AZTECS
The Aztecs =� (the Mexica
and 6 other tribes all speaking the language Nahua) came from the
north;
from Aztlan
where they had emerged from Chicomoztoc (7 Caves) -- they were one of seven
Nahua
speaking
tribes;�
������������������������ Acolhua,
������������������������ Chalca, �������
������������������������ Tepaneca,
������������������������ Tlalhuica,
������������������������ Tlaxcalteca,
������������������������ Xochimilca,
������������������������ Mexica.� (last
to arrive in Valley of Mexico)
Mexica left Aztlan,
migrated to Valley of Mexico; settled, sometime after l25O A.D., in Chapultepec
(near the Western shore of the Lake of Texcoco).�
In l3l9 they were captured by their neighbors and expelled from
Chapultepec.� In l325 they saw eagle carrying
serpent crouched on a prickly pear on an Island in Lake Texcoco.� There on the island of Tenochtitlan they
settled, eventually defeated the Tepanecs (1428), and went on to create an
empire.�� Aztec empire grew on a
foundation of Mexica aggressiveness.�
CREATION - originally there were two primordial
deities �
Ometecuhtli
("Lord of Duality") and Omecihuatl ("Lady of
Duality")
������ �������� They
had four sons: (all 4 could be seen as manifestations of Tezcatlipoca)
� l) Xipe Totec� (Red Tezcatlipoca)���������� (Tezcatlipoca = "Smoking
Mirror")
� 2) Tezcatlipoca�� (Black Tezcatlipoca)�� (lord of the night sky)
� 3) Quetzalcoatl�� (White Tezcatlipoca)� ("Feathered Serpent" -- Morning
Star Associations.)
� 4) Huitzilopochtli�� (Blue Tezcatlipoca)���
Quetzalcoatl and Huitzilopochtli commissioned to
create further life
��������� (including gods, humans, animals,
etc.:
��������� lst created� fire�
&� a half-sun
����� then��
the first man and woman� (Oxomoco
and Cipactonal)
������������������� (which one is male varies)
(who are direct ancestors
������������������� of the common people --
the macehualtin)
����� then the lord and lady of the underworld
(Mictlantecuhtli & Mictecacihuatl)
�������������� &������ the calendar was fixed
�������������� &����� the heavens and waters were created, and floating
����������������������������� on the waters
was the great crocodilian
����������������������������� monster Cipactli,
which became the earth's
�����������������������������
surface(crocodile and toad are earth
������������������������� ���������������metaphors).
�������������� &��� Tlaloc the rain
god was created, and his spouse, Chalchiuhtlicue�
������������ then����� Oxomoco and Cipactonal bore a son, Piltzin-tecuhtli,
������������������������� the first man to marry;
he married a maiden
������������������������� created from the
hairs of the maiden Xochiquetzal
�After this original "Genesis" comes
a sequence of Four World Ages:
���� l) Jaguar Sun - (Nahui Ocelotl)
-� assigned to the Earth, Tezcatlipoca
����� ���������������presiding.�
World populated by giants, subsisting on
������������������� acorns.� Man (the giants) was eaten by jaguars, which
������������������������ ended this world age.
���� 2) Wind Sun - (Nahui Ehecatl)
-� assigned to Wind/Air,� Quetzalcoatl
������������������� presiding.� Human population living on pi�on nuts,
������������������� transformed into monkeys,
and the age was terminated by
������������������� Hurricanes.
���� 3) Rain Sun - (Nahui Quiahuitl)
- assigned to Fire, Tlaloc presiding.�
������������������� Population subsisting on a
wild aquatic, seed bearing
������������������� plant (perhaps water
lily), was transformed into turkeys,
������������������� butterflies, and dogs, and
then destroyed by a great
������������������� fiery rain.
���� 4) Water Sun - (Nahui Atl)
- assigned to Water, presided over by
������������������� Chalchiuhtlicue.� Age terminated by a great deluge/flood,
������������������� after which the population
(which had lived on another
������������������� wild seed bearing plant)
was turned into fish.
���� 5) Earthquake Sun - (Nahui Olin)
- (Olin/Ollin, usually called
������������������� "Movement") -
this is the age in which we are living
������������������� now:� it is to terminate in great
earthquakes.� After
������������������� the end of the fourth Age,
Tezcatlipoca and Quetzalcoatl
������������������� had to initiate the
present Age.� In one version, they
������������������� split the Cipactli monster
in half, and the upper half
������������������� formed the earth and the
lower half formed the heavens.�
������������������� The Earthquake Sun began
in the year 1 Tochtli 978 A.D.
This splitting of Cipactli
angers the other gods, who descend to console her by decreeing that henceforth
from her shall come
all things necessary for man's life.�
From her hair they made trees, flowers, and herbs;
������� from her skin comes grass and
small flowers; from her eyes come wells, springs, and small caverns;
from her mouth,
rivers and large caves;��
������ from her nose, mountain valleys;
and from her shoulders, mountains.��
"And then this terrible creature
cried out in the
night and refused to bring forth fruit if not soaked with blood and fed with
human hearts".
�����
��� ��Next Tezcatlipoca turned into Mixcoatl-Camaxtli
and produced fire,
������ twirling the fire sticks.
���� Next, Mankind is created... Quetzalcoatl
gets bones, the gods drip
�������� their own blood on the bones, and
after four days a male child
�������� emerges and after four more days, a
female comes.
Creation
of Mankind - Quetzalcoatl
descended to the underworld to obtain from its ruler, Mictlantecuhtli,
bones and ashes of
the previous generation of humanity, from which to recreate man.� Mictlantecuhtli
grants the request,
but harasses the departing Quetzalcoatl, so that Quetzalcoatl
drops the bones, breaking
them into pieces,
accounting for the varying stature of man.�
Finally Quetzalcoatl delivers his precious cargo
to the gods
assembled in Tamoanchan.
���� Cihuacoatl-Quilaztli grinds the
bone fragments into a mass, places them
���������� into a precious vessel.
����� thickly on the mass of ground up
bones.� After four days a male child
����� emerges and after four more days, a
female infant.
Sustenance
Mountain - Quetzalcoatl
finds maize in mountain, but can't bring
���������� it back.� Nanahuatl brings it back for mankind.�
(Another version has
Centeotl, son of Piltzintecuhtli (himself the son of the Oxomoco
and Cipactonal) and Xochiquetzal, having his body parts turned
into the wild plants.
�����������
� Version A.�
Quetzalcoatl, transformed into a black
ant, was led to
���� "sustenance Mountain" (Tonacatepetl)
by a red ant.� Here he got some
���� maize grains and brought them back to Tamoanchan,
where the gods
���� decided after tasting it that mankind
should have it.� Quetzalcoatl
���� fails to carry "sustenance
mountain" on his back to mankind, but
���� Nanahuatl (a diseased,
pauper god) succeeds.
� Variant B.��
The gods descended to the cavern where lived Piltzintecuhtli,
��������� son of the primal couple (Oxomoco
and Cipactonal), and his wife,
��������� Xochiquetzal.� Their son, Centeotl was
buried.� From his hair
��������� sprang cotton; from his ears, two
useful seed bearing wild plants;�
��������� from his nose, chia;� from his fingers the sweet potato;�
��������� from his nails a long variety of
maize;� from the remainder of
����� ����his body, many other food plants.
��������
Alcohol
/ Octli - Mayahuel,
a moon maiden, torn to pieces and bones buried.
From the grave
sprang up the maguey, from which octli (pulque) was
derived.
��������� For man's enjoyment:� Mayahuel, the maiden, was torn to
pieces by
�������������� her monster guardians (Tzitzimime),
after she had been
�������������� stolen from them by Quetzalcoatl.� Quetzalcoatl-Ehecatl buried
�������������� the mangled bones of Mayahuel,
and from the grave sprang the
����� ���������agave/maguey plant, from which pulque / octli is
made.�
Sun
and Moon Created -� 26 years after the creation of the earth,
the
��������� diseased but courageous pauper god Nanahuatl,� and the rich
��������� but cowardly Tecciztecatl
leap into a great fire and are
���������� transformed into the sun and the
moon respectively.�
Autosacrifice
(death) of the Gods -� The gods assembled and sacrificed
����� themselves into the fire so as to
provide the newly created sun with�
nourishment.
Human
Wars and Human Sacrifice
-� The death of the gods was not enough
for
����� the sun.� The sun and earth had an insatiable craving for hearts and blood.
�� And that is where man becomes responsible
for the burden.�� War was instituted,
for the primary purpose of obtaining sacrificial victims.
GODS� - Tezcatlipoca� (Smoking Mirror) - black god of the night
sky, a
����� transformer.� Missing a foot (or a leg, which was bitten off by the
���� Cipactli (or Acipactli)
monster.
����
���� Quetzalcoatl -� Also found in the guises and/or names of
�������������� Ehecatl, Nine Wind, Nine
Snake, and
�������������� Xolotl (Xolotl,
the canine deity and equivalent of the evening
������������������� star, is the twin of Quetzalcoatl).
�������������� God of Life and Fertility,
Inventor of Agriculture, Patron of
��������������������� Twins.�
���� Tlaloc - God of Rain and
Thunder
���� Xipe Totec - ("Flayed
Lord"), God of Spring Planting, patron of
�������������� jewelers.� Also called Yopi.
������������� �����������
���� Huitzil-opochtli - God of
War, Hunting, and the Sun.� Later
�������������� associated with the eagle,
emblem of the sun (cf.
�����������������
Mixe witzn 'eagle')
���� Mictlantecuhtli - 'Lord of the Land of the Dead' in the
underworld.
����������� (as with the Greeks, only part of
the underworld was the land of
�������������� the dead)
���� Huehueteotl -� Aged God, a god of Fire
���� Coatlicue� - "Serpent Skirt"� earth fertility an creator goddess.�
�������������� Has skull or serpent for her
head;
�������������� wears a necklace of human
hearts.�
�������������� Has taloned feet (cf. matlacihuatl
- La llorona)
���� Tlazolteotl - Goddess of
Filth.�� Earth goddess; also
procreation,
����������� ���carnal sin, and confession.
���� Yacatecuhtli - God of
Merchants��
For the hazardous journey after death the dead were provided with food, warm blankets, paper flags, water, and dogs.� A jade bead was placed in the mouth of a dead person, to serve as a substitute heart, and he took presents for the lord and lady of the underworld...
Levels ‑ Hazards
���� 1.� River��� (dogs helps person across, reddish color)
���� 2.� Clashing high mountains
���� 3.� obsidian mountain
���� 4.� icy winds
���� 5.� flapping flags all over
���� 6.� arrows shot at soul
���� 7.� ferocious beasts eat hearts
���� 8.� narrow passages between hard rocks
���� 9.� darkness and rest ‑ Chicnahuamictlan.�
���� dead souls could
return to earth for food once a year, and at that time the people on earth made
big festivals.� (cf. today:�
Todos Santos and d�a de los muertos)
SOCIAL STRUCTURE (Major Divisions)
Nobility
�Rulers����
tlatoque (pl.)��
'supreme rulers of major political bodies (empires,
������������������������������ cities,
towns)'��� tlatoani (sing.)
����
"Chiefs"��� tetecutin (pl.)� 'high military and governmental positions'
��������������������������������� tecuhtli
(sing.)
Nobles����� pipiltin (pl.)� 'children of rulers and "chiefs",
occupied
���������������������������� governmental,
religious, and military positions)
��������������������������������� pilli
(sing.)
Intermediate
positions
Merchants���� pochteca (pl.)���� Merchants organized into guilds and
trading over
�������������������������������� long
distances.� pochtecatl
(sing.)
Luxury artisans�� toltecca (pl.)� Artisans of crafts such as gold and
����������������������������������
featherworking.� some guild
organized, others
����� �����������������������������worked for the state.�� tolteccatl (sing)
Commoners
"Free
commoners"� macehualtin
(pl.)���� 'common man', organized into
������������������������������������� calpulli,
agriculturalists, fishers and utilitarian
������������ �������������������������craftsmen.��� macehualli (sing.)
Rural tenants���� mayeque (pl. &
sing.)� commoners who worked on the
private
��������������������������������������������
lands of the nobility.
����
Slaves����������� tlacotin (pl.)���� slaves - attained their status through
gambling,
������������������������������������ economic
necessity, or a criminal act (usually theft)
�������������������������������������� tlacotli�� (sing.)