- Itztapaltotec
In
Aztec religion , Itztapaltotec (sometimes spelled Iztapaltotec) is an aspect of the fertility godXipe Totec . In theAztec calendar , he is one of the patrons of thetrecena beginning with the day One Rabbit ("ce tochtli" inNahuatl ), alongsideXiuhtecuhtli , the god of fire. Xipe Totec proper is the patron of the trecena beginning with the day One Dog ("ce itzcuintli"). Itztapaltotec is an obscure figure, known only from "tonalamatl " (calendars). Brief, confusing information about him is given in two related manuscripts, theCodex Telleriano-Remensis and theCodex Ríos (or Codex Vaticanus A).Itztapaltotec is depicted with a giant sacrificial knife either as a kind of head ornament, or as part of his body. He wears a flayed human skin, and wields a knife and a rattle-staff associated with fertility. Both the large knife and the smaller one he carries may be anthropomorphized by giving them eyes and teeth. This was often done with such knives, although not those actually used for sacrifice, which were undecorated. According to the Codex Telleriano-Remensis and the Codex Ríos, his mouth is open in order to devour people.
Itztapaltotec is probably related to
Itztli , another figure of the Aztec calendar also depicted as a personified knife.__NOTOC__Gallery
References
*cite book |author=Quiñones Keber, Eloise |year=1995 |title=Codex Telleriano-Remensis: Ritual, Divination, and History in a Pictorial Aztec Manuscript |location=Austin |publisher=University of Texas Press |isbn=0-292-76901-6 |pages=pp. 189–190
ee also
*
Itztli
*Xipe Totec External links
* [http://www.famsi.org/research/pohl/jpcodices/rios/index.html A translation of the text of the "tonalamatl" section of the Codex Ríos — John Pohl's Mesoamerica]
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