Go to USC home page USC Logo USC TIMES NEWS & HEADLINES
UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH CAROLINA
CONTACT US
RELATED SITES
USC TIMES SCHEDULE & SUBMISSION GUIDELINES
MORE USC NEWS & HEADLINES
USC TIMES PHOTO GALLERY
TIMES ARCHIVES
TIMES HOME
USC  THIS SITE
Mexican history on view in Thomas Cooper Library Web exhibit

The latest Web exhibit from Thomas Cooper Library’s Department of Rare Books & Special Collections, "Mexico From the Books of South Carolina College," is available at www.sc.edu/library/spcoll/mexico/mexico.htm.
Based on last year's mezzanine exhibit in the library, the Web version illustrates the history of Mexico from the early 16th century through the early 20th century. The exhibit documents the gradual process by which the cultures and history of pre-Columbian Mexico were described and published in Spain, in rival European countries such as the Netherlands, Britain, and France, in Mexico itself, and in the United States.

“Most of the books on display have been in the USC library since the 1830's and 1840's,” Scott said. “They are dramatic evidence of the intellectual ambitions of the original South Carolina College and of the worldwide range of the books that were purchased for its library.

“The oldest item on display is an engraving of Mexico City printed in 1565, from the Italian writer Ramusio’s Voyages. Other early works include illustrations of Aztec customs by the German Theodor de Bry from 1594 and Dutch engraved maps from the 17th century by the Dutchmen De Laet and Montanus.”

Some of the most impressive volumes are from the early 19th century, in Alexander von Humboldt’s great folio Vue des Cordelleres et Monumens des Peuples Indigene de l’Amerique (Paris, 1810) and Lord Kingsborough’s seven-volume Antiquities of Mexico (London, 1830), with its colored facsimiles of pre-Columbian illuminated manuscripts.

The architecture of the pre-Columbian Aztec and Mayan cultures is represented both from Kingsborough’s work and from the American J. L. Stephens’s books about the Yucatan (1841, 1843). Of special note in the final case is a copy of the Mexican military code of justice owned by General Santa Anna.

The exhibit was curated by Scott and prepared for the Web by Zella Hilton. The Department of Rare Books & Special Collections has more than 20 Web-exhibits on history, literature, philosophy, and the history of science. They attract more than 20 million hits a year from users worldwide.

4/05


To go directly to
Thomas Cooper
Library's
Mexican history
exhibit on the
Web, click here.

RETURN TO TOP
USC LINKS: DIRECTORY MAP EVENTS VIP
SITE INFORMATION