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Encyclopedia > Ciuteoteo

In Aztec mythology, the Cihuateteo (also Ciuteoteo or Ciuateoteo) were the spirits of human women who died in childbirth (mociuaquetzque.). Childbirth was considered a form of battle, and its victims were honored as fallen warriors. Their physical remains were thought to strengthen soldiers in battle while their spirits became the much-feared Cihuateteo who accompanied the setting sun in the west. They also haunted crossroads at night, stealing children and causing sicknesses, especially seizures and madness, and seducing men to sexual misbehavior.


Their images appear with the beginning day signs of the five western trecena, (1 Deer, 1 Rain, 1 Monkey, 1 House, and 1 Eagle) during which they were thought to descend to the earth and cause particularly dangerous mischief. They are depicted with skeletal faces and with eagle claws for hands.


They are associated with the goddess Ciucoatl and are sometimes considered envoys of Mictlan, the world of the dead.


Compare: Erinyes, La Llorona




  Results from FactBites:
 
Ciuteoteo (77 words)
In Aztec mythology, the Ciuteoteo were spirits of the underworld who lived under the protection Ciucoatl.
They carry down the sun from the highest point of the sky to its home in the underworld in the shape of eagles, bringing illness to children.
Article "Ciuteoteo" created on 05 August 1997; last modified on 14 May 1998 (Revision 2).
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