Nahuatl On-Line, and a question

David L. Frye dfrye at umich.edu
Tue Dec 14 16:30:07 UTC 1999


First, here is my chicken-and-egg question: I assume that there is a close
relation between "chihchiltic" red and "chilli" chile (pepper), but which
came first?

Second, here is my list of Nahuatl links, with the caveat that I have not
checked out all of them recently. (Please don't include the list if you
reply to the short question above!)


John Schwaller's University of Montana Nahuatl home page:
http://www.umt.edu/history/nahuatl/

Joe Campbell's Tri-dialectical Nahuatl vocabulary:
http://www.umt.edu/history/nahuatl/multidia.htm

A preliminary version of a dictionary of Ameyaltepec Nahuatl is posted at
http://www.yale.edu/nahuatl (click on Dictionary)

An excellent Prehispanic Calendars site:
http://www.public.iastate.edu/~rjsalvad/scmfaq/calendar.html

The Aztec calendar pages:
http://www.xs4all.nl/~voorburg/aztec.html.

"Check out our site to see what modern day Mexica are up to":
http://www.mexica-movement.org

Tezozomoc's Nahuatl Home page:
http://www.geocities.com/SoHo/Studios/4325/nahuatl.html
New pages relating to nahua spirituality:
http://www.geocities.com/SoHo/Studios/4325/tloque.html

The University of Pennsylvania Library has a new web page dealing with
items which might be of interest to scholars of Nahuatl:
 http://www.library.upenn.edu/special/gallery/kislak/index/cultural.html

The Templo Mayor Museum (INAH) has a new web site (via Arizona State); the
extensive pages include instructional guides to the Aztec culture and many
photos useful for Mesoamerican students:
http://archaeology.la.asu.edu/vm/mesoam/tm/pages2/index2.htm

Tom Fredericksen's "Aztec On-Line Student/Teacher Resource Center":
http://members.aol.com/spdtom/index.html

David Jordan's Web site has information on Nahuatl pronunciation:
http://weber.ucsd.edu/~dkjordan/nahuatl.html.

Spanish website for kids, some sections in Nahuatl:
http://www.kokone.com.mx

Jeff MacSwan's (UCLA, 1997) dissertation,'A Minimalist Approach to
Intrasentential Code Switching: Spanish-Nahuatl Bilingualism in Central
Mexico' (.pdf format):
http://www.humnet.ucla.edu/people/macswan/diss.html

Mole recipe:
http://www.slip.net/~bobnemo/mole.html

nice site on Nahuatl medicine:
http://www.mexicodesconocido.com.mx/hierbas/mednahua.htm

The Aztec Student Tearcher Resource Center page at:
http://members.aol.com/SPDTOM/index.html

The Azteca Web page at:
http://www.azteca.net/aztec/

The Mesoamerican Archeology Web page at:
http://copan.bioz.unibas.ch/meso.html

The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Mesoamerica at:
http://www.cultures.com/meso_resources/meso_encyclopedia/
meso_encyclopedia_home.html



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