Moctezuma

Título

Moctezuma

Descripción

But there was a building in the most solitary part of the gardens, which surprised the Spaniards more than any thing they met with, and it was called the House of Sorrow, because the emperor used to retire thither on the death of his relations, or on any calamity, public or private. The roof, the ceiling, and the sides were black, and only just so much light was admitted as to discover the dismal obscurity. In this gloomy mansion, the Spanish authors, pretend Montezuma used to converse familiarly with the prince of darkness.

Materia

Complicidad con el diablo
Satanismo
Veracidad
Rumores

Relación

Historia

Identificador

255

Autor

Anónimo

Fecha

1768

Editor

Anónimo. The wonders of nature and art; being an account of whatever is most curious and remarkable throughout the world; Whether relating to its Animals, Vegetables, Minerals, Volcanoes, Cataracts, Hot and Cold Springs, and Other Parts of Natural History; or, to the Buildings, Manufactures, Inventions, and Discoveries of its Inhabitants. The whole collected from the writings of the best Historians, Travellers, Geographers, and Philosophers, among which are some Original Manuscripts; interspersed with pious Observations and Reflections; illustrated with Notes, and adorned with Copper-Plates Londres, 1768: p.111.

Idioma

EN

Cobertura

Inglaterra s. XVIII

Fuente

ECCO, CW3306315736, Imagen: 116, Enlace: http://find.galegroup.com/ecco/infomark.do?&source=gale&prodId=ECCO&userGroupName=unam_ecco&tabID=T001&docId=CW3306315736&type=multipage&contentSet=ECCOArticles&version=1.0&docLevel=FASCIMILE. Fecha de captura: 9/12/2015

Original Format

Impreso

Colección

Citación

Anónimo, “Moctezuma,” México Imaginario, consulta 29 de abril de 2024, https://mexicoimaginario.omeka.net/items/show/16600.

Formatos de Salida