English:
Identifier: mexicancentralamer00bowd (find matches)
Title: Mexican and Central American antiquities, calendar systems, and history;
Year: 1904 (1900s)
Authors: Bowditch, Charles P. (Charles Pickering), 1842-1921 Seler, Eduard, 1849-1922 Förstemann, Ernst Wilhelm, 1822-1906 Schellhas, Paul, b. 1859 Sapper, Karl, 1866-1945 Dieseldorff, Erwin Paul, 1868-1940 Wesselhoeft, Selma Parker, Alberta M Thomas, Cyrus, 1825-1910
Subjects: Mayas Maya calendar Calendar, Mexican
Publisher: Washington, Govt. print. off.
Contributing Library: Getty Research Institute
Digitizing Sponsor: Getty Research Institute
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le part isrestored, doubtless incorrectly, as may be clearly seen in several preserved portions. This copywas reproduced by Brantz Mayer ( Mexico as it was, etc.. New York, 1844) as the upper side of aburied stone found in Mexico, which was said to have served for the sacrificio gladiatorio. Thiscopy is also given by Chavero in Mexico d trav6s de los siglos, v. 1, as Piedra policroma del sa-crificio gladiatorio. SELER) ANCIENT MEXICAN FEATHER ORNAMENTS 65 one of which is combined with the numeral 1 and the other with thenumeral 5. The five dates with the numeral 1 and the five withthe numeral 5 are just 51 days apart. And these five times 51 inter-mediate days are marked on the sheet by small circles in the circum-ference of the five divisions. Here we find a male and a female deityplaced opposite to each other in the first (upper right) division, whichis shown to belong to the region of the east by the drawing of theheavens with the image of the sun upon it and, moreover, by a rising
Text Appearing After Image:
c dFig. 9. Mexican shields. sun (J, figure 8). Beside the latter stands ce Mazatl (one deer), asthe name hieroglyph of the day. Beside the former (c, figure 8) as namehieroglyph of the day is macuilli Cuetzpalin (five lizard). Theformer god, whom I must take, for various reasons, to be the same asXolotl in the Borgian codex, page 29 (a, figure 9), wears on his left arma shield, which has a hand as its emblem, and the ends of his loin clothare also painted with large black hands. Xolotl is a figure which orig-inated in southern regions, and may possibly represent fire rushing downfrom heaven or light flaming up in the heavens. In the manuscripts7238—No. 28—05 5 66 BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY (bull. 28 the setting sun, devoured by the earth, is opposed to him, similarly asthe sun god is opposed to the death god. He may perhaps be describedas a sun god of southern tribes (Zapotecs?). In the Mexican legendhe appears as the representative of human sacrifice and as the god ofmonstrosit
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