1 / 12

The Aztec Calendar

The Aztec Calendar. Fabiola Cortes-Villena Literature and Science April 29 th , 2002 (Also available on the web at http://fabiolacortes.tripod.com/calendar.html). Sun Stone. Weighs 25 tons, has a diameter of just under 12 feet, and a thickness of 3 feet. Carved in 1479.

olinda
Télécharger la présentation

The Aztec Calendar

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Aztec Calendar Fabiola Cortes-Villena Literature and Science April 29th, 2002 (Also available on the web at http://fabiolacortes.tripod.com/calendar.html)

  2. Sun Stone • Weighs 25 tons, has a diameter of just under 12 feet, and a thickness of 3 feet. • Carved in 1479. • Discovered on December 17th, 1760 • Buried under the zocalo, or main square in Mexico city. • Embedded into a wall inside the metropolitan cathedral. • Moved to the National museum of Anthropology and History in 1885. (Montalvo)

  3. What the sun stone represents • It represents how the Aztec world began, how it would continue and when it would reach its inevitable end. • The Aztec were living in 5th and last creation of the world. • Each creation was a “sun” because movement of the sun maintained human life. • The four previous suns and the dates they perished surround the Sun God: Tonatiuh

  4. The Center of the Sun Stone

  5. Aztec Calendar • Based on the early Maya Calendar System. • Apparently was developed following cues and astronomic observations. • Exactly how they came up with it, remains a puzzle.

  6. Maya Vs. Aztec Calendar • The Maya had three different calendars in their system, whereas the Aztec only adopted two of them: • Xiupohualli or year-count • Tonalpohualli or day-count • The Aztec had a more primitive numeric system and less precise way of recording dates: • Aztec event recording only included the day and name of the year. This was ambiguous because: • The same day can occur twice in a year • Years with the same name occur every 52 years

  7. Xiupohualli (year count) • Also called the solar calendar. • Used to determine many ceremonies and rituals linked to agricultural cycles. • 18 20-day months + 5-day period = 365 days (like the Maya Haab). • Each month had 4 5-day weeks.

  8. Tonalpohualli (day count) • Also called the sacred calendar. • Used for divinatory purposes by a priest who would cast horoscopes and predict favorable and unfavorable days. • 20 13-day weeks = 260 days (like the Maya Tzolkin). • “A day (tonalli) in the Tenalpohualli consist of a number and a symbol or day sign, each daysign is dedicated to a God. The twenty days and their Gods are successively.” (The system of the Tonalpohualli) • Crucial to the balance of the universe.

  9. Tonalpohualli (cont.) • According to the Aztecs, the universe is in a very delicate equilibrium: • The world is always on the edge of a war of gods, who are constantly competing for supreme power . • Gods need to have their own space, rituals, social groups, and of course their own sacrifices. • The Tonalpohualli tells how time is to be divided among the gods. (Voorburg)

  10. Aztec “Century” • Every 52 years both calendars meet, and a new “century” in the Aztec calendar cycle begins. • 12-day Celebration • Fasting • Human Sacrifices

  11. Today • The sun stone representing the Aztec calendar is perhaps the most famous symbol of Mexico, besides the flag. • Parts and bits of the “Sun Stone” can also be found on Mexican currency. • “In general, the uses and meaning of the sunstone is ignored and a completely agreed-upon interpretation has not been reached for this magnific monument.” (Mexica Sunstone) • The Tonalpohualli is still in use among the present-day inhabitants of native regions in Mexico. (Richards, 187)

  12. References Mexica Sunstone. 1996. http://www.geocities.com/a1ma_mia/sunstone/ Montalvo, Fanya S. The Aztec Calendar. 1995. http://www.ai.mit.edu/people/montalvo/Hotlist/aztec.html Richards, E. G. Mapping Time: The Calendar and its History. Oxford University Press: New York, 1998. 186-195 The system of the Tonalpohualli.http://www.artcamp.com.mx/AZ/9.html Voorburg, René. The Aztec Calendar. http://www.azteccalendar.com/

More Related