When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Tecpatl - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tecpatl

    Tecpatl (sacrificial knife), image based on the Codex Borgia. In Aztec mythology, the tecpatl was sometimes drawn as a simple flint blade, sharpened with some notches on the edge, in the Codex Borgia it appears red. [3] Tecpatl was associated with Northern cardinal point ., [4] the dark place of eternal stillness and rest of the dead.

  3. Macuahuitl - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macuahuitl

    A drawing from the Catalog of the Royal Armoury of Madrid by the medievalist Achille Jubinal in the 19th century. The original specimen was destroyed by a fire in 1884. The maquahuitl (Classical Nahuatl: māccuahuitl, other orthographic variants include mākkwawitl and mācquahuitl; plural māccuahuimeh), [4] a type of macana, was a common weapon used by the Aztec military forces and other ...

  4. Ītzpāpālōtl - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ītzpāpālōtl

    However, she can also appear with clear butterfly or eagle attributes. Her wings are obsidian or tecpatl (flint) knife tipped. [5] (In the Manuscript of 1558, Itzpapalotl is described as having "blossomed into the white flint, and they took the white and wrapped it in a bundle.") She could appear in the form of a beautiful, seductive woman or ...

  5. Chalchiuhtotolin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chalchiuhtotolin

    Chalchihuihtotolin is a symbol of powerful sorcery. Tezcatlipoca can tempt humans into self-destruction, but when he takes the form of a turkey he can also cleanse them of contamination, absolve them of guilt, and overcome their fate. In the tonalpohualli, Chalchihuihtotolin rules over day Tecpatl (Stone Knife) and over trecena 1-Atl (Water). [1]

  6. Tōnalpōhualli - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tōnalpōhualli

    The Aztec form of writing is largely pictorial and was a semasiographic system, meaning writing existed separately from spoken word. [5] The glyphs were recognizable to their meaning, and members of the population would understand what day it was and their current position in time. [ 5 ]

  7. Codex Magliabechiano - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Codex_Magliabechiano

    The Codex Magliabechiano is a pictorial Aztec codex created during the mid-16th century, in the early Spanish colonial period. It is representative of a set of codices known collectively as the Magliabechiano Group (others in the group include the Codex Tudela and the Codex Ixtlilxochitl ).

  8. Tezcatlipoca - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tezcatlipoca

    The frontispiece of the Codex Fejéváry-Mayer, one of the more well-known images from Aztec codices, features a god circumscribed in the 20 trecena, or day symbols, of the Tōnalpōhualli. The exact identity of this god is unclear, but is most likely either Tezcatlipoca or Xiuhtecutli. The figure has yellow and black face paint, as is ...

  9. Tlaltecuhtli - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tlaltecuhtli

    The other gods were angered to hear of Tlaltecuhtli's treatment and decreed that the various parts of her dismembered body would become the features of the new world. Her skin became grasses and small flowers, her hair the trees and herbs, her eyes the springs and wells, her nose the hills and valleys, her shoulders the mountains, and her mouth ...