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The Ancient Aztecs

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Title: The Ancient Aztecs


1
The Ancient Aztecs
Presentation created by Andrew Clark, Nikhil
Sekher, and Joshua Reitan
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Polytheism
Polytheism - the doctrine of or belief in more
than one god or in many gods.
4
Aztec Gods
  • The Aztecs mental image of Gods were
    anthropomorphic- meaning that natural forces they
    believed in were personified.
  • The Aztecs were exteremely open minded when it
    came to religion. They took gods from different
    regions and different peoples constonatly.
  • As society grows complex, so do the Gods.

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The Manifestation of Aztec Gods
  • Pantheon - the gods of a particular mythology
    considered collectively.
  • As society grew more intelligent, the Pantheon
    grew larger and larger.
  • It was the priests job to keep track of the ever
    growing Pantheon- there were so many Gods that
    the ordinary man was not expected to know them
    all.

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The Role of Priests
All these earth gods were their life. The
complicated religious pattern they left to the
priests, who told them when to weep, when to get
drunk, when to rejoice, when to die. The people
seemed content to resign themselves to those who
spoke of the unknowable with so great a
certainty. (Von Hagen 160)
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The Role of Priests
  • Priests were the most trusted of men.
  • Since they were the ones whose job was to keep
    track of the Gods and know them, they were
    trusted.
  • Complicated matters regarding complicated Gods
    were left to the priests.
  • These complicated matters will be discussed in
    further detail later.

9
Blood - The fluid that circulates in the
principal vascular system of human beings and
other vertebrates, in humans consisting of plasma
in which the red blood cells, white blood cells,
and platelets are suspended.
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Blood The drink of the Gods.
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Huitzilopochtli, the Hummingbird Wizard,
was the Aztecs' own. They were his children, the
"chosen people." He it was who led them out of
the dry misery of the north into the promised
land of Mexico-Tenochtitlán he took his place
among all the other gods, from the ancient past
and from other cultures.
14
He was the sun, the ever-youthful warrior who
fought battles with the other gods for man's
survival. Each day he rose, fought the night, the
stars, the moon, and, armed with sunbolts,
brought on the new day.
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Since he fought these battles for them, the
Aztecs could only repay him by nourishing him for
his eternal wars. The proffered food could be
neither the watered-down intoxicant pulque, nor
corncakes such as mortal man ate--the god must be
nourished on the stuff of life blood.
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It was the sacred duty of every Aztec--for all
were part of an agrarian militia--to take
prisoners for sacrifice in order to obtain for
Huitzilopochtli the nectar of the gods--human
hearts and blood. (Von Hagen 160)
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for if the beneficent gods were not nourished
they would cease to protect man from the other
gods, and this might lead to the total
destruction of the world. (Von Hagen 161) How
could so many new hearts and blood be provided
for the gods so that they may be pleased? War.
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Militant Religion
  • What did peace mean to the Aztecs?
  • Peace was dangerous.
  • How could new hearts and blood be provided and
    sacrificed to the Gods if there was peace?
  • Militant Religion - War and Religion are tied
    together.
  • War could be considered the Aztecs natural
    condition.

19
Sacrificial Rituals
When the great temple pyramid to
Huitzilopochtli was dedicated in Mexico in 1486,
"king" Ahuitzotl, after a two years' war campaign
in Oaxaca, amassed more than twenty thousand
prisoner victims. These were lined up in rows
waiting to be spread-eagled over the sacrificial
stone. Their hearts were cut out and held briefly
to the sun, then, still pulsating, deposited in
the heart urn of the recumbent Chac-Mool figure.
(Van Hagen 161)
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Rituals
  • 2 main calenders
  • Ritualistic (Not astronomical)
  • 20 periods of 13 days
  • 20 x 13 260
  • The origin of this calendar is not known. It is
    said to even be more than 1,500 years old!
  • Solar (Astronomical)
  • 18 20-day months
  • 18 x 20 360 5 empty days (explained later)
  • 52-year cycles
  • 365(days) x 52(years) 18,980-day period

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The Role of Priests
  • Know the pantheon of the gods.
  • Calculate Rituals
  • Understand the exact interconnection between each
    particular god and time according to the
    calender.
  • For example, sacrifices had to be made at exact
    moments in time in order to please the god they
    wanted to appeal to.

23
Rituals
All the developed intellect of the Aztec was
turned toward this one thing how to propitiate
the right god at the right time. So sacrifice was
not mere butchery, it was a parade of elaborately
conceived ritual with only one object in view to
preserve human existence. (Van Hagen 165)
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Rituals
  • Sacrifice was not meaningless butchery.
  • To the Aztecs, sacrifice was they key to
    preserving human existence.
  • The Aztecs understood that if they did not offer
    the gods their drink, the gods would not be
    pleased the gods would in turn, cease to protect
    the human race, and instead, destroy the human
    race.

25
Nemontemi
  • Nemontemi the five empty days
  • Occurs at the end of every 52-year cycle. (After
    the 360 days).
  • These are the unlucky days.
  • Nemontemi was announced by the priests
  • All fires were extinguished.
  • Fasting was general.
  • Sexual intercourse ceased.
  • Artists were to remain idle.
  • Businesses were to remain idle.

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Nemontemi
  • After the priests calculate the end of Nemontemi,
    and if the world had not ended, they would
    perform the first ritual of the new cycle

Sacrifice.
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Nemontemi
  • First sacrifice of the new cycle
  • A sacrificial victim was chosen.
  • His chest was cut open and the heart pulled out.
  • All the fires would than be rekindled in the
    temples and throughout the land.

28
Festivals and Holidays
  • THE FESTIVAL was almost continuous in ancient
    Mexico. It is not easy to separate festive and
    ceremonial, sacred and secular, since everything
    was bound up together. (Von Hagen 97)

29
Festivals and Holidays
  • There are 18 months in the solar calender.
  • Each of these months contained some forms of
    celebration to the gods.

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  • Ceremonies, parades, sacrifice.
  • Priests dance in the skin of sacrificial victims.
  • Fasting, skin dancing, children sacrifices.
  • Worship of the new corn, god impersonation
    ceremonies, altars created in houses with
    cornstalks, children sacrifices.
  • Dances of workers.
  • Aztecs feast on corn.
  • Feasts that lasted for days.
  • Prisoners of war held captive by the Aztecs
    danced with the Aztecs themselves.

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The Afterlife
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An Aztec Funeral Chant
Where shall I go?Where shall I go?The road of
the god of duality.Is your house perchance in
the place of the fleshless?Perchance inside
heaven?or here on earth onlyis the place of the
fleshless?
34
The Afterlife
  • Occupation, rather than conduct or how one acted
    in life, was the key to where one would go in the
    afterlife.
  • Warriors and certain women (who were considered
    equal to men in some cases) went to paradise in
    the land of Tlaloc, the god of water and rain.
  • This land was filled with flowers.

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The Afterlife
  • Women who died during childbirth also went to
    paradise in another area.
  • They also haunted children and other women on
    earth.
  • Aztecs who were unclassified journeyed to the
    land of the Lord of the Dead through rivers,
    mountains, and deserts. When they reached the
    realm of the Lord of the Dead, he assigned them
    to one of nine hells.

37
Key Gods and Myths
38
Huitzilopochtlis Myth
  • Huitzilopochtli was the son of the goddess
    Coatlicue, she had 400 other sons and one
    daughter.
  • When no one could figure out who the father ( he
    was actually born from a ball of humming bird
    feathers) Huitzilopochtlis siblings attempted to
    kill him to prevent embarrasing the family name

39
Huitzilopochtlis Myth (cont.)
  • Huitzilopochtli was born battle ready and
    defeated all of his brothers using a shield and
    his weapon called the turquoise snake staff. He
    cut out his sisters heart and kicked her body
    off a cliff because she convinced
    Huitzilopochtlis brothers to fight him in the
    first place
  • From then on sacrifices were conducted by cutting
    out a victims heart and tossing the body off a
    cliff

40
Huitzilopochtlis role in Aztec Religion
  • He was God of War, the Sun, lord of the South,
    and also known as the hummingbird, and I
    represented by the color blue
  • He is a warrior in armor covered by hummingbird
    feathers, and he is usually represented by
    hummingbirds and sometimes eagles
  • Huitzilopochtli is one of the main gods of the
    Aztecs, at the top of the pantheon of Gods as God
    of the sun

41
Myth of Quetzalcoatl
  • Known as the feathered serpent, god of life,
    breath, and the wind
  • He fell to land of the dead Mictlantecuhtli
  • where he gathered bones and returned to the world
    of the living where he sprinkled blood on them
    and created humans
  • He was king and god of the sun at one point and
    afterward sailed East. It was believed that he
    would return one day for his kingdom

42
Quetzalcoatls symbols
  • He was white in his human form and said to glow
    as well
  • He represented priesthood, knowledge and the arts
    and crafts
  • He was represented by snakes and butterflies
    which symbolized perfection
  • He has the most compassion for humans and asks
    for only and one sacrifice
  • He was a main god of the Aztecs, but not as
    important as Huitzilopochtli

43
Tlaloc
  • He was one of the 3 Major Gods of the Aztecs
  • God of rain, thunder, lightning, floods,
    droughts, and fertility
  • He has jaguar fangs, a cloud cape, foam sandals,
    a rattle to make thunder, and a crown of heron
    feathers
  • He was known for being both kind and wrathful
  • In a myth similar to the greek myth of winter
    Tlaloc married the goddess of flowers
    Xochiquetzal, but she was kiddnapped by the god
    of night Tezcatlipoca

44
Tlaloc ( cont.)
  • He asked for children as sacrifices
  • Tlaloc is represented by the alligator,lightning
    bolts, storms and disaster
  • He carried rain in jars and poured them on the
    world one caused life, the second blight, the
    third brought frost, and the fourth complete
    destruction
  • With Huitzilopochtli he was a god honored in the
    temple Teotihuacan

45
Aztec Sacrifice
  • Every Aztec god asked for sacrifice though some
    less than others. The ritual follows a similar
    pattern that was established by Huitzilopochtli.

46
Aztec Sacrifice (cont.)
  • Priests took the hearts of war prisoners or the
    hearts of brave warriors. Their heart was cut out
    while still beating and offered to the sun. Their
    body would then be thrown off a cliff or carried
    if it was a respected warrior. Aztecs offered the
    heart and blood of their enemies because they
    believed that the gods needed blood to survive

47
Quetzalcoatl and Cortes
  • Quetzalcoatl was a god believe to have fled his
    kingdom and went East because he lost his place
    as the second sun and ruler of the world.
  • When Cortes the Conquistador arrived in the New
    World the Aztecs believed he was Quetzalcoatl
    because like Quetzalcoatl he had light skin.
    Unfortunately they learned the truth too late

48
The Creation Story
  • The father of the gods Ometeotl gave birth to
    four gods Tezcatlipoca (Quetzalcoatls
    archrival), Quetzalcoatl, Tlaloc, and
    Chalchiuhtlicue ( she would be Tlalocs wife
    after Tezcatlipoca kiddnapped his first wife)

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Creation Story (cont.)
  • Tezcatlipoca, the jaguar, became the sun and
    claimed to be ruler of the world
  • Quetzalcoatl did not like that and hit
    Tezcatlipoca into the ocean and turned himself
    into the sun
  • Tezcatlipoca feeling angrier now knocked
    Quetzalcoatl out of the sky, this created a
    powerful gale killed almost all of the humans on
    the planet only a few survived but became monkeys

50
Creation Story ( cont. 2)
  • Tlaloc took the opportunity while Quetzalcoatl
    and Tezcatlipoca were fighting and became the
    third sun and repopulated the planet.
    Quetzalcoatl then rained fire on humans killing
    them all again this time a few escaped but became
    birds
  • Chalchiuhtlicue then established herself as the
    fourth sun while her brothers were squabbling and
    repopulated the earth once more

51
Creation Story (cont. 3)
  • It is unsurprising what happened next but
    Tezcatlipoca then caused floods to eradicate
    mankind once more and the only ones to survive
    became fish
  • The entire world was engulfed by flooding and
    there was no more land

52
Creation Story (cont. 4)
  • Tezcatlopoca and Quetzalcoatl stopped fighting to
    lift the world out of the ocean, and Quetzalcoatl
    created Aztecs by traveling to the underworld
    gathering their bones and giving drops of his
    blood
  • Quetzalcoatl was from then respected as the one
    who gave the Aztecs life. Also, none of the four
    gods became god of the sun, Huitzilopochtli
    became the fifth sun and remained so however many
    mayan and Aztecs refer the end of the world with
    the coming of the 6th sun

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Fun With Aztecs
1) There will be 4 groups. Each round each team
will send up a representative to answer the
question. 2) The person that hits the buzzer
first will have 15 seconds to ask their group for
an answer. When the 15 seconds is up, there can
be no more communication between the group and
the Rep., then the question must me answered. 3)
If the answer is not right, the question will
move on to the next group 4) Picture questions
are worth 2 points, one for the question and one
for the pronunciation of the Aztec God's
name. 5) NO HITTING. You will be ejected from
the game.
56
The roles of the priests involved all these
EXCEPT
  • Observe, calculate, and keep track of the days of
    the ritual and solar calendars.
  • Keep track and study all the gods of the
    pantheon.
  • Oversee sacrificial rituals.
  • Accompany the undead through their journey to the
    underworld.

57
Tlaloc
A) God of Birth and Babies B) God of Rain C)
Goddess of Love D) Goddess of Hate
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What is a Pantheon?
  1. A type of obelisk.
  2. The gods of a particular mythology considered
    collectively.
  3. A certain Aztec statue created and dedicated to
    the gods.
  4. The house of the priests.

59
http//library.thinkquest.org/27981/god.html
Xipe Totec
A) God of Spring and New Life B) God of
Destruction C) Goddess of Food and Water D)
This isn't Aztec, it's just a drawing.
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What is the drink of the gods?
  1. Water
  2. Specific river water
  3. Blood
  4. Orange juice

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All the following are reasons for sacrificial
rituals EXCEPT
  • The gods must be given blood in order to be
    pleased and provide protection to the Aztecs.
  • The gods will not destroy the human race if given
    blood.
  • The amount of blood given to the gods by the
    Aztecs equals to the amount of Aztecs that are
    allowed in heaven.

62
Huitzilopochtli
A) God of Vegetation B) God of the Sun C) God of
Serpents D) Goddess of Fire
63
How many days were in the Ritualistic calender?
  1. 260
  2. 360
  3. 180
  4. 5

64
When did Nemontemi occur?
  1. When natural disasters began to occur frequently.
  2. After every 52-year cycle.
  3. When there was an eclipse.
  4. Whenever the Aztecs lost a battle.

65
What does the term militant religion mean?
  1. It describes a society that only goes to war in
    order to preserve peace and non violence
    throughout the land.
  2. It describes a society that attempts to create
    the largest army in the world.
  3. It describes a society that rules its people with
    military force and unbalanced power.
  4. It describes a society in which war and religion
    are tied together.

66
Mictlantecuhtl
A) God of Hats and Robes B) God of the Dead C)
God of the Living D) God of Difficult names
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This is what determined where people went in the
afterlife.
  1. Integrity
  2. Faithfulness
  3. Intelligence
  4. Occupation

68
Quetzalcoatl
A) God of Music B) God of Warfare C) God of
Knowledge and Creation D) Goddess of Animals
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Works Cited
  • http//library.thinkquest.org/03oct/00875/text/Azt
    ecC.htm
  • http//library.thinkquest.org/27981/god.html
  • http//www.aztec-indians.com/aztec-gods.html
  • http//www.crystalinks.com/aztecgods.html
  • Vaillant, George C. Aztecs of Mexico Origin,
    Rise, and Fall of the Aztec Nation. Garden City,
    NY Doubleday, 1962. Questia. Web. 20 Sept. 2011.
  • Von Hagen, Victor Wolfgang. The Ancient Sun
    Kingdoms of the Americas. Cleveland, OH World,
    1961. Questia. Web. 20 Sept. 2011.
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