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Encyclopedia > Human sacrifice in Aztec culture
The Aztec world
Aztec society

Nahuatl language
Aztec calendar
Aztec religion
Aztec mythology
Human sacrifice in Aztec culture Image File history File links No higher resolution available. ... Aztec is a term used to refer to certain ethnic groups of central Mexico, particularly those groups who spoke the Nahuatl language and who achieved political and military dominance over large parts of Mesoamerica in the 14th, 15th and 16th centuries, a period referred to as the Late post-Classic... // Aztec society traditionally was divided into two classes; the macehualli (people) or peasantry and the pilli or nobility. ... Nahuatl ( [1] is a term applied to a group of related languages and dialects of the Aztecan [2] branch of the Uto-Aztecan language family, indigenous to central Mexico. ... The Aztec calendar was the calendar of the Aztec people of Pre-Columbian Mexico. ... Aztec religion was a Mesoamerican religion combining elements of polytheism, shamanism and animism within a framework of astronomy and calendrics. ... The Aztec civilization recognized a polytheistic mythology, which contained the many gods and supernatural creatures from their religious beliefs. ...

Aztec history

Aztlán
Aztec codices
Aztec warfare
Aztec Triple Alliance
Spanish conquest of Mexico
Siege of Tenochtitlan
La Noche Triste
Hernán Cortés The Aztecs were a Pre-Columbian Mesoamerican people of central Mexico in the 14th, 15th and 16th centuries. ... For other uses, see Aztlán (disambiguation). ... Detail of first page from the Boturini Codex, depicting the departure from Aztlán. ... Note: This page or section contains IPA phonetic symbols in Unicode. ... The Aztec Triple Alliance, also known as The Aztec Empire, was an alliance of three Aztec city-states: Tenochtitlán; Texcoco; and Tlacopán. ... Aztec empire The Spanish conquest of the Aztec Empire was one of the most important campaigns in the Spanish colonization of America. ... Combatants Spain Tlaxcallān Aztec Empire Commanders Hernán Cortés Pedro de Alvarado Cuitláhuac Cuauhtémoc Strength 86 cavalry 900 infantry 80,000 natives 100,000- 300,000 warriors[1] Casualties 20,000 natives dead 100,000 dead 100,000 civilian dead The Siege of Tenochtitlan ended in... Hernán Cortés Hernán Cortés, marqués del Valle de Oaxaca (1485–December 2, 1547) was the conquistador who conquered Mexico for Spain. ... Hernán(do) Cortés Pizarro, 1st Marqués del Valle de Oaxaca (1485–December 2, 1547) was the conquistador who became famous for leading the military expedition that initiated the Spanish Conquest of Mexico. ...

Hueyi Tlatoani

Acamapichtli (13761395)
Huitzilíhuitl (13951417)
Chimalpopoca (14171427)
Itzcóatl (14271440)
Moctezuma I (14401469)
Axayacatl (14691481)
Tízoc (14811486)
Ahuitzotl (14861502)
Moctezuma II (15021520)
Cuitláhuac (1520)
Cuauhtémoc (15201521) Huey Tlatoani (Nahuatl great speaker, also spelt Uei Tlatoani or Hueyi Tlahtoani; plural Huey Tlatoque) was the Nahuatl title used for the emperor of the Mexica (Aztec). ... Acamapichtli was the first tlatoani (king) of the Aztecs of Tenochtitlan. ... // Events March – The treaty between England and France is extended until April of 1377. ... Events End of reign of Hungary by Capet-Anjou family. ... Huitzilíhuitl (died circa 1417) was the second Tlatoani, or Aztec ruler of Tenochtitlan. ... Events End of reign of Hungary by Capet-Anjou family. ... Events Antipope Benedict XIII is deposed, and Pope Martin V is elected. ... Chimalpopoca (died circa 1427) was the third Tlatoani, or Aztec ruler of Tenochtitlán. ... Events Antipope Benedict XIII is deposed, and Pope Martin V is elected. ... Events Lincoln College, a constituent college of the University of Oxford, is founded. ... Itzcoatl (Obsidian Serpent in Nahuatl) was the fourth tlatoani (emperor) of the Aztecs, ruling from 1427 (or 1428) to 1440, the period when the Mexica (as the Aztecs called themselves) threw off the domination of the Tepanecs and laid the foundations for the eventual Aztec Empire. ... Events Lincoln College, a constituent college of the University of Oxford, is founded. ... For alternative meanings, see number 1440. ... Moctezuma Ilhuicamina, or Moctezuma I (also known as Montezuma I) (the surname meaning solitary one who shoots an arrow into the sky) was born to Huitzilihuitl, the second Aztec Emperor. ... For alternative meanings, see number 1440. ... Events July 26 - Battle of Edgecote Moor October 17 - Prince Ferdinand of Aragon wed princess Isabella of Castile. ... Axayacatl (pron. ... Events July 26 - Battle of Edgecote Moor October 17 - Prince Ferdinand of Aragon wed princess Isabella of Castile. ... Year 1481 was a common year starting on Monday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar). ... Tízoc was the Aztec ruler (Tlatoani) of the city of Tenochtitlán. ... Year 1481 was a common year starting on Monday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar). ... Events Tízoc, Aztec ruler of Tenochtitlan dies. ... Auítzotl (sometimes rendered as Ahuitzotl) was the Aztec ruler of the city of Tenochtitlán. ... Events Tízoc, Aztec ruler of Tenochtitlan dies. ... 1502 was a common year starting on Wednesday (see link for calendar) of the Gregorian calendar. ... Moctezuma or Montezuma II, also known as Motecuhzoma Xocoyotzin (c. ... 1502 was a common year starting on Wednesday (see link for calendar) of the Gregorian calendar. ... Year 1520 (MDXX) was a leap year starting on Sunday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar. ... Cuitláhuac was the Aztec ruler (Tlatoani) of the city of Tenochtitlán from June to October 1520. ... Year 1520 (MDXX) was a leap year starting on Sunday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar. ... For other uses, see Cuauhtémoc (disambiguation). ... Year 1520 (MDXX) was a leap year starting on Sunday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar. ... Events January 3 - Pope Leo X excommunicates Martin Luther in the papal bull Decet Romanum Pontificem. ...

Human sacrifice was an aspect of historical Aztec culture/religion, although the extent of the practice is debated by scholars. The Spaniards who first met the Aztecs explicitly stated in their writings that human sacrifice was widely practiced in Mesoamerica. For example, Bernal Díaz's The Conquest of New Spain includes eye-witness accounts of the remains of sacrificial victims. In addition, there are a number of second-hand accounts of human sacrifices written by Spanish friars, told to them by native eye-witnesses. Human sacrifice is the act of killing a human being for the purposes of making an offering to a deity or other, normally supernatural, power. ... Aztec is a term used to refer to certain ethnic groups of central Mexico, particularly those groups who spoke the Nahuatl language and who achieved political and military dominance over large parts of Mesoamerica in the 14th, 15th and 16th centuries, a period referred to as the Late post-Classic... The Spanish people or Spaniards are an ethnic group native to Spain, in southwestern Europe, who are primarily descended from the autochthonous pre-Indo-European Euskaldunak, Latin, Visigothic, Celtic and Moorish peoples. ... This article is about the culture area. ... Bernal Díaz del Castillo memorial, in Medina del Campo (Spain) Bernal Díaz del Castillo (1492 or 1493 - 1584) was a conquistador, who wrote an eyewitness account of the conquest of Mexico by the Spaniards under Hernán Cortés, himself serving as a rodelero under Cortez. ... The Conquest of New Spain is the first person conquistador narrative of Bernal Díaz del Castillo (1492 or 1493 - 1581), a 16th century soldier, settler and conqueror who served with Francisco Hernández de Córdoba, Juan de Grijalva and Hernán Cortés in Mexico and Yucatan, and...


Presently, scholars largely accept that human sacrifice was practiced in the Aztec Empire as well as throughout pre-Columbian Mesoamerica. Since the late 1970s, excavations of the offerings in the Great Pyramid of Tenochtitlan, Teotihuacán's Pyramid of the Moon and other archaeological sites have provided physical evidence of human sacrifice among the Mesoamerican peoples.[1][2][3] The 1970s decade refers to the years from 1970 to 1979, also called The Seventies. ... The Great Pyramid or Templo Mayor was the main temple of the Aztec capital of Tenochtitlan (modern Mexico City). ... Teotihuacán[1] was, at its height in the first half of the 1st millennium CE, the largest pre-Columbian city in the Americas. ... Teotihuacan is the largest Pre-Columbian archeological site in the Americas. ...


A wide number of interpretations of the Aztec practice of human sacrifice have been proposed by modern scholars, both with regards to its religious and social significance. For example, one theory that has been widely discredited is that the Mesoamerican diet was lacking protein and that cannibalism of sacrificial victims was a necessary part of the Aztec diet.[4] Other theories link the practice to special socio-psychological factors or see it as a political tool. Most Mesoamerican scholars however see it as a part of the millennia-long cultural tradition of human sacrifice in Mesoamerica. Cannibal redirects here. ...


Human sacrifice among pre-Columbian indigenous populations is a controversial topic today. The discussion of human sacrifice is also tied with the classic conflict between viewing indigenous peoples as either "noble savages" or "primitive barbarians" also within modern scholarship, where some scholars tend to romanticize the description of human sacrifice while others tend to exaggerate it.[5] A section of Benjamin Wests The Death of General Wolfe; Wests depiction of this American Indian has been considered an idealization in the tradition of the Noble savage (Fryd, 75) In the 17th century culture of Primitivism the noble savage, uncorrupted by the influences of civilization, was considered... For other uses, see Barbarian (disambiguation). ...

Contents

The antecedents of Mesoamerican sacrifice

The practice of human sacrifice was widespread in the Mesoamerican and in the South American cultures during the Inca Empire.[6][7] Like all other known pre-Columbian civilizations of Mesoamerica, the Aztecs practiced human sacrifices. The extant sources describe how the Aztecs sacrificed human victims on each of their eighteen festivities, one festivity for each of their 20-day months.[8] It is unknown if the Aztecs engaged in human sacrifice before they reached the Anahuac valley and started absorbing other cultural influences. The first human sacrifice reported in the sources was the sacrifice and skinning of the daughter of the king Cóxcox of Culhuacán, this story is a part of the legend of the foundation of Tenochtitlan.[9] Several ethnohistorical sources state that under the guidance of Tlacaelel the importance of human sacrifice in Aztec history was given extra emphasis. Human sacrifice is the act of killing a human being for the purposes of making an offering to a deity or other, normally supernatural, power. ... South America South America is a continent crossed by the equator, with most of its area in the Southern Hemisphere. ... For the a general view of Inca civilisation, people and culture, see Incas. ... For the city in Mexico, see Anáhuac, Nuevo León. ... Tenochtitlan, looking east. ... Tlacaelel (1397 - 1487) was the nephew of Itzcoatl (1427 - 1440) and brother of Moctezuma I (1440 - 1469), the first and second Mexica emperors. ...


The role of sacrifice in Mesoamerica

Human sacrifice as shown in the Codex Magliabechiano.
Human sacrifice as shown in the Codex Magliabechiano.

Sacrifice was a common theme in Mesoamerican cultures. In the Aztec "Legend of the Five Suns", all the gods sacrificed themselves so that mankind could live. Some years after the Spanish conquest of Mexico, a body of Franciscans confronted the remaining Aztec priesthood and demanded, under threat of death, that they desist from their murderous practice. The priests defended themselves as follows: Aztec human sacrifice, from Codex Mendoza, a postcortesian document, made by request of Viceroy Mendoza, but rendered by native scribes (tlacuilos) File links The following pages link to this file: Aztec Categories: Author died more than 100 years ago public domain images ... Aztec human sacrifice, from Codex Mendoza, a postcortesian document, made by request of Viceroy Mendoza, but rendered by native scribes (tlacuilos) File links The following pages link to this file: Aztec Categories: Author died more than 100 years ago public domain images ... Detail of first page from the Boturini Codex, depicting the departure from Aztlán. ... Aztec empire The Spanish conquest of the Aztec Empire was one of the most important campaigns in the Spanish colonization of America. ...

Life is because of the gods; with their sacrifice they gave us life [...]. They produce our sustenance [...] which nourishes life.[10]

What the Aztec priests were referring to was a central Mesoamerican belief: that a great, on-going sacrifice sustains the universe. Everything is tonacayotl: the "spiritual flesh-hood" or "bodily [sacrificial] presence" of the gods on earth. Everything —earth, crops, moon, stars and people— springs from the severed or buried bodies, fingers, blood or the heads of the sacrificed gods. Humanity itself is macehualli, "those deserved and brought back to life through penance".[11] A strong sense of indebtedness was connected with this worldview. Indeed, nextlahualli (debt-payment) was a commonly used metaphor for human sacrifice, and, as Bernardino de Sahagún reported, it was said that the victim was someone who "gave her service". Bernardino de Sahagún Bernardino de Sahagún (1499 – October 23, 1590), was a Franciscan missionary to the Aztec (Nahua) people of Mexico, best known as the compiler of the Florentine Codex, also known as Historia general de las cosas de Nueva España (General History of the Things of...


Human sacrifice was in this sense the highest level of an entire panopoly of offerings through which the Aztecs sought to repay their debt to the gods. Both Sahagún and Toribio de Benavente (also called "Motolinía") observed that the Aztecs gladly parted with everything: burying, smashing, sinking, slaying vast quantities of quail, rabbits, dogs, feathers, flowers, insects, beans, grains, paper, rubber and treasures as sacrifices. Even the "stage" for human sacrifice, the massive temple-pyramids, was an offering mound: crammed with treasures, grains, soil and human and animal sacrifices that were buried as gifts to the deities. Adorned with the land's finest art, treasure and victims, these temples had become buried offerings under new structures every half a century. Fray Toribio de Benavente ( ? Benavente, Spain- 1568, Mexico City) also known as Motolinia was a Franciscan missionary and among the first 12 clerics to arrive in New Spain in May 1524. ...


The sacrifice of animals was common, a practice for which the Aztecs bred dogs, eagles, jaguars and deer. Objects also were sacrificed, broken and offered to their gods. The cult of Quetzalcóatl required the sacrifice of butterflies and hummingbirds. Quetzalcoatl (feathered snake, in Nahuatl: Ketsalkoatl, in Spanish: Quetzalcóatl) is the Aztec name for the Feathered-Serpent deity of ancient Mesoamerica, one of the main gods of many Mexican and northern Central American civilizations. ...


Self-sacrifice was also quite common; people would offer maguey thorns, tainted with their own blood and, like the Maya kings, would offer blood from their tongue, ear lobes, or penises[12][13] Blood held a central place in Mesoamerican cultures. The Florentine Codex reports that in one of the creation myths Quetzalcóatl offered blood extracted from a wound in his own penis to give life to humanity. There are several other myths in which Nahua gods offer their blood to help humanity.[14] ... Page 51 of Book IX from the Florentine Codex. ... The Nahua are a group of indigenous peoples of Mexico. ...


Common people would offer maguey thorns with their blood.[15] Lloyd deMause has argued that, like present-day self harmers, the Aztecs also practiced bloodletting from cuts made with obsidian knives or bone needles on fleshy parts of the body, like earlobes, lips, tongue, chest and calves.[16] This was considered private and a personal act of penitence toward the gods. The thorns were put in a ball of straw called zacatapayoli and later placed in an adoratorium. Please wikify (format) this article as suggested in the Guide to layout and the Manual of Style. ...

Maya Queen "Lady Xoc" draws a barbed rope through her pierced tongue in the Yaxchilan Lintel 24.
Maya Queen "Lady Xoc" draws a barbed rope through her pierced tongue in the Yaxchilan Lintel 24.

During social or environmental stress, the Maya kings would make a wound on their tongue or on their penis, and pass a piece of rope through it.[17] If this supreme sacrifice failed it was believed the entire dynasty could fall. Image File history File links No higher resolution available. ... Image File history File links No higher resolution available. ... Lintel 24, structure 23, Yaxchilan (drawn by Charnay). ...

The 52-year cycle

The cycle of fifty-two years was central to Mesoamerican cultures. The Nahua's religious beliefs were based on a great fear that the universe would collapse after each cycle if the gods were not strong enough. Every fifty-two years a special New Fire ceremony was performed.[18] All fires were extinguished and at midnight a sacrifice was made. The Aztecs waited for the dawn. If the Sun appeared it meant that the sacrifices for this cycle had been enough. A fire was ignited on the body of a victim, and this new fire was taken to every house, city and town. Rejoicing was general: a new cycle of fifty-two years was beginning, and the end of the world had been postponed, at least for another 52-year century. (A similar ceremony is still practiced by small indigenous groups, but without human sacrifice.) The ceremony was older than the Aztecs. While originally it was believed it was a matter of luck to survive, the Aztecs thought that constant sacrifice through the fifty-two year cycle could postpone the end. The Aztec glyph for a New Fire ceremony, with the year Two Reed (Ome Acatl). ... Sol redirects here. ...


According to Miguel León-Portilla, Tlacaelel reformed the original Nahua religion and the Aztecs viewed themselves as the main representatives for feeding the gods. This gave them a new sense of identity, from "people without face" as they were called by hostile neighbours, to the people in charge of the existence of the universe. Thus they began to call themselves "The people of the sun". Other researchers dispute León-Portilla's perspective, pointing to the relative lack of primary sources.[citation needed] Miguel León-Portilla (born in Mexico City, 22 February 1926) is a Mexican anthropologist and historian, and the prime authority on Nahuatl thought and literature. ... Tlacaelel (1397 - 1487) was the nephew of Itzcoatl (1427 - 1440) and brother of Moctezuma I (1440 - 1469), the first and second Mexica emperors. ...


Sacrifices to specific gods

Huitzilopochtli

Huitzilopochtli was the tribal deity of the Mexica and, as such, he represented the character of the Mexica people and was often identified with the sun at the zenith, and with warfare. // Huitzilopochtli, as depicted in the Codex Telleriano-Remensis. ... The word Aztec is usually used as a historical term, although some contemporary Nahuatl speakers would consider themselves Aztecs. ...


When the Aztecs sacrificed people to Huitzilopochtli the victim would be placed on a sacrificial stone.[19] Then the priest would cut through the abdomen with an obsidian or flint blade.[20] The heart would be torn out still beating and held towards the sky in honor to the Sun-God; the body would be carried away and either cremated or given to the warrior responsible for the capture of the victim. He would either cut the body in pieces and send them to important people as an offering, or use the pieces for ritual cannibalism. The warrior would thus ascend one step in the hierarchy of the Aztec social classes, a system that rewarded successful warriors.[21] Cannibal redirects here. ...

Victim of sacrificial gladiatorial combat, from Codex Magliabechiano. Note that he is tied to a large stone and his macuahuitl (sword/club) is covered with what appears to be feathers instead of obsidian.
Victim of sacrificial gladiatorial combat, from Codex Magliabechiano. Note that he is tied to a large stone and his macuahuitl (sword/club) is covered with what appears to be feathers instead of obsidian.

Image File history File links No higher resolution available. ... Image File history File links No higher resolution available. ... Detail of first page from the Boturini Codex, depicting the departure from Aztlán. ... Drawing of a 15th century macahuitl The maquahuitl, an Aztec obsidian-edged sword-club, was a devastating cutting weapon capable of easily cleaving to bone (according to a Spanish account, it was capable of easily decapitating a horse), but lacked a point (and thus couldnt be used for thrusting...

Tezcatlipoca

Tezcatlipoca was generally considered the most powerful god, the god of night, sorcery and destiny (the name tezcatlipoca means "smoking mirror", or "obsidian"). The Aztecs believed that Tezcatlipoca created war to provide food and drink to the gods. Tezcatlipoca was known by several epithets including "the Enemy" and "the Enemy of Both Sides", which stress his affinity for discord. Tezcatlipoca had the power to forgive sins and to relieve disease, or to release a man from the fate assigned to him by his date of birth; however, nothing in Tezcatlipoca's nature compelled him to do so. He was capricious and often brought about reversals of fortune. To the Aztecs, he was an all-knowing, all-seeing nearly all-powerful god. One of his names can be translated as "We Who Are His Slaves". Tezcatlipoca as depicted in the Codex Borgia. ... For the food preparation, see Smoking (cooking). ... A mirror, reflecting a vase. ... This article is about a type of volcanic glass. ...


Some captives were sacrificed to Tezcatlipoca in ritual gladiatorial combat. The victim was then tethered in place and given a mock weapon. He died fighting against up to four fully armed jaguar knights and eagle warriors.


A curious sacrifice was that of a young handsome Nahua. Throughout a year he would be dressed in Tezcatlipoca's likeness and treated as a living incarnation of the God. At the end of the year at the festival of Toxcatl he would climb up the temple's steps voluntarily and offer himself for sacrifice. This was accomplished by recruiting a young volunteer and letting him live a luxurious life for the year. The youth would represent Tezcatlipoca on earth; he would get four beautiful women as his companions until he met his destiny, in the meantime he walked through the streets of Tenochtitlan playing a flute. On the day of the sacrifice a feast would be held in Tezcatlipoca's honor. The young man would climb the pyramid, break his flute and surrender his body to the priests. This was one of the more solemn festivities for the Aztecs. Sahagún compared it to the Christian Easter.[22] This article is about the Christian festival. ...


Huehueteotl

To appease Huehueteotl, the fire god and a senior deity, the Aztecs had a ceremony where they prepared a large feast at the end of which they would burn captives and before they died they would be taken from the fire and their hearts would be cut out. Motolinía and Sahagún reported that the Aztecs believed that if they did not placate Huehueteotl a plague of fire would strike their city. The sacrifice was considered an offering to the deity. Just before the slaves died they were removed from the fires to have their hearts extracted.[23] Statue of Huehueteotl in Tijuana, Mexico In Aztec mythology, Xiuhtecuhtli (also Huehueteotl, old god) was the personification of life after death, light in darkness and food during famine. ... Fray Toribio de Benavente ( ? Benavente, Spain- 1568, Mexico City) also known as Motolinia was a Franciscan missionary and among the first 12 clerics to arrive in New Spain in May 1524. ...


Tláloc

Main article: Child sacrifice in pre-Columbian cultures

Tláloc was the god of rain. The Aztecs believed that if sacrifices weren't supplied for Tláloc, rain wouldn't come and their crops wouldn't flourish. Leprosy and rheumatism, diseases caused by Tláloc, would infest the village. Tláloc required the tears of the young as part of the sacrifice. The priests made the children cry during their way to immolation: a good omen that Tláloc would wet the earth in the raining season. In the Florentine Codex, also known as General History of the Things of New Spain, Sahagún wrote: The remains of a sacrificed boy to Huitzilopochtli in the Great Pyramid of Tenochtitlan (photo by Héctor Monta). ... Tlaloc, as depicted in the Magliabechi Codex Tlaloc was, in Aztec mythology, the god of rain and fertility. ... Immolation means a sacrificial killing by burning, such as: Animal sacrifice Human sacrifice Sati is a Hindu funeral custom involving immolation. ...

They offered them as sacrifices to [Tlaloc and Chalchiuhtlicue] so that they would give them water.[24]

Chalciuhtlicue from the Codex Ríos In Aztec mythology, Chalchiuhtlicue (also Chalciuhtlicue, or Chalcihuitlicue) (She of the Jade Skirt) was the goddess of lakes and streams. ...

The Flower Wars

Main article: Flower war

It has often been claimed by scholars that, the Aztecs resorted to a form of ritual warfare, the Flower War, in order to obtain living human bodies for the sacrifices in time of peace. This claim however has been severely criticised by scholars such as Ross Hassig[25][26]and Nigel Davies[27] who claim that the main purpose of the Flower Wars was political and not religious and that the number of sacrificial victims obtained through flower wars was insignificant compared to the number of victims obtained through normal political warfare. A flower war (or more correctly, flowery war) from the Nahuatl xochiyaoyotl; was, among the Aztec, a planned war in which the objective was not to kill enemies or conquer territory, but rather to capture as many prisoners as possible, who would then be sacrificed in religious ceremonies and maybe...


According to Diego Durán's History of the Indies of New Spain, and a few other sources that are also based on the Crónica X, the Flower Wars were originally a treaty between the cities of Aztec Triple Alliance and Tlaxcala and Huexotzingo motivated by a famine in Mesoamerica in 1450. Aztec prisoners were also sacrificed in Tlaxcala and Huexotzingo. The capture of prisoners for sacrifices was called nextlaualli ("debt payment to the gods"). These sources however are contradicted by other sources, such as the Codex Chimalpahin, which mentions "Flower Wars" much earlier than the famine of 1450 and against other opponents than the ones mentioned in the treaty. Diego Durán (c. ... Crónica X is the name given by Mesoamerican researchers to a postulated primary-source early 16th century historical work on the traditional history of the Aztec and other central Mexican peoples, which some researchers theorize formed the basis for several other extant 16th century documents. ... The Aztec Triple Alliance, also known as The Aztec Empire, was an alliance of three Aztec city-states: Tenochtitlán; Texcoco; and Tlacopán. ... Picture from the History of Tlaxcala showing Cortés meeting with the Tlaxcallan messengers. ... // March - French troops under Guy de Richemont besiege the English commander in France, Edmund Beaufort, Duke of Somerset, in Caen. ... Picture from the History of Tlaxcala showing Cortés meeting with the Tlaxcallan messengers. ...


Because the objective of Aztec warfare was to capture victims alive for human sacrifice, battle tactics were designed primarily to injure the enemy rather than kill him. After towns were conquered their inhabitants were no longer candidates for human sacrifice, only liable to regular tribute. For other uses, see Tribute (disambiguation). ...


Slaves also could be used for human sacrifice, but only if the slave was considered lazy and had been resold three times.[28]


The sacrifice ritual

Most of the sacrificial rituals took more than two people to perform. In the usual procedure of sacrifice, the victim would be taken to the top of the temple.[29] Then the victim would be laid on a stone slab by four priests, and his/her abdomen sliced open by a fifth priest with a ceremonial knife made of flint. The cut was made in the abdomen and went through the diaphragm. The priest would grab the heart and tear it out, still beating. It would be placed in a bowl held by a statue of the honored god, and the body thrown on the temple's stairs.[30] This article is about the sedimentary rock. ... For other types of diaphragm, see Diaphragm. ...


The body parts would then be disposed of: the viscera fed the animals in the zoo; the bleeding head was placed on display in the tzompantli, which means hairy skulls.[31] Not all the skulls in the tzompantlis were victims of sacrifice. In the Anales de Tlatelolco it is described that during the siege of Tlatelolco by the Spaniards, the Tlatelolcas built three tzompantli: two for their own dead and one for the fallen conquerors, including two severed heads of horses. A stake used to display the heads of victims or defeated Mesoamerican ball game opponents. ... The Anales de Tlatelolco (Annals of Tlatelolco) is a codex manuscript written in Nahuatl, using Latin characters, by anonymous Aztec authors in 1528 in Tlatelolco, only seven years after the fall of the Aztec Empire. ... Tlaltelolco is an area in Mexico City, centered on the Plaza de las Tres Culturas, a square surrounded on three sides by an excavated Aztec pyramid, the 17th century church Templo de Santiago, and the modern office complex of the Mexican foreign ministry. ...


Other kinds of human sacrifice, which paid tribute to various deities, approached the victims differently. The victim could be shot with arrows (in which the draining blood represented the cool rains of spring); die in unequal fighting (gladiatorial sacrifice) or be sacrificed as a result of the Mesoamerican ballgame; burned (to honor the fire god); flayed after being sacrificed (to honor Xipe Totec, "Our Lord The Flayed One"), or drowned.[32] This article is about the Roman professional fighters. ... Ballcourt at Monte Alban Ballcourt at Uaxactun The Mesoamerican ballgame[1] was a sport with ritual associations played for over 3000 years by the peoples of Mesoamerica in Pre-Columbian times. ... Michelangelos Last Judgment - Saint Bartholomew holding the knife of his martyrdom and his flayed skin Flaying is the removal of skin from the body. ... Xipe Totec ias depicted in the Codex Borgia, notice the bloody weapon and the flayed human skin he wears as a suit with the hands hanging down. ...

A tzompantli, or skull rack, as shown in the post-Conquest Ramirez Codex.
A tzompantli, or skull rack, as shown in the post-Conquest Ramirez Codex.

Image File history File linksMetadata Download high resolution version (810x580, 183 KB) Summary depiction of a tzompantli (skull rack), right half of image; associated with the depiction of Aztec temple dedicated to the deity Huitzilopochtli. ... Image File history File linksMetadata Download high resolution version (810x580, 183 KB) Summary depiction of a tzompantli (skull rack), right half of image; associated with the depiction of Aztec temple dedicated to the deity Huitzilopochtli. ... A stake used to display the heads of victims or defeated Mesoamerican ball game opponents. ... This article or section contains information that has not been verified and thus might not be reliable. ...

Estimates of the scope of the sacrifices

For the re-consecration of Great Pyramid of Tenochtitlan in 1487, the Aztecs reported that they sacrificed about 80,400 prisoners over the course of four days, though they were probably much less. (According to Ross Hassing, author of Aztec Warfare, "between 10,000 and 80,400 persons" were sacrificed in the ceremony.[33]) Four tables were arranged at the top so that the victims could be jettisoned down the sides of the temple. Michael Harner, in his 1997 article The Enigma of Aztec Sacrifice, estimates the number of persons sacrificed in central Mexico in the 15th century as high as 250,000 per year. Fernando de Alva Cortés Ixtlilxochitl, a Mexica descendant and the author of Codex Ixtlilxochitl, claimed that one in five children of the Mexica subjects was killed annually. Victor Davis Hanson argues that an estimate by Carlos Zumárraga of 20,000 per annum is more plausible. Other scholars believe that, since the Aztecs always tried to intimidate their enemies, it is more likely that they could have inflated the number as a propaganda tool.[34] The real number of sacrificed victims during the 1487 consecration is unknown. The Great Pyramid or Templo Mayor was the main temple of the Aztec capital of Tenochtitlan (modern Mexico City). ... Events Richard Fox becomes Bishop of Exeter. ... (14th century - 15th century - 16th century - other centuries) As a means of recording the passage of time, the 15th century was that century which lasted from 1401 to 1500. ... Fernando de Alva Cortés Ixtlilxochitl (1568?-1648). ... Detail of first page from the Boturini Codex, depicting the departure from Aztlán. ... Victor Davis Hanson giving a lecture at Kenyon College. ... For other uses, see Propaganda (disambiguation). ...


The same can be said for Bernal Díaz's inflated calculations when, in a state of visual shock, he grossly miscalculated the number of skulls at one of the seven Tenochtitlan tzompantlis. According the Florentine Codex, fifty years before the conquest the Aztecs burnt the skulls of the former tzompantli. Mexican archeologist Eduardo Matos Moctezuma has unearthed and studied some tzompantlis.[35] Page 51 of Book IX from the Florentine Codex. ...


Sacrifices were made on specific days. Sahagún, Juan Bautista de Pomar and Motolinía report that the Aztecs had eighteen festivities each year, one for each Aztec month. They clearly state that in those festivities sacrifices were made. Each god required a different kind of victim: young women were drowned for Xilonen; children were sacrificed to Tláloc; Nahuatl-speaking prisoners to Huitzilopochtli, and a single nahua would volunteer for Tezcatlipoca. The Ramírez Codex states that for the annual festivity of Huitzilopochtli more than sixty prisoners were sacrificed in the main temple, and prisoners were sacrificed in other large Aztec cities as well. Juan Bautista de Pomar (died 1590) was an historian and writer interested in pre-Columbian Aztec matters after Mexico had been conquered by Spain. ... Nahuatl ( [1] is a term applied to a group of related languages and dialects of the Aztecan [2] branch of the Uto-Aztecan language family, indigenous to central Mexico. ... The Ramirez Codex is the name applied to two unrelated post-conquest manuscripts from central Mexico. ...


Not all sacrifices were made at the Tenochtitlan temples; a few were made at "Cerro del Peñón", an islet of the Texcoco lake. According to an Aztec source, in the month of Tlacaxipehualiztli (from February 22 to March 13), thirty-four captives were sacrificed in the gladiatorial sacrifice to Xipe Totec. More victims would be sacrificed to Huitzilopochtli in the month Panquetzaliztli (from 9 November to 28 November) according to the Ramírez Codex. This would mean a figure as low as 300 to 600 victims a year. Marvin Harris multiplies it by twenty, assuming that the same sacrifices were made in every one of the sections or calpullis of the city. There is little agreement on the actual figure due to the scarcity of archeological evidence. Marvin Harris Marvin Harris (August 18, 1927 – October 25, 2001) was an American anthropologist. ...


Every Aztec warrior would have to provide at least one prisoner for sacrifice. All the male population was trained to be warriors, but only the few who succeeded in providing captives could became full-time members of the warrior elite. Those who could not would became macehualli, workers. Accounts also state that several young warriors could unite their efforts in order to capture a single prisoner, which suggests that capturing prisoners for sacrifice was challenging.


Discussion of primary sources

The serpents of Lápida de Aparicio (250-900 CE) from the pre-Aztec site of El Tajín represent jets of blood of a decapitated victim. Anthropology Museum of Xalapa.
The serpents of Lápida de Aparicio (250-900 CE) from the pre-Aztec site of El Tajín represent jets of blood of a decapitated victim. Anthropology Museum of Xalapa.

Early Spanish accounts mention the sacrificial practice of the Aztecs as well as other Mesoamerican cultures in the 16th century. There are numerous depictions of sacrifices in the Mexica statuary, as well as in codices such as the Ríos, Tudela, Telleriano-Remensis, Durán, and Sahagún's Florentine. On the other hand, the pre-Columbian, indigenous codices that depict the rites were not written texts but pictorial and highly symbolic ideographs -- the Aztecs had not developed the fully written language of their predecessors, the Mayans. Bishop Zumarraga (1528-48) burned all obtainable texts for missionary reasons.[36] Image File history File linksMetadata Size of this preview: 450 × 600 pixelsFull resolution (1536 × 2048 pixel, file size: 1. ... Image File history File linksMetadata Size of this preview: 450 × 600 pixelsFull resolution (1536 × 2048 pixel, file size: 1. ... El Tajín is a Pre-Columbian archaeological site near the city of Papantla, in the state of Veracruz, Mexico. ... Decapitation (from Latin, caput, capitis, meaning head), or beheading, is the removal of a living organisms head. ... Xalapa Cathedral Xalapa (or Jalapa) is the capital city of the Mexican state of Veracruz. ... (15th century - 16th century - 17th century - more centuries) As a means of recording the passage of time, the 16th century was that century which lasted from 1501 to 1600. ... Charlie Chaplin Statue A statue is a sculpture depicting a specific entity, usually a person, event, animal or object. ...


For Mesoamerica as a whole, the accumulated archaeological, iconographical and in the case of the Maya written evidence, indicates that human sacrifice was widespread across cultures and periods, dating back to 600 BCE and possibly much earlier. Osteological analyses have also been interpreted as corroborating the texts.[37][38] Pictorial illustrations of sacrifices on Maya ceramics and stelae have also been published.[39] A human skeleton - (endoskeleton) Osteology is the scientific study of bones. ... Ancient Egyptian funerary stela A stela (or stele) is a stone or wooden slab, generally taller than it is wide, erected for funerary or commemorative purposes, most usually decorated with the names and titles of the deceased inscribed, carved in relief or painted onto the slab. ...


Accounts from the Grijalva expeditions

In addition to the accounts provided by Sahagún and Durán, there are other important texts to be considered.


Juan de Grijalva, Hernán Cortés, Juan Díaz, Bernal Díaz, Andrés de Tapia, Francisco de Aguilar, Ruy González and the Anonymous Conqueror wrote about the Conquest of Mexico. Martyr d'Anghiera, Lopez de Gomara, Oviedo y Valdes and Illescas, while not in Mesoamerica, wrote their accounts based on interviews with the participants. Bartolomé de Las Casas and Sahagún arrived later to New Spain but had access to direct testimony, especially of the indigenous people. All of these narratives mention and describe the practice of human sacrifice Juan de Grijalva (born around 1489 in Cuéllar - January 21, 1527) was a Spanish conquistador. ... Hernán(do) Cortés Pizarro, 1st Marqués del Valle de Oaxaca (1485–December 2, 1547) was the conquistador who became famous for leading the military expedition that initiated the Spanish Conquest of Mexico. ... Bartolomé de las Casas This article is about a Spanish priest in the 16th century. ... map of New Spain in red, with territories claimed but not controlled in orange. ...


Juan Díaz

Juan Díaz, a participant of the 1518 Grijalva expedition, wrote Itinerario de Grijalva before 1520, in which he describes the aftermath of a sacrifice on an island near Veracruz. Juan Díaz, born in Sevilla, Spain, was a 16th century conquistador and the chaplain of the Grijalva expedition (1518), who wrote the Itinerario (itinerary route) of the expedition. ...


Bernal Díaz

Bernal Díaz corroborates Juan Díaz's history: The Conquest of New Spain is the first person conquistador narrative of Bernal Díaz del Castillo (1492 or 1493 - 1581), a 16th century soldier, settler and conqueror who served with Francisco Hernández de Córdoba, Juan de Grijalva and Hernán Cortés in Mexico and Yucatan, and...

On these altars were idols with evil looking bodies, and that very night five Indians had been sacrificed before them; their chests had been cut opened, and their arms and thighs had been cut off. The walls were covered with blood. We stood greatly amazed and gave the island the name isleta de Sacrificios [Island of the Sacrifices].[40]

In The Conquest of New Spain Díaz recounted that, after landing on the coast, they came across a temple dedicated to Tezcatlipoca. "That day they had sacrificed two boys, cutting open their chests and offering their blood and hearts to that accursed idol". Díaz narrates several more sacrificial descriptions on the later Cortés expedition. Arriving at Cholula, they find "cages of stout wooden bars [...] full of men and boys who were being fattened for the sacrifice at which their flesh would be eaten".[41] When the conquistadors reached Tenochtitlan, Díaz described the sacrifices at the Great Pyramid: The Roman Catholic church of Nuestra Señora de los Remedios overlooks the town of Cholula from atop the Great Pyramid. ...

They strike open the wretched Indian's chest with flint knives and hastily tear out the palpitating heart which, with the blood, they present to the idols [...]. They cut off the arms, thighs and head, eating the arms and thighs at ceremonial banquets. The head they hang up on a beam, and the body is […] given to the beasts of prey.[42]

According to Bernal Díaz, the chiefs of the surrounding towns, for example Cempoala, would complain on numerous occasions to Cortés about the perennial need to supply the Aztecs with victims for human sacrifice. It is clear from his description of their fear and resentment toward the Mexicas that, in their opinion, it was no honor to surrender their kinsmen to be sacrificed by them.[43] Cempoala (or Zempoala was an important MesoAmerican city as the largest city on the Gulf of Mexico and the capital of the kingdom of Totnicapan occupied by the Totonac people. ...


Hernán Cortés

Cortés describes similar events in his Letters:

They have a most horrid and abominable custom which truly ought to be punished and which until now we have seen in no other part, and this is that, whenever they wish to ask something of the idols, in order that their plea may find more acceptance, they take many girls and boys and even adults, and in the presence of these idols they open their chests while they are still alive and take out their hearts and entrails and burn them before the idols, offering the smoke as sacrifice. Some of us have seen this, and they say it is the most terrible and frightful thing they have ever witnessed.[44]

The Anonymous Conqueror

The Anonymous Conqueror's Narrative of Some Things of New Spain and of the Great City of Temestitan details Aztec sacrifices.[45] On Chapter XIV he depicts the temple in which men, women, boys and girls were sacrificed.[46] On Chapter XXIV the Anonymous Conqueror repeatedly claims that the Aztecs were cannibals, sodomites, alcoholics and polygamists.[47] The original Spanish text is lost. The description of the temple was published in the 1556 Ramusio Italian edition. The Narrative of Some Things of New Spain and of the Great City of Temestitan is a historical document dating from the 16th century, one of the few surviving contemporary Spanish accounts from the period of the Spanish conquest of the Aztec Empire and central Mexico (1519—1521). ...

A jaguar-shaped cuauhxicalli in the National Museum of Anthropology. This altar-like stone vessel was used to hold the hearts of sacrificial victims. See also chacmool.
A jaguar-shaped cuauhxicalli in the National Museum of Anthropology. This altar-like stone vessel was used to hold the hearts of sacrificial victims. See also chacmool.

Image File history File links Size of this preview: 800 × 587 pixelsFull resolution (1666 × 1222 pixel, file size: 301 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg) Ocelotl-Cuauhxicalli, Nationalmuseum für Anthropologie, Mexiko-Stadt Photograph: Luidger 29. ... Image File history File links Size of this preview: 800 × 587 pixelsFull resolution (1666 × 1222 pixel, file size: 301 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg) Ocelotl-Cuauhxicalli, Nationalmuseum für Anthropologie, Mexiko-Stadt Photograph: Luidger 29. ... Jaguar shaped Cuauhxicalli in the National Museum of Anthropology of Mexico A cuauhxicalli or quauhxicalli ( meaning Eagle gourd bowl in Nahuatl) was an altar-like stone vessel used by the Aztecs to contain human hearts extracted in sacrificial ceremonies. ... Museums front entrance. ... Chac Mool statue from the Chichen Itza site A chacmool at Chichen Itza Chac-Mool is the name given to a type of Pre-Columbian Mesoamerican stone altar. ...

Assessment of the practice of human sacrifice

Human sacrifice was nothing new when the Aztecs arrived to the Valley of Mexico, nor was it something unique to pre-Columbian Mexico. Other Mesoamerican cultures, such as the Tarascans and Toltecs, performed human sacrifices, as did many Old World cultures such as the Canaanites, Egyptians, Chinese, Mongols, Scythians, Celts and even the Greeks of Homeric times. Although the extent of human sacrifice is unknown among several Mesoamerican civilizations, such as Teotihuacán,[48] what distinguished Maya and Aztec human sacrifice was the importance with which it was embedded in everyday life. The Valley of Mexico is a highlands plateau in central Mexico roughly coterminous with the present-day Distrito Federal and the eastern half of Estado de Mexico. ... Tarascan men reeling cord for nets & making nets, 1899. ... The Atlantes – columns in the form of Toltec warriors in Tula. ... The Old World consists of those parts of Earth known to Europeans, Asians, and Africans before the voyages of Christopher Columbus; it includes Europe, Asia, and Africa (collectively known as Africa-Eurasia), plus surrounding islands. ... Map of Canaan For other uses, see Canaan (disambiguation). ... For other uses, see Mongols (disambiguation). ... The Scythians (, also ) or Scyths ([1]; from Greek ), a nation of horse-riding nomadic pastoralists who spoke an Iranian language[2], dominated the Pontic steppe throughout Classical Antiquity. ... Celts, normally pronounced //, is a modern term used to describe any of the European peoples who spoke, or speak, a Celtic language. ... For other uses, see Homer (disambiguation). ... Teotihuacán[1] was, at its height in the first half of the 1st millennium CE, the largest pre-Columbian city in the Americas. ...


Diego Durán states that Aztecs made "indifferent or sarcastic remarks" when the Spaniards severely criticized the rite. In his Book of the Gods and Rites some of the Nahuas even ridiculed the Christian sensibilities. Instead, they asked the Spaniards to applaud:

The sacrifice of human beings […], the honored oblation of great lords and noblemen. They remember these things and tell of them as if they had been great deeds.[49]

Sacrifices were ritualistic and symbolic acts accompanying huge feasts and festivals. Victims usually died in the "center stage" amidst the splendor of dancing troupes, percussion orchestras, elaborate costumes and decorations, carpets of flowers, crowds of thousands of commoners, and all the assembled elite. Oblation, an offering (Late Lat. ...


In the special case of the young man who was indoctrinated for a year to submit himself to Tezcatlipoca's temple, the would-be victim was the Aztec equivalent of a celebrity or rock star, being greatly revered and adored to the point of "kissing the ground" when he passed by, as Sahagún put it.[50]


Proposed explanations of Aztec Human Sacrifice

The nutritional explanation

Main article: Cannibalism in pre-Columbian America

Scholars Michael Harner[51] and Marvin Harris have argued that the motivation behind human sacrifice among the Aztecs was actually the cannibalization of the sacrificial victims. While there is universal agreement that the Aztecs practiced human sacrifice, there is a lack of scholarly consensus as to whether cannibalism was widespread. At one extreme anthropologist Marvin Harris, author of Cannibals and Kings, has propagated the claim, originally proposed by Harner, that the flesh of the victims was a part of an aristocratic diet as a reward, since the Aztec diet was lacking in proteins. This claim has been completely refuted by Bernard Ortíz Montellano who, in his studies of Aztec health, diet, and medicine,[52][53] demonstrates that while the Aztec diet was low in animal proteins, it was rich in vegetable proteins. While there is universal agreement that some Mesoamerican people practiced human sacrifice, there is a lack of scholarly consensus as to whether cannibalism in pre-Columbian America was widespread. ... Marvin Harris Marvin Harris (August 18, 1927 – October 25, 2001) was an American anthropologist. ... Cannibals and Kings ISBN 0394407652 (1977) is a book written by Marvin Harris. ...


The political explanation

The high-profile nature of the sacrificial ceremonies indicates that human sacrifice played an important political function. The Mexica used a sophisticated package of psychological weaponry to maintain their empire, aimed at instilling a sense of fear into their neighbours. European empires, in contrast, were typically secured through the creation of garrisons and installation of puppet governments in conquered towns or settlements. The Mexica used human sacrifice as a weapon of terror even against the Spanish conquistadors, whose fallen victims were sacrificed and sometimes skinned and their bloody heads placed at the tzompantli. From across the empire even the chiefs of enemy towns were invited, or in the case of tributary towns obliged, to attend sacrificial ceremonies in Tenochtitlan. Their refusal would be considered an act of defiance against the Mexica. For other uses, see Fear (disambiguation). ...


The psychological explanation

For Lloyd deMause it is significant that the victims were invested of a profound cosmological meaning. According to psychohistorians human sacrifices, including sacrifices in Mesoamerica, were an unconscious form of revenge for the traumatogenic modes of childrearing.[54] (The vindication of traumatogenic education on scapegoats is called displacement by psychologists.) In The Emotional Life of the Nations deMause constantly refers about displacement among the Aztecs' practice of sacrifice.[55] Psychohistory is the study of the psychological motivations of historical events. ... The “Trauma model” of mental disorders is an expression coined by psychiatrist Colin Ross as a solution to the problem of comorbidity in the mental health field. ... In psychology, the term displacement is an unconscious defence mechanism, whereby the mind redirects emotion from a dangerous object to a safe object. ...


See also

Human sacrifice is the act of killing a human being for the purposes of making an offering to a deity or other, normally supernatural, power. ... The remains of a sacrificed boy to Huitzilopochtli in the Great Pyramid of Tenochtitlan (photo by Héctor Monta). ...

External links

Arqueología mexicana is a bimonthly publication edited by the Mexican Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia (National Institute of Anthropology and History). ...

Notes

  1. ^ Matos-Moctezuma, Eduardo (1986). Vida y muerte en el Templo Mayor. Fondo de Cultura Económica. 
  2. ^ "Evidence May Back Human Sacrifice Claims" By Mark Stevenson
  3. ^ "Grisly Sacrifices Found in Pyramid of the Moon" By LiveScience Staff.
  4. ^ Harner, Michael (1977). "The Ecological Basis for Aztec Sacrifice". American Ethnologist, Vol. 4 (No. 1,): 117-135.
  5. ^ López-Luján, Leonardo; et al (in press). Nuevas perspectivas sobre el sacrificio humano entre los mexicas. Mexico City: Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia. Book on international seminary with 28 specialists celebrated in September 2007 in the Museum of the Templo Mayor.
  6. ^ Graulich, Michael (2003). "El sacrificio humano en Mesoamérica". Arqueología mexicana XI, 63: 16-21.
  7. ^ Reinhard, Johan (November 1999). "A 6,700 metros niños incas sacrificados quedaron congelados en el tiempo". National Geographic, Spanish version: 36-55.
  8. ^ Bernardino de Sahagún, Historia General de las Cosas de la Nueva España, ed. a cargo de Ángel Ma. Garibay (México: Editorial Porrúa, 2006), chapters XX to XXXVIII
  9. ^ Thema, Equipo (2002). Los aztecas. Ediciones Rueda, 39-40. 
  10. ^ Nicholson, Henry B. (1971). (in) Handbook of Middle American Indians. University of Texas Press, 402. 
  11. ^ León-Portilla (1963, p.111).
  12. ^ Museo del Templo Mayor, Hall 2
  13. ^ Cecelia Klein. "The Ideology of Autosacrifice at the Templo Mayor" in E. H. Boone, ed. The Aztec Templo Mayor pp. 293-370. Washington, D.C.: Dumbarton Oaks. 1987 ISBN 0-88402-149-1
  14. ^ Soustelle, Jacques (2003). La vida cotidiana de los aztecas. Fondo de Cultura Económica, 102ff. 
  15. ^ Durán, Fr. Diego (1967). Historia de las Indias de Nueva España. Porrúa. 
  16. ^ deMause, Lloyd (2002). The Emotional Life of Nations. NY: Karnac, 413. 
  17. ^ Schele and Miller (1992).
  18. ^ Matos-Moctezuma, Eduardo (2006). Tenochtitlan. Fondo de Cultura Económica, 172-73. 
  19. ^ Bernardino de Sahagún, Historia General de las Cosas de la Nueva España (op. cit.), p. 76
  20. ^ Sahagún, Ibid.
  21. ^ Duverger, Christian (2005). La flor letal: economía del sacrificio azteca. Fondo de cultura económica, 83-93. 
  22. ^ Sahagún, Op. cit., p. 79
  23. ^ Bernardino de Sahagún, Historia General de las Cosas de la Nueva España (op. cit.), p. 83
  24. ^ Sahagún, Fray Bernardino (1950-1959). Florentine Codex: General History of the Things of New Spain. 1561-82., trans. Arthur J.O. Anderson and Charles E. Dibble. Santa Fe: School of American Research and the University of Utah, III, 5. 
  25. ^ Hassig, Ross (1988). Aztec Warfare: Imperial Expansion and Political Control. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 0-806-12121-1. 
  26. ^ Hassig, Ross (2003). "El sacrificio y las guerras floridas". Arqueología mexicana XI: 46-51.
  27. ^ Davies, Nigel (1968). Los Señorios independientes del Imperio Azteca. Mexico D.F.: Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia (INAH). 
  28. ^ Duverger, Christian (2005). La flor letal. Fondo de cultura económica, 81. 
  29. ^ Bernardino de Sahagún, Historia General de las Cosas de la Nueva España (op. cit.), p. 88
  30. ^ Duverger, Christian (2005). La flor letal. Fondo de cultura económica, 139-40. 
  31. ^ Duverger, Ibid., 171
  32. ^ Duverger (op. cit.), pages 157-167
  33. ^ Hassig, Ross (2003). "El sacrificio y las guerras floridas". Arqueología mexicana XI: 47.
  34. ^ Duverger (op. cit), 174-77
  35. ^ Matos-Moctezuma, Eduardo (2005). Muerte a filo de obsidiana. Fondo de Cultura Económica, 111-124. 
  36. ^ George Holtker, "Studies in Comparative Religion", The Religions of Mexico and Peru, Vol 1, CTS
  37. ^ [1] - "Ritual Sacrifice and the Feathered Serpent Pyramid at Teotihuacán, México" By George L. Cowgill
  38. ^ [2] - "Analysis of Kaqchikel Skeletons: Iximché, Guatemala" By Stephen L. Whittington & Robert H. Tykot
  39. ^ Stuart, David (2003). "La ideología del sacrificio entre los mayas". Arqueología mexicana XI, 63: 24-29.
  40. ^ Díaz, Bernal (2005, published posthumously in 1632). Historia verdadera de la conquista de Nueva España (Introducción y notas de Joaquín Ramírez Cabañas). Editorial Porrúa, 24. 
  41. ^ Díaz (op. cit.), p. 150
  42. ^ [3] Dinesh D'Souza's article
  43. ^ The Conquest of New Spain, chap. XLVI
  44. ^ Cortés, Hernán (2005, originally published in 1523). Cartas de relación. México: Editorial Porrúa, page 26. "Y tienen otra cosa horrible y abominable y digna de ser punida que hasta hoy no habíamos visto en ninguna parte, y es que todas las veces que alguna cosa quieren pedir a sus ídolos para que más acepten su petición, toman muchas niñas y niños y aun hombre y mujeres de mayor edad, y en presencia de aquellos ídolos los abren vivos por los pechos y les sacan el corazón y las entrañas, y queman las dichas entrañas y corazones delante de los ídolos, y ofreciéndolos en sacrificio aquel humo. Esto habemos visto algunos de nosotros, y los que lo han visto dicen que es la más cruda y espantosa cosa de ver que jamás han visto".
  45. ^ [4] - Narrative of Some Things of New Spain and of the Great City of Temestitan, México, Chapter XV, written by a Companion of Hernán Cortés, The Anonymous Conqueror.
  46. ^ [5] – Ibid., Chapter XIV
  47. ^ [6] – Ibid., Chapter XXIV
  48. ^ [7] DNA analysis shows that the Teotihuacan civilization brought human victims from distant towns.
  49. ^ Diego Duran, Book of the Gods and Rites, p. 227
  50. ^ Sahagún, Historia general, op. cit, p. 104)
  51. ^ Harner, Michael (1977). "The Ecological Basis for Aztec Sacrifice". American Ethnologist, Vol. 4 (No. 1,): 117-135.
  52. ^ Ortiz de Montellano, Bernard R. (1990). Aztec Medicine, Health, and Nutrition. Rutgers University Press. 
  53. ^ Ortiz De Montellano, Bernard R. (1983). "Counting Skulls: Comment on the Aztec Cannibalism Theory of Harner-Harris". American Anthropologist, New Series, Vol. 85, (No. 2): 403-406..
  54. ^ Godwin, Robert (2004). One Cosmos under God. Omega Books, 142, 154. 
  55. ^ deMause, Lloyd (2002). The Emotional Life of Nations. NY: Karnac, e.g., pages 31, 312, 374, 289-90, 410. 

The Great Pyramid or Templo Mayor was the main temple of the Aztec capital of Tenochtitlan (modern Mexico City). ... Arqueología mexicana is a bimonthly publication edited by the Mexican Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia (National Institute of Anthropology and History). ... The National Geographic Society was founded in the USA on January 27, 1888, by 33 men interested in organizing a society for the increase and diffusion of geographical knowledge. ... Bernardino de Sahagún Bernardino de Sahagún (1499 – October 23, 1590), was a Franciscan missionary to the Aztec (Nahua) people of Mexico, best known as the compiler of the Florentine Codex, also known as Historia general de las cosas de Nueva España (General History of the Things of... Bernardino de Sahagún Bernardino de Sahagún (1499 – October 23, 1590), was a Franciscan missionary to the Aztec (Nahua) people of Mexico, best known as the compiler of the Florentine Codex, also known as Historia general de las cosas de Nueva España (General History of the Things of... Arqueología mexicana is a bimonthly publication edited by the Mexican Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia (National Institute of Anthropology and History). ... Bernardino de Sahagún Bernardino de Sahagún (1499 – October 23, 1590), was a Franciscan missionary to the Aztec (Nahua) people of Mexico, best known as the compiler of the Florentine Codex, also known as Historia general de las cosas de Nueva España (General History of the Things of... Arqueología mexicana is a bimonthly publication edited by the Mexican Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia (National Institute of Anthropology and History). ... Arqueología mexicana is a bimonthly publication edited by the Mexican Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia (National Institute of Anthropology and History). ... Dinesh DSouza (born April 25, 1961 in Bombay, India) is an author currently serving as the Robert and Karen Rishwain Fellow at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University. ... The Conquest of New Spain is the first person conquistador narrative of Bernal Díaz del Castillo (1492 or 1493 - 1581), a 16th century soldier, settler and conqueror who served with Francisco Hernández de Córdoba, Juan de Grijalva and Hernán Cortés in Mexico and Yucatan, and... The Narrative of Some Things of New Spain and of the Great City of Temestitan is a historical document dating from the 16th century, one of the few surviving contemporary Spanish accounts from the period of the Spanish conquest of the Aztec Empire and central Mexico (1519—1521). ...

References

Anonymous Conqueror [ca.1550] (1917). Narrative of Some Things of New Spain and of the Great City of Temestitan, México (online reproduction by FAMSI, edited by Alec Christensen), Marshall H. Saville (trans. and ed.), New York: The Cortes Society. OCLC 6720413. Retrieved on 2008-01-12. 
Carrasco, David (1999). City of Sacrifice: The Aztec Empire and the Role of Violence in Civilization. Boston, MA: Beacon Press. ISBN 0-8070-4642-6. OCLC 41368255. 
Díaz del Castillo, Bernal [1632] (1963). The Conquest of New Spain, J. M. Cohen (trans.), 6th printing (1973), Penguin Classics, Harmondsworth, England: Penguin Books. ISBN 0-14-044123-9. OCLC 162351797. 
Durán, Diego [ca.1581] (1994). The History of the Indies of New Spain, Doris Heyden (trans., annot., and introd.), English translation of Historia de las Indias de Nueva-España y Islas de Tierra Firme, Civilization of the American Indian series, #210, Norman: University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 0-8061-2649-3. OCLC 29565779. 
Godwin, Robert W. (2004). One Cosmos under God: The Unification of Matter, Life, Mind & Spirit. Saint Paul, MN: Paragon House. ISBN 1-55778-836-7. OCLC 55131504. 
Hassig, Ross (1988). Aztec Warfare: Imperial Expansion and Political Control, Civilization of the American Indian series, #188. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 0-8061-2121-1. OCLC 17106411. 
León-Portilla, Miguel (1963). Aztec Thought and Culture: A Study of the Ancient Náhuatl Mind, Jack Emory Davis (trans.), Civilization of the American Indian series, #67, Norman: University of Oklahoma Press. OCLC 181727. 
Matos Moctezuma, Eduardo (1998). Vida y muerte en el Templo Mayor, 3rd edition, México D.F.: Fondo de Cultura Económica. ISBN 968-16-5712-8. OCLC 40997904.  (Spanish)
Ortiz De Montellano, Bernard R. (June 1983). "Counting Skulls: Comment on the Aztec Cannibalism Theory of Harner-Harris". American Anthropologist 85 (2): pp.403–406. Arlington, VA: American Anthropological Association. doi:10.1525/aa.1983.85.2.02a00130. ISSN 0002-7294. OCLC 1479294.
Ortiz De Montellano, Bernard R. (1990). Aztec Medicine, Health, and Nutrition. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press. ISBN 0-8135-1562-9. OCLC 20798977. 
Sahagún, Bernardino de (1950-1982), Florentine Codex: History of the Things of New Spain, translated and edited by Arthur J.O. Anderson and Charles Dibble, University of Utah Press, 12 books and 2 introductory volumes.
Schele, Linda; and Mary Ellen Miller (1992). Blood of Kings: Dynasty and Ritual in Maya Art, Justin Kerr (photographer), 2nd paperback edn., reprint with corrections, New York: George Braziller. ISBN 0-8076-1278-2. OCLC 41441466. 
The Narrative of Some Things of New Spain and of the Great City of Temestitan is a historical document dating from the 16th century, one of the few surviving contemporary Spanish accounts from the period of the Spanish conquest of the Aztec Empire and central Mexico (1519—1521). ... The Online Computer Library Center (OCLC) was founded in 1967 and originally named the Ohio College Library Center. ... 2008 (MMVIII) will be a leap year starting on Tuesday of the Anno Domini (common) era, in accordance with the Gregorian calendar. ... is the 12th day of the year in the Gregorian calendar. ... Beacon Press, founded in 1854 and a department of the Unitarian Universalist Association, operates as a book publisher in the United States of America. ... The Online Computer Library Center (OCLC) was founded in 1967 and originally named the Ohio College Library Center. ... Bernal Díaz del Castillo (1492 or 1493 - 1581) was a conquistador, who wrote an eyewitness account of the conquest of Mexico under Hernán Cortés. ... J. M. Cohen (1903-1989) was a prolific translator (into English) of European literature. ... It has been suggested that Penguin Modern Poets, Penguin Great Ideas be merged into this article or section. ... The Online Computer Library Center (OCLC) was founded in 1967 and originally named the Ohio College Library Center. ... Diego Durán (c. ... Doris Heyden (née Heydenreich) was a prominent scholar of Mexico’s ancient cultures. ... The University of Oklahoma Press is a university press that is part of the University of Oklahoma. ... The Online Computer Library Center (OCLC) was founded in 1967 and originally named the Ohio College Library Center. ... Paragon House is an independent publisher of quality scholarly books and serious non-fiction. ... The Online Computer Library Center (OCLC) was founded in 1967 and originally named the Ohio College Library Center. ... The University of Oklahoma Press is a university press that is part of the University of Oklahoma. ... The Online Computer Library Center (OCLC) was founded in 1967 and originally named the Ohio College Library Center. ... Miguel León-Portilla (born in Mexico City, 22 February 1926) is a Mexican anthropologist and historian, and the prime authority on Nahuatl thought and literature. ... The University of Oklahoma Press is a university press that is part of the University of Oklahoma. ... The Online Computer Library Center (OCLC) was founded in 1967 and originally named the Ohio College Library Center. ... Eduardo Matos Moctezuma (b. ... Fondo de Cultura Económica (FCE, Fondo) is the most important publishing house in Mexico[1][2] and one of the most important ones in Latin America. ... The Online Computer Library Center (OCLC) was founded in 1967 and originally named the Ohio College Library Center. ... The American Anthropologist is the flagship journal of the American Anthropological Association. ... American Anthropological Association (AAA) was founded in 1902 and claims to be, the worlds largest professional organization of individuals interested in anthropology. Although there were several other American anthropological societies in existence at the turn of the 20th century, this new, national organization was formed to promote the science... A digital object identifier (or DOI) is a standard for persistently identifying a piece of intellectual property on a digital network and associating it with related data, the metadata, in a structured extensible way. ... ISSN, or International Standard Serial Number, is the unique eight-digit number applied to a periodical publication including electronic serials. ... The Online Computer Library Center (OCLC) was founded in 1967 and originally named the Ohio College Library Center. ... Rutgers University Press is a nonprofit academic publishing house, operating in Piscataway, New Jersey under the auspices of Rutgers University. ... The Online Computer Library Center (OCLC) was founded in 1967 and originally named the Ohio College Library Center. ... Bernardino de Sahagún Bernardino de Sahagún (1499 – October 23, 1590), was a Franciscan missionary to the Aztec (Nahua) people of Mexico, best known as the compiler of the Florentine Codex, also known as Historia general de las cosas de Nueva España (General History of the Things of... Page 51 of Book IX from the Florentine Codex. ... Linda Schele (1942 - 18 April 1998 was a noted expert in the field of Maya epigraphy and iconography. ... Mary Miller is the master of Saybrook College at Yale University and the Vincent Scully Professor of the History of Art. ... The Online Computer Library Center (OCLC) was founded in 1967 and originally named the Ohio College Library Center. ...


 
 

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