Monday, April 20, 2015

                                          Religion cont.



The Calendar and the Sun


The ancient Aztec religion was highly focused on keeping nature in balance.  One false step could lead to natural disaster.  The weak sun could stop moving.  In the sky was a constant battle between light and darkness, a battle that would someday be lost.
Huitzilopochtli (Hummingbird of the South) was the warrior sun (either the sun god or the one who fights for the sun god, Tonatiuh (the name given to Nanauatl)).  Huitzilopochtli (or Tonatiuh) needed blood sacrifice in order to win the battle against darkness.  Either there would be ritual blood-letting, or actual people would be sacrificed.  Those sacrificed would rise to fight with him.  And so human sacrifices became more and more common in Mexico.  Often battles would be fought just to capture prisoners to sacrifice - the Aztec flower war (or Aztec flowery war).
Every 52 years, the people were terrified that the world would end.  All religious fires were extinguished, people all over the empire would destroy their furniture and precious belongings and go into mourning.  When the constellation of the Pleiades appeared, the people would be assured that they were safe for another 52 years.
The world in ancient Aztec religion was divided up into 4 quadrants, and the center - their city Tenochtitlán.  The heavens were divided into 13 ascending layers, and the underworld 9 descending layers.  The heavens and underworld may be better described as wheels within wheels, a more common form for the Aztecs than layers or lines.  The temple in Tenochtitlán was also the place where the forces of heaven and earth intersected.   

Aztec reincarnation





Aztec Sacrifice

            In spite of all the great accomplishments of the empire, it's the Aztec sacrifice that the people are often remembered for.  Why were sacrifices offered?  What were they like?
            Though the human sacrifice is the most talked about, there were actually many types of sacrifices in the empire.  The people believed that they owed a blood-debt to the gods.   They wanted to avert disaster by paying the endless debt.  Blood was a common theme - the sacrifice that the gods required.
So, animals would be sacrificed, as well as humans.  Also, there was ritual blood-letting, where people would cut themselves to offer their blood to the gods.
            Human sacrifice was practiced to some extent by many peoples in Mesoamerica (and for that matter, around the world) for many centuries.  But it was the Aztec empire that really took the ritual to new heights.  How many people were sacrificed by the Aztecs?  We don't know how many were sacrificed over the years - it's possible that some accounts are exaggerated - but it was probably thousands each year - tens of thousands or more altogether.  Some estimates claim 20,000 a year.
The Aztecs had 18 months in one cycle, and for each of the 18 months there was ritual sacrifice.  The victim would be painted as a part of the ritual, they would be placed on a slab where their heart would be removed and held up to the sun.  The body would be thrown down the stairs of the temple/pyramid.
The body would be disposed of in various ways, such as feeding animals at the zoo or putting on display (the heads).  There are some accounts of cannibalism, but it's uncertain if this was practiced to any great extent.
There were other ways that humans would be sacrificed - shot with arrows, drowned, burned, or otherwise mutilated.  Killing in a fight (like the Roman gladiators) also took place.
Both the empire's own people, and their enemies were sacrificed.  The warriors were often involved in a special ritual war called a xochiyaoyotl (or flower war/flowery war).  The object was not to gain territory or kill the enemy, but to capture them as food for the gods.  Both sides of the battle were required to fight, and they usually were willing participants.  The people would be captured instead of killed, and then sacrificed.

Aztec sacrificing





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