Dresden Codex is a famous classic, so it got its name because it was kept in the German city of S? 0? 1 in the library of CHSchelandes. The librarian of the Royal Library bought this book on 1739. At the end of World War II, the allied bombing destroyed the city and the manuscript of this book. Today, scholars can only study it with books from19th century. It tells the story of three worlds that once existed, and each world was destroyed by a big flood. The inhabitants of the first world are dwarves, or "repairmen", who build cities on the ruins. At dawn, the dwarf turned to stone. The inhabitants of the second world are "cross-border people", and the outcome of this world is the same as that of the first world. The inhabitants of the third world are Maya, and the outcome is the same. The arrival of the Spanish took place in the fourth world, which is now the world, and it will be swept away by another devastating flood. The fate of the Paris Codex can be described as the rest of my life. 1859, a scholar "searched for books" in the waste books beside the chimney of the Paris Library and found this book that was about to be scrapped. He made a report to the museum, and the museum took back the book. Of the three manuscripts, the Paris Manuscript is the most "pocket-sized", with a length of only 1.45 meters.
The Transcript of Madrid was found around 1860. At that time, it was divided into two, and the owners were a university professor and a private book collector. With the help of busybodies, professors and book collectors have grown into "second ventures" of Madrid National Library. The manuscript is divided into 56 pages and is 6.7 meters long after expansion. Its cultural relics are precious.