Historias de la Conquista del Mayab ("Histories of the Conquest of the Mayab") is a Mexican manuscript ostensibly written in 1725 by an otherwise unknown friar, Joseph de San Buena Ventura, who compiled it from various older sources. The manuscript is now regarded as a forgery created in the 1950s or 1960s, with information derived from a Spanish translation of Sylvanus G. Morley's 1947 book The Ancient Maya. It is written on modern paper, which cannot date from earlier than the 19th century.

Historias de la Conquista del Mayab appears to have been produced by the same forger as Las Memorias de Guerrero, the Historia de la pazificacion de las tierras de los indios itzaes y las ganzias de el tayasal y de todos los pueblos de la alaguna en el año 1697, and the Canek Manuscript, with which it bears a number of similarities.

The manuscript was acquired by the Archivo de Historia de México Condumex [1] in Mexico City shortly after 1970.

References

  1. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2017-01-13. Retrieved 2017-01-09.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  • Prem, Hanns J. (1999). "The "Canek Manuscript" and Other Faked Documents". Ancient Mesoamerica. 10 (2): 297–311. doi:10.1017/S0956536199102062. ISSN 0956-5361. S2CID 162449014.
  • San Buenaventura, Joseph de (1994). Gabriela Solís Robleda and Pedro Bracamonte y Sosa (ed.). Historias de la Conquista del Mayab, 1511–1679. Mérida: Universidad Autónoma de Yucatán.


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