User:Alammana/Mixteca-Puebla style

Mixteca-Puebla style is a term that describes a representational art style common throughout central and southern Mexico around 1300 AD. Also known as International or Codex style after the painted manuscripts known as codices, common iconography representing gods, lords, calendar dates and place names are found on polychrome ceramics and in other mediums such as sculptures and architectural elements.

Codices
Mixteca-Puebla codices are split into two groups based on their differences in content, style and the rituals depicted: the Borgia Group and the Mixtec Group. The codices of the Borgia group are mainly concerned with the pantheon of Nahua gods, rituals and divinatory calendars while the Mixtec Group focuses on the history and genealogy of Mixtec lords.

The Borgia Group
The Borgia Group is named for the most famous codex in the group, once owned by the famous Borgia family. Archaeological and iconographic evidence shows that the Borgia codices were created by the peoples of the Tolteca-Chichimeca, mostly Eastern Nahua peoples who lived in the geographical region now comprising the Mexican states of Puebla and Tlaxcala.

The Borgia Group codices:
 * Codex Borgia and Codex Vaticanus B (now in the Vatican Library, Rome)
 * Codex Laud (now in the Bodleian Library, Oxford University, Oxford)
 * Codex Fejervary-Mayer (now in the National Museums Liverpool)
 * Codex Ríos (now in the Vatican Library, Rome)
 * Codex Cospi (now in the Biblioteca Universitaria, Bologna)
 * Codex Fonds Mexicanus 20 (now in the Bibliothéque Nationale, Paris)

The Mixtec Group
The Mixtec Group includes eight known manuscripts, each depicting different aspects of related history, genealogy and ritual of the post classic Mixtec kingdoms as they rose to power from 950-1521 AD.

The Mixtec Group codices:
 * Codices Zouche-Nuttall and Egerton (aka Waecker Götter) (both now in the British Museum, London)
 * Codices Bodley and Selden (both now in the Bodleian Library, Oxford)
 * Codex Vindobonensis (now in the National Bibliotek, Vienna)
 * Codex Colombino* (now in the Museo Nacional de Antropología, México City)
 * Codices Becker I and II (now in the Museum Für Völkerkunde, Vienna)
 * *Codices Colombino and Becker I are the first and second parts of the same manuscript