Id., pp. 25-7, 30-1.
172
Id., p. 39.
173
Id., p. 58.
174
Id., pp. 67, 218-19, 240.
175
Id., p. 135.
176
Id., p. 154.
177
'Y el Ynga Yupangue entraba solo, y él mismo por su mano sacrificaba las ovejas y corderos.' Betanzos, Historia de los Ingas, lib. i., cap. xi., quoted in Kingsborough's Mex. Antiq., vol. viii., p. 156.
178
Id., pp. 157, 236, 389, vol. vi., pp. 273-5.
179
Id., vol. viii., p. 160.
180
Id., p. 174.
181
Id., p. 176.
182
Id., pp. 174-82. He presents a most elaborate discussion of this point. See also vol. vi., pp. 512, 523.
183
Id., vol. viii., p. 238.
184
Id., p. 248.
185
Id., p. 257.
186
Id., p. 258, vol. vi., p. 236.
187
Id., pp. 164-6.
188
Id., p. 208. 'Representations of the lifting up of serpents frequently occur in Mexican paintings: and the plagues which Moses called down upon the Egyptians by lifting up his rod, which became a serpent, are evidently referred to in the eleventh and twelfth pages of the Borgian Manuscript. An allusion to the passage of the Red Sea … seems also to be contained in the seventy-first page of the Lesser Vatican MS.; and the destruction of Pharaoh and his host, and the thanksgiving of Moses, may perhaps be signified by the figure on the left, in the same page, of a man falling into a pit or gulf, and by the hand on the right stretched out to receive an offering.'
189
Id., p. 222.
190
Id., p. 232, et seq. Kingsborough reasons at some length on this point.
191
Id., p. 361.
192
Id., p. 406.
193
Id., pp. 272-3, 333-5, 392-3; vol. viii., pp. 121-2, 142-3, 391.
194
Id., vol. vi., pp. 300-1; vol. viii., p. 137.
195
Id., vol. vi., p. 504, vol. viii., p. 18.
196