by Spence,Lewis
YAOTZIN (The Enemy). A manifestation of Tezcatlipoca, 66
YATIRI (The Ruler). Aymara name of Pachacamac in his form of Pachayachachic; Huaina Ccapac and, 299
YEAR. The Mexican, 39, 40
YETL. God of natives of British Columbia, 12;
probably cognate with Quetzalcoatl, 12, 83
YMA SUMAC (How Beautiful). Daughter of Curi-Coyllur; in the drama Apu-Ollanta, 252–253
YOALLI EHECATL (The Night Wind). A manifestation of Tezcatlipoca, 66
YOHUALTICITL. A name of Metztli, which see
YOLCUAT. Form of Quetzalcoatl, 84
YOPI. Indian tribe; Xipe adopted from, 92
YUCATAN. Settlement of the Maya in, 151–152;
architectural remains in, 178
YUCAY. Inca ruins at, 269
YUM KAAX (Lord of the Harvest Fields). Maya deity; God E probably identical with, 174
YUNCA. Name given to the tropical and lowland districts of Peru, 255
YUPANQUI PACHACUTIC. Ninth Inca, known also as Pachacutic. See Pachacutic
Z
ZACATECAS. Mexican province, 32
ZAPOTECA. Aboriginal Mexican race, 23;
builders of Mitla, 31;
their calendric system, 38;
and Quetzalcoatl, 84–85;
creation-myth of, 121–122;
Maya influences transmitted to the Nahua through, 147;
in effect a border people, influenced by and influencing Maya and Nahua, 147;
of Nahua stock, 147
ZAQUE. Aboriginal Mexican race, 24
ZIPACNA (Cockspur or Earth-heaper). Son of Vukub-Cakix; in a Kiche myth in the Popol Vuh, 211–213, 216
ZIPPA. A chieftain of the Chibchas, 276
ZOQUE. A chieftain of the Chibchas, 276
ZOTUTA. Region in Yucatan inhabited by remnant of Cocomes, 156
ZOTZILAHA CHIMALMAN. The Maya bat-god, called also Camazotz, 171–172
ZUMARRAGA. Mexican chronicler, 13
ZUTUGIL dialect, 145
Table of Contents
THE MYTHS OF MEXICO AND PERU
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
MAPS
PREFACE
CHAPTER I: THE CIVILISATION OF MEXICO
The Civilisations of the New World
Evidence of Animal and Plant Life
Origin of American Man
Traditions of Intercourse with Asia
Legends of European Intercourse
The Legend of Madoc
American Myths of the Discovery
A Peruvian Prophecy
The Prophecy of Chilan Balam
The Type of Mexican Civilisation
The Mexican Race
Legends of Mexican Migration
The Toltec Upheaval
Artificial Nature of the Migration Myths
Myths of the Toltecs
Legends of Toltec Artistry
The House of Feathers
Huemac the Wicked
The Plagues of the Toltecs
King Acxitl
A Terrible Visitation
Fall of the Toltec State
The Chichimec Exodus
The Disappearance of the Toltecs
Did the Toltecs Exist?
A Persistent Tradition
A Nameless People
Toltec Art
Other Aboriginal Peoples
The Cliff-dwellers
The Nahua Race
The Aculhuaque
The Tecpanecs
The Aztecs
The Aztec Character
Legends of the Foundation of Mexico
Mexico at the Conquest
A Pyramid of Skulls
Nahua Architecture and Ruins
Cyclopean Remains
Teotihuacan
The Hill of Flowers
Tollan
Picture-Writing
Interpretation of the Hieroglyphs
Native Manuscripts
The Interpretative Codices
The Mexican “Book of the Dead”
The Calendar System
The Mexican Year
Lunar Reckoning
Groups of Years
The Dread of the Last Day
The Birth-Cycle
Language of the Nahua
Aztec Science
Nahua Government
Domestic Life
A Mysterious Toltec Book
A Native Historian
Nahua Topography
Distribution of the Nahua Tribes
Nahua History
Bloodless Battles
The Lake Cities
Tezcuco
The Tecpanecs
The Aztecs
The Aztecs as Allies
New Powers
CHAPTER II: MEXICAN MYTHOLOGY
Nahua Religion
Cosmology
The Sources of Mexican Mythology
The Romance of the Lost “Sahagun”
Torquemada
The Worship of One God
Tezcatlipoca
Tezcatlipoca, Overthrower of the Toltecs
Myths of Quetzalcoatl and Tezcatlipoca
Tezcatlipoca and the Toltecs
The Departure of Quetzalcoatl
Tezcatlipoca as Doomster
The Teotleco Festival
The Toxcatl Festival
Huitzilopochtli, the War-God
The War-God as Fertiliser
Tlaloc, the Rain-God
Sacrifices to Tlaloc
Quetzalcoatl
The Man of the Sun
Various Forms of Quetzalcoatl
Quetzalcoatl’s Northern Origin
The Worship of Quetzalcoatl
The Maize-Gods of Mexico
The Sacrifice of the Dancer
An Antiquarian Mare’s-Nest
The Offering to Centeotl
Importance of the Food-Gods
Xipe
Nanahuatl, or Nanauatzin
Xolotl
The Fire-God
Mictlan
Worship of the Planet Venus
Sun-Worship
Sustaining the Sun
A Mexican Valhalla
The Feast of Totec
Tepeyollotl
Macuilxochitl, or Xochipilli
Father and Mother Gods
The Pulque-Gods
The Goddesses of Mexico: Metztli
Tlazolteotl
Chalchihuitlicue
Mixcoatl
Camaxtli
Iztlilton
Omacatl
Opochtli
Yacatecutli
The Aztec Priesthood
Priestly Revenues
Education
Orders of the Priesthood
An Exacting Ritual
CHAPTER III: MYTHS AND LEGENDS OF THE ANCIENT MEXICANS
The Mexican Idea of the Creation
Ixtlilxochitl’s Legend of the Creation
Creation-Story of the Mixtecs
Zapotec Creation-Myth
The Mexican Noah
The Myth of the Seven Caverns
The Sacrificed Princess
The Fugitive Prince
Maxtla the Fierce
A Romantic Escape
A Thrilling Pursuit
The Defeat of Maxtla
The Solon of Anahuac
Nezahualcoyotl’s Theology
The Poet Prince
The Queen with a Hundred Lovers
The Golden Age of Tezcuco
A Fairy Villa
Disillusionment
The Noble Tlascalan
The Haunting Mothers
The Return of Papantzin2
Papantzin’s Story
CHAPTER IV: THE MAYA RACE AND MYTHOLOGY
The Maya
Were the Maya Toltecs?
The Maya Kingdom
The Maya Dialects
Whence Came the Maya?
Civilisation of the Maya
The Zapotecs
The Huasteca
The
Type of Maya Civilisation
Maya History
The Nucleus of Maya Power
Early Race Movements
The Settlement of Yucatan
The Septs of Yucatan
The Cocomes
Flight of the Tutul Xius
The Revolution in Mayapan
Hunac Eel
The Last of the Cocomes
The Maya Peoples of Guatemala
The Maya Tulan
Doubtful Dynasties
The Coming of the Spaniards
The Riddle of Ancient Maya Writing
The Maya Manuscripts
The System of the Writing
Clever Elucidations
Methods of Study
The Maya Numeral System
Mythology of the Maya
Quetzalcoatl among the Maya
An Alphabet of Gods
Difficulties of Comparison
The Conflict between Light and Darkness
The Calendar
Traditional Knowledge of the Gods
Maya Polytheism
The Bat-God
Modern Research
God A
The Maize-God
The Sun-God
“The God with the Ornamented Nose”
The Old Black God
The Travellers’ God
The God of Unlucky Days
The Frog-God
Maya Architecture
Methods of Building
No Knowledge of the Arch
Pyramidal Structures
Definiteness of Design
Architectural Districts
Fascination of the Subject
Mysterious Palenque
An Architectural Curiosity
The Temple of Inscriptions
Aké and Itzamal
The House of Darkness
The Palace of Owls
Itzamna’s Fane
Bearded Gods
A Colossal Head
Chichen-Itza
The Nunnery
The “Writing in the Dark”
Kabah
Uxmal
The Dwarf’s House
The Legend of the Dwarf
The Mound of Sacrifice
The Phantom City
The Horse-God
Copan
Mitla
A Place of Sepulture
An Old Description of Mitla
Human Sacrifice at Mitla
Living Sacrifices
The Cavern of Death
Palace of the High-Priest
Furniture of the Temples
CHAPTER V: MYTHS OF THE MAYA
Mythology of the Maya
The Lost “Popol Vuh”
Genuine Character of the Work
Likeness to other Pseudo-Histories
The Creation-Story
Vukub-Cakix, the Great Macaw
The Earth-Giants
The Undoing of Zipacna
The Discomfiture of Cabrakan
The Second Book
A Challenge from Hades
The Fooling of the Brethren
The Princess Xquiq
The Birth of Hun-Apu and Xbalanque
The Divine Children
The Magic Tools
The Second Challenge
The Tricksters Tricked
The Houses of the Ordeals
The Reality of Myth
The Xibalbans
The Third Book