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===Aztec history and international scholarship=== [[File:Piedra del sol Porfirio Diaz.png|thumb|left|President [[Porfirio Díaz]] in 1910 at the [[National Museum of Anthropology (Mexico)|National Museum of Anthropology]] with the [[Aztec Calendar Stone]]. The [[International Congress of Americanists]] met in Mexico City in 1910 on the centennial of Mexican independence.]] Scholars in Europe and the United States increasingly wanted investigations into Mexico's ancient civilizations, starting in the nineteenth century. Humboldt had been extremely important in bringing ancient Mexico into broader scholarly discussions of ancient civilizations. French Americanist [[Charles Étienne Brasseur de Bourbourg]] (1814–1874) asserted that "science in our own time has at last effectively studied and rehabilitated America and the Americans from the [previous] viewpoint of history and archeology. It was Humboldt [...] who woke us from our sleep."{{sfn|Keen|1971|p=336}} Frenchman [[Jean-Frédéric Waldeck]] published ''Voyage pittoresque et archéologique dans la province d'Yucatan pendant les années 1834 et 1836'' in 1838. Although not directly connected with the Aztecs, it contributed to the increased interest in ancient Mexican studies in Europe. English aristocrat [[Edward King, Viscount Kingsborough|Lord Kingsborough]] spent considerable energy in their pursuit of understanding ancient Mexico. Kingsborough answered Humboldt's call for the publication of all known Mexican codices, publishing nine volumes of ''[[Antiquities of Mexico]]'' (1831–1846) that were richly illustrated, bankrupting him. He was not directly interested in the Aztecs, but rather in proving that Mexico had been colonized by Jews.{{citation needed|date=November 2018}} However, his publication of these valuable primary sources gave others access to them.{{citation needed|date=November 2018}} In the United States in the early 19th century, interest in ancient Mexico propelled [[John Lloyd Stephens]] to travel to Mexico and then publish well-illustrated accounts in the early 1840s. The research of a half-blind Bostonian, [[William Hickling Prescott]], into the Spanish conquest of Mexico, resulted in his highly popular and deeply researched ''The Conquest of Mexico'' (1843). Although not formally trained as a historian, Prescott drew on the obvious Spanish sources, but also Ixtlilxochitl and Sahagún's history of the conquest. His resulting work was a mixture of pro- and anti-Aztec attitudes. It was not only a bestseller in English, but it also influenced Mexican intellectuals, including the leading conservative politician, [[Lucas Alamán]]. Alamán pushed back against his characterization of the Aztecs. In the assessment of [[Benjamin Keen]], Prescott's history "has survived attacks from every quarter, and still dominates the conceptions of the laymen, if not the specialist, concerning Aztec civilization".{{sfn|Keen|1971|p=363}} In the later 19th century, businessman and historian [[Hubert Howe Bancroft]] oversaw a huge project, employing writers and researchers, to write the history the "Native Races" of North America, including Mexico, California, and Central America. One entire work was devoted to ancient Mexico, half of which concerned the Aztecs. It was a work of synthesis drawing on Ixtlilxochitl and Brasseur de Bourbourg, among others.{{Sfn|Cline|1973}} When the [[International Congress of Americanists]] was formed in Nancy, France in 1875, Mexican scholars became active participants, and Mexico City hosted the biennial multidisciplinary meeting six times, starting in 1895. Mexico's ancient civilizations have continued to be the focus of major scholarly investigations by Mexican and international scholars.{{fact|date=November 2024}}
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