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Mexica/Aztec Calendar Systems

The Civil Calendar

The solar year was the basis for the civil calendar by which the Mexicas (Aztecs) determined the myriad ceremonies and rituals linked to agricultural cycles. The calendar was made up of 18 months, each lasting 20 days. The months were divided into four five-day weeks. The year was rounded out to 365 days by the addition of the five-day nemontemi (empty days), an omnious period marked by the cessation of normal activities and general abstinence. The correlation of dates in the Gregorian calendar is uncertain, although most authors on the subject affix the beginning of the Aztec year to early Febuary. A variety of sources were consulted in developing the following chart of some of the ritualistic activities associated with each month.

 

No.

 Name of Month

Patron Gods and Rituals

  I.  Atlacacauallo (ceasing of water)

  Tlaloc, Chachihutlicue

Children sacrificed to water gods

 II.  Tlacaxipehualiztli (flaying of men)

 Xipe-Totec

Gladitorial sacrifice; dances by priest wearing the flayed skin of victims

 III.  Tozoztontli (little vigil)

 Coatlicue, Tlaloc

Flayed skins buried, child sacrifices

 IV.  Hueytozoztli (great vigil)

 Centeotl, Chicomecacoatl

Blessing of new corn; maiden sacrificed

 V.  Toxcatl (dryness)

 Tezcatlipoca, Huitzilopochtli

Impersonators of these major gods sacrified

 VI.  Etzalcualiztli (meal of maize & beans)

 Tlaloques

Impersonators of water dieties sacrified by drowning; ritual bathing and dances

 VII.  Tecuilhuitontli (small feast of the lords)

 Huixtocihuatl, Xochipilli

Impersonators of the gods sacrificed; ceremony of salt workers

 VIII.  Hueytecuihutli (great feast of the lords)

 Xilonen

Feast for godess of young corn, lords offer gifts and feast for commoners

 IX.  Tlaxochimaco (birth of flowers)

 Huizilopochtli

All the gods festooned with garlands; feasting on corn-meal cakes and turkey

 X.

 Xocotlhuetzin (fall of fruit)

Hueymiccaihuitl (great feast of the dead)

 Xiuhtecuhtli

Ceremonial pole climbing competition

Sacrifice to fire gods by roasting victims alive

 XI.  Ochpaniztli (sweeping of the roads)

 Tlazolteotl

Sweeping of house and roads; mock combat

 XII.  Teoleco (return of the gods)

 Tezcatlipoca

Ceremonies welcoming gods returning to earth; ceremonial drunkeness, sacrifices by fire

 XIII.  Tepeihuitl (feast of the hills)

 Tlaloc

Ceremonies for mountain rain gods; human sacrifices and ceremonial cannibalism

 XIV.  Quecholli (precious feather)

 Mixcoatl-Camaxtli

Ritualistic hunt following fast; sacrifice of game and ceremonial feasting

 XV.  Panquetzaliztli (raising of the banner)

 Huitzilopochtli

Homes and fruit trees decorated with paper banners; race-procession; massive sacrifices

 XVI.  Atemoztli (water decends)

 Tlaloc

Festival honoring water gods; children and slaves sacrificed

 XVII.  Tititl (streching)

 Llamatecuhtli

Sympathetic magic to bring rain; women beaten with straw-filled bags to make them cry

 XVIII.  Izcalli (resuscitation)

 Xiuhtecuhtli

Image of god made from amaranth dough; feasting on tamales stuffed with greens

   Nemontemi (empty days)  Five unlucky days; no rituals, general fasting

 

Tonalpohualli - The Ritual Calendar

The tonalpohualli (count of days) was the sacred almanac of the Mexicas. This ritual calendar was registered in the tonalamatl (book of days), a green-fold bark paper or deerskin codex from which a priest (called tonalpouque) cast horoscopes and predicated favorable and unfavorable days of the cycle. The almanac year comprised of 260 days, each of which was assigned a date by intermeshing one of 20 day-signs, represented graphically with a gylph, and a number from 1 to13, represented by dots so that no two days in the cycle could be confused. The almanac year was thus made up of 20 13-day weeks, with the first week beginning on 1-Crocodile and ending on 13-Reed, the second week running from 1-Ocelot to 13-Deaths' Head and so on. A god or godess was believed to preside over each day-sign, as shown in the following chart.

 

Cipactli-Crocodile

Tonacatecuhtli- Lord of our Sustenance; male aspect of dual gods

Ehecatl-Wind

Quetzalcoatyl- Plumbed Serpent; god of knowledge and the preisthood

Calli-House

Tepeyolohtli- Heart of the Mountain; jaguar god of the interior earth

Cuetzpallin-Lizard

Huehuecoyotl- Old Coyote; back-biiter or mischief-maker

Coatl-Serpant

Chalchiuhtlicue- Lady of the jade skirt; godess of ground waters

Miquiztli-Deaths' Head

Tecciztecatl-He from the sea-snail; moon god

Mazatl-Deer

Tlaloc- He who makes things sprout; god of rain and earth fertility

Tochtli-Rabbit

Mayahuel- She of the maguey plant; godess of pulque (maguey wine)

Atl-Water

Xiuhtecuhtli- Lord of the year; fire god, patron of rulers

Itzcuintli-Dog

Miclantecuhtli- Lord of Mictlan (Region of the Dead);god of death

Ozomatli-Monkey

Xochipilli- Flower Prince; god of flowers and plants

Malinalli-Grass

Patecatl- He from the Land of Medicines; god of medicinal plants

Acatl-Reed

Tezcatlipoca- Smoking mirror; major creator of god, god of fate

Ocelotl-Ocelot

Tlazolteotl- Eater of Filth; earth mother

Cuauhtli-Eagle

Xipe- Totec- Our Flayed Lord; god of seeding and planting

Cozcaquauhtli-Vulture

Itzapapalotl- Obsidian Butterfly; stellar and agricultural godess

Ollin-Motion

Xolotl- Double; Monster god, twin of Quetzalcoatl

Tecpatl-Flint Knife

Chalchiuhtotolin- Guise of Tezcatlipoca; god of night and the mysterious

Quiahuitl-Rain

Chantico- In the House; godess of the hearth

Xochitl- Flower

Xochiquetzal- Flower of the Rich Plume; godess of flowers

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