Sacrifices to specific gods
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HuitzilopochtliHuitzilopochtli was the sun god and the main deity in the Aztec
religion. Most of the sacrifices went to him because the Aztecs
believed that the sacrifices returned energy to Huitzilopochtli so
he could continue the battle against the god of night. The Aztecs
believed if he did not renew his energy, he could not survive the
next cycle of 52 years. When the Aztecs sacrificed to
Huitzilopochtli, the victim would be placed on a stone slab, then
the priest would ceremonially cut through the abdomen with an
obsidian dagger. Then the heart would be held to the sky in honor of
the sun god. Then the body would be carried away and either cremated
or given to the warrior responsible for the capture of the victims.
He would cut the body into very small pieces and send them to
important people as an offering. In exchange he would received fine
blankets, jewels, slaves, etc. This was a system for rewarding
successful warriors. |
TezcatlipocaTezcatlipoca, generally considered the most powerful god, was the
god of night, sorcery, and destiny. The Aztecs believed that he was
the reason for war. One reason the Aztecs gave sacrifice to
Tezcatlipoca was so that there would be peace. Another reason that
they gave him sacrifice is so that their destiny would be an
honorable one. Of the captives, the most brave were sacrificed to
Tezcatlipoca in the gladiatorial sacrifice but to the Aztecs the
most important and emotive sacrifice was of a young Aztec. This was
done by taking a handsome young volunteer and letting him live a
luxurious life for a year. This youth would represent Tezcalipoca on
earth; he would also get four beautiful women as his companions
until the day he was to die came. He would continually go through
the streets of the city playing his flute. On the day the Aztecs
have a feast in Tezcatlipoca’s honor, the youth would climb the
pyramid, break his flute and surrender to the priest who would
sacrifice him. This was one of the more solemn festivities of the
Aztec. Sahagun compared it to the Christian Easter.HuehueteotlHuehueteotl was the senior deity and also the fire god. To appease
him, the Aztecs would hold large feasts and at the end they would
burn people with their hearts taken out. If they didn’t please
Huehueteotl, the Aztecs believed that a fire would strike their
village. Huehueteotl preferred to have the bodies of newlyweds
thrown into the altar—just before the couple died the bodies were
pulled out and the hearts were cut out as a second offering to him.TlalocTlaloc was the god of rain. The Aztecs believed that, if sacrifices
weren’t given to Tlaloc, the rain wouldn’t come and their crops
wouldn’t grow. Another thing that was believed to happen if
sacrifices weren’t given to Tlaloc was that the leprosy and
rheumatism, diseases believed to be caused by Tlaloc, would infest
the village. The Aztecs believed Tlaloc required the tears of the
young and as a result sacrificed thousands of children at once so
their tears would wet the earth.Sources of victims for human sacrificeNot all inhabitants of Mesoamerica were candidates for human
sacrifice. The main victims for human sacrifice had to be captive
warriors who were from a Nahuatl culture. In order to acquire
captives in time of peace, the Aztec resorted to a form of "ritual
warfare", or flower war. The "flower wars" were originally a treaty
made between the cities of Texcoco, Tenochtitlan, Tlaxcala and
Huexotzingo. The treaty was motivated by a famine in Mesoamerica in
1450. The Aztecs believed that sacred wars were needed to end the
famine. By 1455, there was again prosperity in the region, so the
sacred wars (xochiyáoyotl) were continued.The cihuacoatl (consuelor) Tlacaelel is credited with originating
the idea of the flower wars in order to ensure a supply of captives
in times of peace. The capture of prisoners for sacrifices was
called nextlaualli, "debt payment to the gods" so that the sun could
survive each cycle of 52 years. The flower wars not only gave the
Aztecs a constant supply of prisoners even in what were otherwise
times of peace, but became an important part of their religion.
Smaller numbers of Aztec prisoners were also sacrificed in Tlaxcala
and Huexotzingo.
The Aztec eventually took over Texcoco and Tlacopan so that they
became Aztec cities. As a founding member of the alliance, Texcoco
had a lot of privileges, since it provided the Aztec with their most
cultivated citizens. Eventually Texcoco was exempted form the ritual
war. The Aztecs began to conquer the territories around Tlaxcala and
Huexotzingo.
Tlaxcala was a Nahuatl culture that was never "conquered" by the
Aztecs. As a condition of remaining independent, the Tlaxcalteca
agreed to continue provide victims for human sacrifice by means of
the "flower wars". The high price of their freedom, paid perenially
in human lives, was a major reason why the Tlaxcalteca became allies
of the Spaniards. By the time of the conquest, this ritual war had
escalated to the level of a real war, and it was accepted that it
was only a matter of time until the Aztecs would try to conquer
Tlaxcala. Almost a hundred years of conflict had led to a lot of
hate and bitterness between the rival cities with related cultures.
Because the objective of Aztec warfare was to capture victims for
human sacrifice, Aztec battle tactics were designed primarily to
injure the enemy rather than kill him. This way, the prisoner could
be killed later in a ritual sacrifice. After towns were conquered,
their inhabitants were no longer candidates for human sacrifice
(unless they were offered voluntarily). Probably this would have
changed if Tlaxcala had been conquered, or accepted the alliance of
the Aztecs, when they began to provide support to the Spaniards.
Slaves also could be used for human sacrifice, but this was not
considered as honorable as a war captive. Probably this was the
source of children and women required for some sacrifices, but the
historical sources do not speak much on the origin of this victims.
What is told in detail is that merchants could only offer
slaves—those slaves were paid at premiums rates. This was because
only slaves that had been sold more than four times were considerers
as possible victims; they also had to be young and healthy. Since a
slave could not usually be sold without his/her authorization, those
slaves were particularly rare.
Also, some sacrifices required volunteers. This speaks much of the
faith involved. Most of the sacrifice rituals took more than one
person to perform. In the usual procedure of sacrifice, the victim
would be painted with blue chalk (the color of sacrifice) and taken
to the top of the great pyramid. Then the victim would be laid on a
stone slab by four priests, his abdomen sliced open with a
ceremonial knife (contrary to popular accounts, an obsidian knife
could hardly cut through a ribcage) and his heart taken out and
raised to the sun. The heart would be put in a bowl held by a
statue, and the body thrown on the stairs, where it would be dragged
away. Usually, the sacrifice was supposed to be voluntary—even
captives were supposed to offer their life without struggle, but if
faith was not enough, drugs could be used.
Afterwards, the body parts would be disposed of in various ways: the
viscera were used to feed the animals in the zoo, the head was
cleaned and placed on display in the tzompantli, and the rest of the
body was either cremated or cut into very small pieces and offered
by he warrior as a gift to important people, in exchange of
presents. This has been confirmed by archaeology, since the body of
some of the victims indicate removal of muscles and skinning (José
Luis Salinas Uribe, INAH, 2005). Not necesarilly all the skulls in
the zompamtli were victims of sacrifice. During the siege of
Tlatelolco. The Tlatelolcas built three more tzompamtli. Two for
their own dead, and one for the Spanish (which included two horse
skulls).
Other kinds of human sacrifice, which paid tribute to various other
Aztec deities, approached the victims differently. In these, the
victim could be shot with arrows (in which the draining blood
represented the cool rains of spring), died fighting (gladiatorial
sacrifice), burned (to honor the fire god), flayed after being
sacrificed (to honor Xipe Totec, the flayed god), or drowned. |
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