Political Essay on the Kingdom of New Spain ...I. Riley, 1811 |
From inside the book
Արդյունքներ 80–ի 1-ից 5-ը:
Էջ iii
... four months , I could only give a very imperfect map of Mexico , compared with the maps of the most civilized countries of Europe . This idea , however , did not discourage me . When I considered the advantages afforded me by my ...
... four months , I could only give a very imperfect map of Mexico , compared with the maps of the most civilized countries of Europe . This idea , however , did not discourage me . When I considered the advantages afforded me by my ...
Էջ xi
... four thousand metres * above the level of the sea . The Spanish government having with extraordi- nary liberality made the most important sacrifices for the perfection of nautical astronomy , and for accurate surveys of the coast , we ...
... four thousand metres * above the level of the sea . The Spanish government having with extraordi- nary liberality made the most important sacrifices for the perfection of nautical astronomy , and for accurate surveys of the coast , we ...
Էջ xix
... four sheets , makes the longitude of Mexico 102 ° 8 ' 0 " , and the latitude 19 ° 57 ' , false 32 minutes . Several Mexican geometricians of the seventeenth century guessed pretty nearly the true longitude of the capital . Father Diego ...
... four sheets , makes the longitude of Mexico 102 ° 8 ' 0 " , and the latitude 19 ° 57 ' , false 32 minutes . Several Mexican geometricians of the seventeenth century guessed pretty nearly the true longitude of the capital . Father Diego ...
Էջ xxi
... four days . He made no astronomical ob- servations , and those which M. Alzate communica- ⚫ Ephemerides astronomica , a Triesneker , 1803 . Voyage en Californie , 1772 , p . 104 . ted to him , were not of a nature to GEOGRAPHICAL ...
... four days . He made no astronomical ob- servations , and those which M. Alzate communica- ⚫ Ephemerides astronomica , a Triesneker , 1803 . Voyage en Californie , 1772 , p . 104 . ted to him , were not of a nature to GEOGRAPHICAL ...
Էջ xxviii
... four degrees fur- ther to the west in the South Sea . Jean Covens and Corneille Mortier , in their map of the Mexican archipelago , make the longitude of Acapulco 106 ° 10 ' 0 " . The old maps of the depot of the ma- rine make it 104 0 ...
... four degrees fur- ther to the west in the South Sea . Jean Covens and Corneille Mortier , in their map of the Mexican archipelago , make the longitude of Acapulco 106 ° 10 ' 0 " . The old maps of the depot of the ma- rine make it 104 0 ...
Common terms and phrases
Acapulco Alzate amalgamation America Anahuac Antillon appears astronomical Aztec births canal Cape capital of Mexico Catorce Cerro Chihuahua clay-slate climate coast colonies contains Cordillera Cortez Cruz cultivation degree distance Durango eclipse elevation Europe European extent feet francs geographical Guadalaxara Guanaxuato height idem Indians inhabitants intendancy island isthmus Juan kingdom labour latitude Lima longitude Madrid Malaspina Manuscript map Mascaro mercury meridian metals metres Mexican miners mines mountains natives negroes Nueva Oaxaca observations Ocean Oltmanns Pachuca Panama Peru Pic d'Orizaba places plains Popocatepetl population porphyry port position possess Presidio produce province provincias internas Puebla race Real del Monte regions river road rock San Luis Potosi Santa silver slaves Sombrerete Sonora South Sea Spain Spaniards Spanish square leagues sterling summit table-land Tasco Tenochtitlan tion toises Trans Valenciana Valladolid valley valley of Mexico veins Velasquez Vera Cruz viceroy village volcanoes wealth whites Xalapa Zacatecas
Սիրված հատվածներ
Էջ 292 - They were bounded by basaltic mountains, of which the structure seems to indicate, that all this country at a very remote period had been already several times convulsed by volcanoes. These fields, watered by artificial means, belonged to the plantation (hacienda) of San Pedro de Jorullo, one of the greatest and richest of the country. In the month of June, 1759, a subterraneous noise was heard.
Էջ 107 - Amazons, and have had occasion to see a great number of tribes assembled under the monastical hierarchy in the missions, must have observed that the American race contains nations whose features differ as essentially from one another, as the numerous varieties of the race of Caucasus, the Circassians, Moors, and Persians differ from one another.
Էջ 66 - In the space of a day the inhabitants descend from the regions of eternal snow to the plains in the vicinity of the sea, -where the most suffocating heat prevails. The admirable order with which different tribes of vegetables rise above one another by strata, as it were, is no where more perceptible than in ascending from the port of Vera Cru* to the table-land of Perote.
Էջ 183 - When a common man disputes with one of the titled lords of the country, he is frequently heard to say, " Do you think me not so white as yourself?
Էջ 181 - is in colour almost a pure white, and his skin is of a particular transparency. The small beard, and small hands and feet, and a certain obliquity of the eyes, are more frequent indications of the mixture of Indian blood, than the nature of the hair.
Էջ xl - Argand's lamps, contain every evening some hundreds of young people, of whom some draw from relievo or living models, while others copy drawings of furniture, chandeliers, or other ornaments in bronze. In this assemblage (and this is very remarkable in the midst of a country where the prejudices of the nobility against the...
Էջ 182 - The casts of Indian or African blood preserve the odour peculiar to the cutaneous transpiration of those two primitive races. The Peruvian Indians, who in the middle of the night distinguish the different races by their quick sense of smell, have formed three words to express the odour of the European, the Indian American, and the negro: they call the first pezuna, the second posco *, and the third grqjo.
Էջ xl - Rome, surpasses in beauty and purity of style everything which remains in this way in Europe. Instruction is communicated gratis at the Academy of Fine Arts. It is not confined alone to the drawing of landscapes and figures; they have had the good sense to employ other means for exciting the national industry. The academy labors successfully to introduce among the artisans a taste for elegance and beautiful forms.
Էջ 66 - ... the Indian to labour, and excites his industry. At the height of San Miguel, pines begin to mingle with the oaks which are found by the traveller as high as the elevated plains of Perote, where he beholds the delightful aspect of fields sown with wheat.
Էջ 293 - Eruptions of mud, and especially of strata of clay enveloping balls of decomposed basaltes in concentrical layers, appear to indicate that subterraneous water had no small share in producing this extraordinary revolution. Thousands of small cones, from 6 to 10 feet in height, called by the natives ovens (hornitos), issued forth from the Malpays.