Garnet-throated Hummingbird (see Hunn, attestations)
QUETZAL-HUĪTZIL-IN, literally, “hummingbird of precious plumage,” Garnet-throated Hummingbird (Lamprolaima rhami) [FC: 24 Quetzalhuyjtzilin] “Its throat is chili-red, its wing-bend ruddy. Its breast is green. Its wings and its tail [feathers] resemble quetzal feathers.” Martin del Campo identified this as the Broad-tailed Hummingbird. However, that species does not show a green breast nor ruddy wing-bend. The Garnet-throated Hummingbird is a better match.
Eugene Hunn says this "is no doubt 'Quetzal hummingbird,' as in the [Florentine] Codex, which most likely references a color scheme reminiscent of that of the Resplendent Quetzal, brilliant blue-green, maybe combined with red. He illustrated this twice, so the name might well have referred to more than one species (personal communication, 21 April 2024). Chris Carlson brought this example to our attention. The orthography for this bird name has been normalized from the way it appears in Franciscus Hernández, "Historiae animalivm et mineralivm Novae Hispaniae” (https://gdz.sub.uni-goettingen.de/id/PPN473544997).