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FBI has returned a 500-year-old stolen document by Hernán Cortés Spanish conquerors in Mexico.
The manuscript page reached 1527 and is one of the 15 pages from 1985 to 1985 and 1993 from Mexico, the U.S. Research Agency said the US researcher.
Page – Describing payments for supplies for expeditions – it was discovered in the US and was repeated on Wednesday.
Cortés was an explorer that brought the end of the Aztec Empire and helped spread the way for the Spanish Colonization of America. The details of the manuscripts crosses the one that would become a new Spain.
At its height, Colony stretched throughout the western and Central North America and Latin America.
The previous document was written after the governor of the New Spain of the Spanish Crown Cortés.
The Mexican National Archive counted the document between a collection of paper signed by Cortés, but 15 pages were lacking when microfilms were placed in 1993.
The recovered pages was a number written in wax, proposing the archivist in 1985-1986, proposing that he stole between two cataloging periods.
The Mexican government requested the support of the FBI until the support of the crime group of FBI to find missing documents in 2024, which pages were taken and how certain pages were torn.
FBI said the open source research document was located in the US.
The agency has not revealed that the manuscript was found or when he was the owner.
No one will put in front of theft in front of theft.
Documents “really gives a lot of cloths, the planning and preparation of the territory,” he said to pay “Payment of Ordinary Gold Preparation for the preparation of spices”.
Eastern and southern Asian areas were the so-called “spice lands”. The Europeans wanted to find a faster commercial career in the west sailing, but they were so landed in America.
Cortés would go to Northwestern Mexico and Baja California Peninsula.
The document is a political strain in Mexico and the US, Trump Administration and the US Mexican Migration Migration.
However, FBI says, being one of the largest consumers of antiquity, had the responsibility of the US to deal with the traffic of artifacts.
Mrs. Dittmer said, “They are protected goods such as protected parts and represent valuable moments in Mexican history, so it is something that Mexicans have a better understanding of history.”
He said the FBI was a decision to locate and repeat the remaining pages that are still missing.
Another document signed by Cortés returned to Mexico in 2023.