, II, 238 — See Poitos. - - Small-por—Ravages which it commits in Mexico, I, I'll — See Inoculation and Vaccine. Smith (Dr. Adam) — His estimate of the quantity of gold and silver which has flowed into Europe since 1492, III, 408. - - Snow — Its limit, I, 74—Manner of transporting it to Vera Cruz, IV, 191 — Produce of the duty on the sale of snow, - IV, 216. Soap — Places where it is manufactured, III, 467—Amount annually exported from Vera Cruz, IV, 30–Amount imported at Vera Cruz in 1802, IV, 33 ; exported from Mexico for other parts of Spanish America, in 1802, IV, 38; in 1803, IV, 49. Socabon of Nochistongo—See Desague and Nochistongo. Socabon del Rey, a level in the Cerro de la Compaña near Tasco, III, 139.
Sochipiltecatl, a rich Indian family at Guaxocingo, I, 186. - Society (Patriotic) of Cuba, for the encouragement of the sciences, I, 211. o Soda—How found, III, 322–Provinces where it abounds, III, 462—Qualities and use of the soda of Xaltocan, III, 484. Soledad, village, II, 354. Solis (Martin de) charged with the administration of the Desague, II, 142. Solorzano—His estimate of the gold and silver which have flowed into Europe since 1492, III, 405. Sombrerete, town, II, 234. - Sonnesehmidt (M. Frederic)—His memoirs on the mines of Mexico, I, lxxxviii, III, 252—He discovered meteoric iron at Zacatecas, II, 293; III. 298–Seven heights determined by this traveller, IV, 353 et seq. Sonora, bishoprick—Its revenues, I, 231. Sonora, intendancy—Its extent, II, 296–Its rivers, II, 298—A part of this intendancy is named la Pimeria, ibid.—Its communications with New Mexico and New California, II, 299—Its towns, II, 304—Nomenclature of its reales de minas, III, 125. Sonora, province, makes a part of the intendancy of Sonora, II, 297. Sonora, river, II, 298. Sonora, town, II, 305. Sotto la marina, village, II, 282—Was proposed to supply the place of the port of Vera Cruz, I, 82. Spaniards—Hatred which exists between them and the creoles, I, 205—Their number in Mexico, I, 206. Specie in circulation in the New World—Discussion on this subject, III, 430—Amount of its annual accumulation in Mexico, IV, l l 1. Spices, amount imported into Mexico in 1803, IV, 44. Spoons of silver found in the port of Nootka by Cook—
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