The following
section is adapted from several sources including books on Aztec philosophy
and Religion and an article by Richard Hooke
THE AZTECS
Aztecs were a wandering Native American tribe who came
to Mexico during the 13th century.There they built a great civilization
including cities, pyramids, and temples. In 1519 Spanish conquistadors
arrived in Mexico and defeated the Aztecs.
Harder - Aztec comes from the word Azteca, which is derived from Aztlán
("White Land"). Aztlán is believed to have been the northwestern region of
today's Mexico. Aztlán is the land where, according to Aztec tradition,
their tribe originated. According to Aztec legend at the beginning of the
12th century until the 13th century, the Aztec peoples migrated south to the
Valley of Mexico in search of a place to settle.
By the 1400's and into the early 1500's, the Aztecs had established one of
the most advanced civilizations in the Americas. Some of their cities at
that time were as large as any in Europe. Aztec peoples practiced a religion
that affected every part of their lives. To honor their gods, they
constructed towering temples, huge sculptures, and held ceremonies that
included bloody human sacrifices. The Aztec empire was destroyed by the
Spaniards, who conquered it in 1521. But the Aztecs have made a lasting mark
on Mexican culture.
A wandering peoples from Aztlan, found through prophesy, their place by the
lake in the Valley of Mexico. From this modest beginning, their rise to
power and fall to the Spanish is the best documented history of any ancient
civilization of the Americas. Although the city of Tenochitlan was in
part destroyed, many of the cultural traditions of the Aztecs continues long
after the conquest. Like their ruins hidden under the zocolo of Mexico City,
traditional culture can still be found under the veneer of modern society.
Travel with caution deep into the mountains, you may find that no one is
speaking Spanish and ceremonial dances are still celebrated.
The term, Aztec, is a startlingly imprecise term to describe the culture
that dominated the Valley of Mexico in the fifteenth and sixteenth
centuries. Properly speaking, all the Nahua-speaking peoples in the Valley
of Mexico were Aztecs, while the culture that dominated the area was a tribe
of the Mexica (pronounced "me-shee-ka") called the Tenochca ("te-noch-ka").
At the time of the European conquest, they called themselves either
"Tenochca" or "Toltec," which was the name assumed by the bearers of the
Classic Mesoamerican culture. The earliest we know about the Mexica is that
they migrated from the north into the Valley of Mexico as early as the
twelfth century AD, well after the close of the Classic Period in
Mesoamerica. They were a subject and abject people, forced to live on the
worst lands in the valley. They adopted the cultural patterns (called
Mixteca-Pueblo) that originated in the culture of Teotihuacán, so the urban
culture they built in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries is essentially a
continuation of Teotihuacán culture.
As stated in the section on the Toltecs, the peoples of Mesoamerica
distinguished between two types of people: the Toltec (which means
"craftsman"), who continued Classic urban culture, and the Chichimec, or
wild people, who settled Mesoamerica from the north. The Mexica were, then,
originally Chichimec when they migrated into Mexico, but eventually became
Toltecs proper.
The history of the Tenochca is among the best preserved of the
Mesoamericans. They date the beginning of their history to 1168 and their
origins to an island in the middle of a lake north of the Valley of Mexico.
Their god, Huitzilopochtli, commanded them on a journey to the south and
they arrived in the Valley of Mexico in 1248. According to their history,
the Tenochca were originally peaceful, but their Chichimec ways, especially
their practice of human sacrifice, revolted other peoples who banded
together and crushed their tribe. In 1300, the Tenochcas became vassals of
the town of Culhuacan; some escaped to settle on an island in the middle of
the lake. The town they founded was Tenochtitlan, or "place of the
Tenochcas."
Relations between the Tenochcas and Culhuacan became bitter after the
Tenochcas sacrificed a daughter of the king of Culhuacan; so enraged were
the Culhuacans that they drove all the Tenochcas from the mainland to the
island. There, the Tenochcas who had lived in Culhuacan taught urban culture
and architecture to the peoples on the island and the Tenochcas began to
build a city. The city of Tenochtitlan is founded, then, sometime between
1300 and 1375.
The Tenochcas slowly became more powerful and militarily more skilled, so
much so that they became allies of choice in the constant conflicts between
the various peoples of the area. The Tenochcas finally won their freedom
under Itzacoatl (1428-1440), and they began to build their city,
Tenochtitlan, with great fervor. Under Itzacoatl, they built temples, roads,
a causeway linking the city to the mainland, and they established their
government and religious hierarchy. Itzacoatl and the chief who followed him
Mocteuzma I (1440-1469) undertook wars of conquest throughout the Valley of
Mexico and the southern regions of Vera Cruz, Guerrero, and Puebla. As a
result, Tenochtitlan grew dramatically: not only did the city increase in
size, precipitating the need for an aqueduct system to bring water from the
mainland, it grew culturally as well as the Tenochcas assimilated the gods
of the region into their religion.
A succession of kings followed Mocteuzma I until the accession of
Mocteuzma II in 1502; despite a half century of successful growth and
conquest, Tenochca culture and society began to suffer disasters under
Mocteuzma II. First, tribute peoples began to revolt all over the conquered
territories and it is highly likely that Tenochca influence would eventually
have declined by the middle of the sixteenth century. Most importantly, the
reign of Mocteuzma II was interrupted by the invasion of the Spaniards under
Cortez in 1519-1522. The Spaniards kidnapped Mocteuzma and eventually killed
him in 1524. When the city of Tenochtitlan fell, the remainder of Mexico
fell very rapidly. The Spaniards managed this conquest for several reasons.
First, Aztec conquest was not concerned with political or territorial
influence; the conqests only had to do with the payment of tribute. There
was, then, a large group of subject peoples with no loyalty to Tenochtitlan
and alot of hostility. Cortez conquered Tenochtitlan largely by using
these enmities. Second, the Aztecs had nothing like formal military
strategy; wars were largely fought as large-scale individual combats.
Finally, Cortez and his men were desperate; they had entered Mexico against
orders and knew that, unless they conquered Mexico, that they would be
severely punished when they returned.
The economy of Tenochtitlan was built off of one overwhelming fact: the
urban population on the island required high levels of economic support from
surrounding areas. In its earliest history, Tenochtitlan was
self-supporting; the village was small and agriculture was managed through
the chinampa method of architecture, practiced widely throughout
Mesoamerica. In the chinampa , flat reeds were placed in the shallow areas
of the lake, covered with soil, and then cultivated. In this way, the Aztecs
reclaimed much of the lake for agriculture. A large part of the city's
population were farmers; at its height (100,000-300,000), at least half the
population would leave the city in the morning to go farm and return in the
evening.
The city itself consisted of a large number of priests and craftspeople; the
bulk of the economy rested on extensive trade of both necessary and luxury
items. Tenochtitlan was a true urban center. It had a permanent population,
it had a large and bustling market (the Spanish estimated that at least
60,000 people crowded the market), and it had the beginnings of economic
class. For the kinship groups of the city were divided up into calpulli ,
many of which practiced a specific craft or trade, such as rope-making or
pot-making. While there is a great deal of controversy over the precise
nature of the capulli , it seems to
be a transition point between kinship organization (the calpulli were
kinship groups) and economic class (the calpulli specialized in particular
crafts). In addition, the calpulli seemed to be arranged in ranks: there was
the highest calpulli , another five calpulli that had schools for nobility,
and then all the rest.
The Aztecs did have two clearly differentiated social classes. At the bottom
were the macehualles, or "commoners," and at the top the pilli, or nobility.
These were not clearly differentiated by birth, for one could rise into the
pilli by virtue of great skill and bravery in war.
All male children went to school. At the age of 15, each male child went to
telpuchcalli ("house of youth"), where he learned the history and religion
of the Aztecs, the art of war and fighting, the trade or craft specific to
his calpulli , and the religious and civic duties of everyday citizenship.
The children of nobility also attended another school, a school of nobility
or calmecac , if he was a member of one of the top six calpulli . There the
child learned the religious duties of priests and its secret knowledge; for
the distinction between government and religious duties was practically
non-existent. This public education was only limited to boys.
In Aztec society, women were regarded as the subordinate of men. Above
everything else, they were required to behave with chastity and high moral
standards. For the most part, all government and religious functions were
closed off to women. In fact, one of the most important religious
offices, the Snake Woman, was always filled by men. There were some temples
and gods that had priestesses, who had their own schools, but their exact
position in the hierarchy is unknown.
Aztec laws were simple and harsh. Almost every crime, from adultery to
stealing, was punished by death and other offenses usually involved severe
corporal punishment or mutilation (the penalty for slander, for instance,
was the loss of one's lips). This was not a totalitarian state, however;
there was a strong sense of community among the Aztecs and these laws, harsh
as they seem, were supported by the community rather than an autocratic
judiciary.
Slavery was common among the Aztecs; it was not, however, racial or
permanent. One became a slave by being captured in war, by committing
certain crimes, such as theft, by voluntarily entering into slavery, or by
being sold by one's parents. If one was captured in war, slavery was a
pleasant option, for the purpose of Aztec warfare was primarily the capture
of live human sacrifices. If, however, one had a useful trade, the Tenochca
would forego the sacrifice and employ the captive in that trade.
There was little distinction between the religious and the secular
hierarchy, although historians and anthropologists argue that the Aztecs
developed farther than any other Mesoamerican group a secular aspect of
society. At the very top of the hierarchy was the tlacatecuhtli , or "chief
of men." He dominated all the religious ceremonies and served as a military
leader. Below the tlacatecuhtli were a series of religious offices and some
secular functions, such as military generals.
RELIGION
The religion of the Aztecs was incredibly complicated, partly due to the
fact that they inherited much of it from conquered peoples. Their religion
was dominated by three gods: Huitzilopochtli ("hummingbird wizard," the
native and chief god of the Tenochca, Huitzilopochtli was the war and sun
god), Tezcatlipoca ("Smoking Mirror," chief god of the Aztecs in general),
and Quetzalcoatl ("Sovereign Plumed Serpent," widely worshipped throughout
Mesoamerica and the god of civilization, the priesthood, and learning).
Below these three gods were four creating gods who were remote and aloof
from the human world.
Below these were an infinity of other gods, of which the most important were
Tlaloc, the Rain God, Chalchihuitlicue, the god of growth, and Xipe, the
"Flayed One," a god associated with spring.
The overwhelming aspect of Aztec religious life in the imaginations of
non-Aztecs was the predominance of human sacrifice. This had been practiced
all throughout the Mesoamerican world, but the Tenochca practiced it at a
scale never seen before or since. We don't know a great deal about the
details, but we have a fairly good idea of its general character and
justification. Throughout Mesoamerica, the theology involved the concept
that the gods gave things to human beings only if they were nourished by
human beings. Among the Maya, for instance, the priests would nourish the
gods by drawing their own blood by piercing their tongues, ears,
extremities, or genitals. Other sacrifices involved prayer, offerings of
food, sports,
and even dramas. The Aztecs practiced all of these sacrifices, including
blood-letting. But the Aztec theologians also developed the notion that the
gods are best nourished by the living hearts of sacrificed captives; the
braver the captive, the more nourishing the sacrifice. This theology led to
widespread wars of conquest in search of sacrificial victims both captured
in war and paid as tribute by a conquered people.
We can successfully reconstruct Aztec human sacrifice with a high level of
accuracy. Some sacrifices were very minimal, involving the sacrifice of a
slave to a minor god, and some were very spectacular, involving hundreds or
thousands of captives. Aztec history claims that Ahuitzotl (1468-1502), who
preceded Mocteuzma II as king, sacrificed 20,000 people after a campaign in
Oaxaca ("O-a-sha-ka"). No matter what the size of the sacrifice, it was
always performed the same way. The victim was held down by four priests on
an altar at the top of a pyramid or raised temple while the officiant made
an incision below the rib cage and pulled out the living heart. The heart
was then burned and the corpse was pushed down the steep steps; a very brave
or noble victim was carried down the steps. The most brutal of human
sacrifices were those dedicated to the god Huehueteotl. Sacrificial victims
were drugged and then thrown into a fire at the top of the ceremonial
platform. Before they were killed by the fire, they were dragged out
with hooks and their living hearts were pulled out and thrown back into the
fire.
While human sacrifice was the most dramatic element of Aztec sacrifice, the
most common form of sacrifice was voluntary blood-letting which occurred at
every religious function. Such blood-letting was tied to rank: the higher
one was in social or priestly rank, the more blood one had to sacrifice.
There was an urgency to all this sacrifice. The Aztec believed that the
world was controlled by divine forces that were in constant conflict and
opposition to one another. The universe was poised between conflicting
forces of creation and destruction; human beings could, in part, influence
this balance through the practice of sacrifice.
In addition to sacrifice, the Aztec religion, like the Mayan religion, was
dominated by calculations of time. The Aztecs had several calendars; each
day was controlled by two gods, each of which had a benificient and a
malevolent aspect. In a complex series of astronomical calculations, one
could precisely determine how to behave and what to do in order to achieve
the best results.
It is not unfair to say that Aztec culture was overwhelmingly eschatological
in a way that can only be rivalled by early Christianity. The Aztecs, like
the Mayans, believed that the universe had been created five times and
destroyed four times; each of these five eras was called a Sun. The first
age was called Four Ocelot (for it began on the date called Four Ocelot).
Tezcatlipoca (Smoking Mirror) dominated the universe and eventually became
the sun disk. The world was destroyed by jaguars. The second age was Four
Wind, dominated by Quetzalcoatl (Sovereign Plumed Serpent); men were turned
to monkeys and the world was destroyed by hurricanes and tempests. The third
age was Four Rain, dominated by Tlaloc (the rain god); the world was
destroyed by a rain of fire. The fourth era was Four Water and was dominated
by Chalchihuitlicue (Woman with the Turquoise Skirt); the world was
destroyed by a flood. The fifth era, the one we live in now, is Four
Earthquake, and is dominated by Tonatiuh, the Sun-God. This age will end in
earthquakes.
The Aztecs had two calendars: the ritual year and the solar year. The ritual
year lasted for 260 days and the solar year lasted for 365 days. Every
fifty-two years these two calendars would resynchronize; the Aztecs, then,
lived in 52-year cycles. In Aztec religion, the destruction of every era
always occurred on the last day of each 52 year cycle (although each era
lasted for several of these cycles). Every 52 years, then, the Aztecs
believed that the world was about to end and the close of the 52 year cycle
was the most important religious event in Aztec life for this period was the
most dangerous period in human life. This was the time when the gods
could decide to destroy humanity. Every cycle ended with the New Fire
Ceremony. For five
days before the end of the cycle, all religious altar fires were
extinguished and people all over the Aztec world destroyed furniture and
possessions and went into mourning for the world. On the last day, the
priests went to the Hill of the Star, a crater in the Valley of Mexico, and
waited for the constellation of the Pleiades to appear. If it appeared, that
meant that the world would continue for fifty-two more years. The priests
would light a fire in an animal carcass, and all the fires of the Valley of
Mexico would be lit from this single fire. The day after saw sacrifices,
blood-letting, feasting, and renovation of possessions and houses.
WRITING
We can barely read Mayan writing, but we do know how to read Aztec writing.
Like the Mayans, the Aztecs developed a true system of writing. Aztec
writing isn't phonetic but rather a loose system of rebus writing. Still, if
the testimony of the Spanish is reliable, this writing system was seen as an
aid to oral traditions rather than as a replacement. Aztec writing was used
for many purposes: calculation, calendrical counts, chronicles, diaries, and
even history. This is why we know far more about Aztec history before
1500—and in far greater chronological detail—than any other American
peoples. Many theories have been presented for the development of a
widespread literate tradition among the Aztecs, while the same didn't occur
for the Mayas. Perhaps the most convincing is the fact that Aztec society
was far more complex than any other preceding culture. The persistent need
for accurate record-keeping which is introduced with social complexity led
to the development of the most literate society on the American continents.
by Richard Hooke
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