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          <title type="main">Humboldt’s History of New Spain</title>
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            <persName ref="https://d-nb.info/gnd/118554700">
              <surname>Humboldt</surname>
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          <date type="publication">1811</date>
          <pubPlace>Charleston, South Carolina</pubPlace>
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          <title type="full">in: &lt;i&gt;The Carolina Gazette&lt;/i&gt; 710 (6. Juli 1811), S. [4].</title>
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                <head>CITY OF MEXICO.</head>
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                    <head>HUMBOLDT&#x2019;S HISTORY OF NEW SPAIN.</head>
                    <lb break="yes"/>
                    <p>&#x201C;The valley in which the city of Mexico<lb break="yes"/>stands is upwards of 6500 feet above the level of<lb break="yes"/>the sea. It is of an oval form, encompassed on<lb break="yes"/>all sides by mountains. It contains several lakes.<lb break="yes"/>The largest is salt. Formerly it surrounded the<lb break="yes"/>city, which was approached only by causeways,<lb break="yes"/>constructed in the water. But, at present, the<lb break="yes"/>extent of this lake is diminished, and the city is<lb break="yes"/>now on the land, at some distance from the water&#x2019;s<lb break="yes"/>edge. The circumference of the valley is 67<lb break="yes"/>leagues.</p>
                    <lb break="yes"/>
                    <p>&#x201C;Mexico is undoubtedly one of the finest cities<lb break="yes"/>ever built by Europeans in either hemisphere.<lb break="yes"/>With the exception of St. Petersburgh, Berlin,<lb break="yes"/>Philadelphia, and some quarters in Westminster,<lb break="yes"/>there does not exist a city of the same extent,<lb break="yes"/>which can be compared to the capital of New-<lb break="hyph-yes"/>Spain, for the uniform level of the ground on<lb break="yes"/>which it stands, for the regularity and breadth of<lb break="yes"/>the streets, and the extent of the public places.<lb break="yes"/>The architecture is generally of a very pure<lb break="yes" />style, and there are even edifices of very beauti-<lb break="no"/>ful structure, the exterior of the houses is not<lb break="yes"/>loaded with ornaments.</p>
                    <lb break="yes"/>
                    <p>&#x201C;The ballustrades and gates are all of Biscay<lb break="yes"/>iron, ornamented with bronze, and the houses,<lb break="yes"/>instead of roofs, have terraces like those in Italy,<lb break="yes"/>and other southern countries.</p>
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                    <p>&#x201C;Mexico has been very much embellished,<lb break="yes"/>since the residence of the Abbe <persName key="chappedauteroche_j">Chappe</persName> there in<lb break="yes"/>1769. The edifice destined to be the School of<lb break="yes"/>Mines, for which the richest individuals of the<lb break="yes"/>country furnished a sum of more than three mil-<lb break="no"/>lions of francs, would <choice><sic>dorn</sic><corr type="editorial">adorn</corr></choice> the principal places<lb break="yes"/>of Paris or London. Two great palaces [hotels]<lb break="yes"/>were recently constructed by Mexican artists,<lb break="yes"/>pupils of the academy of fine arts of the capital.<lb break="yes"/>One of these places, in the quarter <hi rendition="#i" >delle Tras-<lb break="no"/>pana,</hi> exhibited in the interior of a court a very<lb break="yes"/>beautiful oval peristyle of coupled columns. The<lb break="yes"/>traveller justly admires a vast circumference,<lb break="yes"/>paved with porphyry flags, and enclosed with an<lb break="yes"/>iron railing, richly ornamented with bronze, con-<lb break="no"/>taining an equestrian statue of King <persName key="karliv">Charles the<lb break="yes"/>fourth</persName>, placed on a pedestal of Mexican marble,<lb break="yes"/>in the midst of the <hi rendition="#i"><choice><sic>Paza</sic><corr type="editorial">Plaza</corr></choice> Major</hi> of Mexico, op-<lb break="no"/>posite the cathedral, and the viceroy&#x2019;s palace.<lb break="yes"/>However, it must be agreed, that notwithstand-<lb break="no"/>ing the progress of the arts, within these last<lb break="yes"/>thirty years, it is much less from the grandeur<lb break="yes"/>and beauty of the monuments, than from the<lb break="yes" />breadth and straightness of the streets, and much<lb break="yes"/>less from its edifices, than from its uniform regu-<lb break="no"/>larity, its extent and position, that the capital of<lb break="yes"/>New Spain attracts the admiration of Europeans.</p>
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                    <p>&#x201C;Nothing can present a more rich and varied<lb break="yes" />appearance, than the valley, when, in a summer<lb break="yes"/>morning, <choice>
                            <sic>they</sic>
                            <corr type="editorial">the</corr>
                        </choice> sky without a cloud, and of that<lb break="yes"/>deep azure which is peculiar to the dry and rari-<lb break="no"/><cb/>fied air of high mountains, we transport ourselves<lb break="yes"/>to the top of one of the towers of the cathedral<lb break="yes"/>of Mexico, or ascend the hill of Chapoltepeck.<lb break="yes"/>A beautiful vegetation surrounds this hill. Old<lb break="yes"/>cypress trunks, of more than 15 and 16 metres<lb break="yes"/>in circumference raise their naked heads above<lb break="yes"/>those of the schinus, which resemble, in their<lb break="yes"/>appearance, the weeping willows of the east.&#x2014;<lb break="yes"/>From the centre of this solitude, the summit of<lb break="yes"/>the porphyritical rock of Chapoltepeck, the eye<lb break="yes"/>sweeps over a vast plain of carefully cultivat-<lb break="no"/>ed fields, which extend to the very feet of<lb break="yes" />the colossal mountains covered with perpetual<lb break="yes"/>snow. The city appears as if washed by the<lb break="yes"/>waters of the lake of Tezcuco, whose basin, sur-<lb break="no"/>rounded with villages and hamlets, brings to mind<lb break="yes"/>the most beautiful lakes of the mountains of<lb break="yes"/>Switzerland. Large avenues of elms and poplars<lb break="yes"/>lead in every direction to the capital; and two<lb break="yes"/>aqueducts, constructed overs arches of very great<lb break="yes"/>elevation, cross the plain, and exhibit an appear-<lb break="no"/>ance equally agreeable and interesting. The<lb break="yes" />magnificent convent of Nuestra Senoro de Gua-<lb break="no"/>dalope, appears joined to the mountains of Tepey-<lb break="no"/>acack, among ravines, which shelter a few date<lb break="yes"/>and young yucca trees. Towards the south, the<lb break="yes"/>whole tract between <choice>
                            <sic>San, Angel</sic>
                            <corr type="editorial">San Angel,</corr>
                        </choice> Tacabaya, and<lb break="yes"/>San Augustin de las Cuevas, appears an im-<lb break="no"/>mense garden of orange, peach, apple, cherry,<lb break="yes"/>and other European fruit trees. This beautiful<lb break="yes"/>cultivation forms a singular contrast with the wild<lb break="yes"/>appearance of the naked mountains which en-<lb break="no" />close the valley, among which the famous volcanos<lb break="yes"/>of La Puebla, Popocantepelt and Iztaccicichualt<lb break="yes"/>are the most distinguished. The first of these<lb break="yes"/>forms an enormous cone, of which the crater,<lb break="yes"/>continually inflamed, and throwing up smoke and<lb break="yes"/>ashes, opens in the midst of eternal snows.&#x201D;</p>
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