The Myths of Mexico & Peru (Illustrated) (Myths and Legends of the Ancient World Book 5)

Home > Other > The Myths of Mexico & Peru (Illustrated) (Myths and Legends of the Ancient World Book 5) > Page 37
The Myths of Mexico & Peru (Illustrated) (Myths and Legends of the Ancient World Book 5) Page 37

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

 

‹ Prev