CHAPTER I: The Civilisation of
Mexico
The Civilisations
of the New World
THERE is now no question as to the
indigenous origin of the civilisations of Mexico, Central America, and Peru. Upon few subjects,
how. ever, has so much mistaken erudition been lavished. The beginnings of the races who
inhabited these regions, and the cultures which they severally created, have been referred
to nearly every civilised or semicivilised nation of antiquity, and wild if fascinating
theories have been advanced with the intention of showing that civilisation was initiated
upon American soil by Asiatic or European influence. These speculations were for the most
part put forward by persons who possessed but a merely general acquaintance with the
circumstances of American aboriginal civilisation, and who were struck by the superficial
resemblances which undoubtedly exist between American and Asiatic peoples, customs, and
art-forms., but which cease to be apparent to the Americanist, who perceives in them only
such likenesses as inevitably occur in the work of men situated in similar environments and
surrounded by similar social and religious conditions.
The Maya of Yucatan may be
regarded as the most highly civilised of the peoples who occupied the American continent
before the advent of Europeans, and it is usually their culture which we are asked to
believe had its seat of origin in Asia. It is unnecessary
to refute this theory in detail, as that has already been ably accomplished.[By Payne in
The New World called America, London 1892-99] But it may be remarked that the surest
proof of the purely native origin of American civilisation is to be found in the unique
nature of American art, the undoubted result of countless centuries of isolation. American
language, arithmetic, and methods of time-reckoning, too, bear no resemblance to other
systems, European or Asiatic, and we may be certain that had a civilising race entered
America from Asia it would have left its indelible impress upon things so intensely
associated with the life of a people as well as upon the art and architecture of the
country, for they are as much the product of culture as is the ability to raise
temples.
Evidence of Animal and Plant Life
It is, impossible in this
connection to ignore the evidence in favour of native advancement which can be adduced from
the artificial production of food in America. Nearly all the domesticated animals and
cultivated food-plants found on the continent at the period of the discovery were totally
different from those known to the Old World. Maize, cocoa,
tobacco, and the potato, with a host of useful plants, were new to the European conquerors,
and the absence of such familiar animals as the horse, cow, and sheep, besides a score of
lesser animals, is eloquent proof of the prolonged isolation which the American continent
underwent subsequent to its original settlement by man.
Origin of American
Man
An Asiatic origin is, of course, admitted for the aborigines of America, but it
undoubtedly stretched back into that dim Tertiary Era when man was little more than beast,
and language as yet was not, or at the best was only half formed. Later immigrants there
certainly were, but these probably arrived by way of Behring Strait, and not
by the land-bridge connecting Asia and America by which the first-comers found entrance.
At a later geological period the general level of the North American continent was higher
than at present., and a broad isthmus connected it with Asia. During this prolonged elevation vast littoral plains, now
submerged, extended continuously from the American to the Asiatic shore, affording an easy
route of migration to a type of man from whom both the Mongolian branches may have sprung.
But this type, little removed from the animal as it undoubtedly was, carried with it none of
the refinements of art or civilisation; and if any resemblances occur between the art-forms
or polity of its equal descendants in Asia and America, they are due to the influence of a
remote common ancestry, and not to any later influx of Asiatic civilisation to American
shores.
Traditions of Intercourse with Asia
The few traditions of Asiatic intercourse with America are, alas! easily dissipated. It is a
dismal business to be compelled to refute the dreams of others. How much more fascinating
would American history have been had Asia sowed the seeds of her own peculiar civilisation
in the western continent, which would then have become a newer and further East, a more
glowing and golden Orient I But America possesses a fascination almost as intense when there
falls to be considered the marvel of the evolution of her wondrous civilisations-the flowers
of progress of a new, of an isolated world.
The idea that the "Fu-Sang" of
the Chinese annals alluded to America was rendered illusory by Klaproth, who
showed its identity with a Japanese island. It is not impossible that Chinese and Japanese
vessels may have drifted on to the American coasts) but that they sailed thither of set
purpose is highly improbable. Gomara, the Mexican historian, states that those who served
with Coronado's expedition in 1542 saw off the Pacific coast certain ships having their
prows decorated with gold and silver, and laden with merchandise, and these they supposed to
be of Cathay or China, "because they intimated by signs that they had been thirty days
on their voyage." Like most of these interesting stories, however, the tale has no
foundation in fact, as the incident cannot be discovered in the original account of the
expedition, published in 1838
in the travel-collection of Ternaux-Compans.
Legends of
European Intercourse
We shall find the traditions, one might almost call them
legends, of early European intercourse with America little more satisfactory than those which recount its
ancient connection with Asia. We may dismiss the sagas of
the discovery of America by the Norsemen, which are by no means
mere tradition., and pass on to those in which the basis of fact is weaker and the legendary
interest more strong. We are told that when the Norsemen drove forth those Irish monks who
had settled in Iceland, the fugitives voyaged to
Great
Ireland, by which many antiquarians of
the older school imagine the author of the myth to have meant America. The Irish
Book of Lismore recounts the voyage of St. Brandan, Abbot of Cluainfert, in
Ireland, to an island in the ocean which
Providence had intended as
the abode of saints. It gives a glowing account of his seven years' cruise in western
waters, and tells of numerous discoveries, among them a hill of fire and an endless island,
which he quitted after an unavailing journey of forty days, loading his ships with its
fruits, and returning home. Many Norse legends exist regarding this "Greater
Ireland," or "Huitramanna Land" (White Man's Land), among them one concerning
a Norseman who was cast away on its shores, and who found there a race of white men who went
to worship their gods bearing banners, and "shouting with a loud voice." There is,
of course, the bare possibility that the roving Norsemen may have on occasions drifted or
have been cast away as far south as Mexico, and such an occurrence becomes the more easy of
belief when we remember that they certainly reached the shores of North
America.
The Legend of Madoc
A much more interesting because
more probable story is that which tells of the discovery of distant lands across the western
ocean by Madoc, a princeling of North Wales, in the year
1170. It is recorded in Hakluyt's English Voyages and Powel's History of
Wales. Madoc, the son of Owen Gwyneth, disgusted by the strife of his brothers for the
principality of their dead father, resolved to quit such an uncongenial atmosphere, and,
fitting out ships with men and munition, sought adventure by sea, sailing west, and leaving
the coast of Ireland so far north that he came to a land unknown, where he saw many strange
things. "This land," says Hakluyt, " must needs be some part of that country
of which the Spaniards affirmc themselves to be the first finders since Hanno's time, and
through this allusion we are enabled to see how these legends relating to mythical lands
came to be Associated with the American continent. Concerning the land discovered by Madoc
many tales were current in Wales in mediæval times. Madoc on his
return declared that it was pleasant and fruitful, but uninhabited. He succeeded in
persuading a large number of people to accompany him to this delectable region, and, as he
never returned, Hakluyt concludes that the descendants of the folk he took with him composed
the greater part of the population of the America of the seventeenth century, a conclusion
in which he has been supported by more than one modern antiquarian. Indeed, the wildest
fancies have been based upon this legend, and stories of Welsh-speaking Indians who were
able to converse with Cymric immigrants to the American colonies have been received with
complacency by the older school of American historians as the strongest confirmation of
the saga. It is notable, however, that Henry VII of England, the son of a Welshman, may have
been influenced in his patronage of the early American explorers by this legend of Madoc, as
it is known that he employed one Guttyn Owen, a Welsh historiographer, to draw up his
paternal pedigree, and that this same Guttyn included the story in his works. Such legends
as those relating to Atlantis and Antilia scarcely fall within the scope of American myth,
as they undoubtedly relate to early communication with the Canaries and Azores.
American Myths of the Discovery
But what were
the speculations of the Red Men on the other side of the Atlantic? Were there no rumours there, no legends of an Eastern world?
Immediately prior to the discovery there was in America a widely disseminated belief that at a relatively
remote period strangers from the east had visited American soil, eventually returning to
their own abodes in the Land
of Sunrise. Such, for example, was the
Mexican legend of Quetzalcoatl, to which we shall revert later in its more essentially
mythical connection. He landed with several companions at Vera Cruz, and speedily brought to
bear the power of a civilising agency upon native opinion. In the ancient Mexican pinturas,
or paintings, he is represented as being habited in a long black gown, fringed with white
crosses. After sojourning with the Mexicans for a number of years, during which time he
initiated them into the arts of life and civilisation, he departed from their land on a
magic raft, promising, however, to return. His second advent was anxiously looked for, and
when Cortés and his companions arrived at Vera Cruz, the identical spot at which
Quetzalcoatl was supposed to have set out on his homeward journey, the Mexicans fully
believed him to be the returned hero. Of course Montezuma, their monarch, was not altogether
taken by surprise at the coming of the white man, as he had been informed of the arrival of
mysterious strangers in Yucatan and elsewhere in Central America; but in the eyes of the commonalty the Spanish leader
was a "hero-god" indeed. In this interesting figure several of the monkish
chroniclers of New Spain saw the Apostle St. Thomas, who
had journeyed to the American continent to effect its conversion to Christianity.
A
Peruvian Prophecy
The Mexicans were by no means singular in their presentiments.
When Hernando de Soto, on landing in Peru, first met the Inca Huascar, the latter related an
ancient prophecy which his father, Huaina Ccapac, had repeated on his death-bed, that in the
reign of the thirteenth Inca white men of surpassing strength and valour would come from
their father the Sun, and subject the Peruvians to their rule. "I command you,"
said the dying king," to yield them homage and obedience, for they will be of a nature
superior to ours." [Garcilasso el Inca de la Vega, Hist. des Incas, lib. ix. cap. 15.]
But
the most interesting of American legends connected with the discovery is that in which the
prophecy ot the Maya priest Chilan Balam is described. Father Lizana, a venerable Spanish
author, records the prophecy, which he states was very well known throughout Yucatan, as does Villagutierre, who
quotes it.
The Prophecy of Chilan Balam
Part of this strange prophecy runs
as follows: "At the end of the thirteenth age, when Itza is at the height of its power,
as also the city called Tancah, the signal of God will appear on the heights, and the Cross
with which the world was enlightened will be manifested. There will be variance of men's
will in future times, when this signal shall be brought. . . . Receive your barbarous
bearded guests from the cast, who bring the signal of God, who comes to us in mercy and
pity. The time of our life is coming. . . ."
It would seem from the perusal of
this prophecy that a genuine substratum of native tradition has been overlaid and coloured
by the influence of the early Spanish missionaries. The terms of the announcement are much
too exact, and the language employed is obviously Scriptural. But the native books of Chilan
Balam, whence the prophecy is taken, are much less explicit, and the genuineness of their
character is evinced by the idiomatic use of the Maya tongue, which, in the form they
present it in, could have been written by none save those who had habitually employed it
from infancy. As regards the prophetic nature of these deliverances it is known that the
Chilan, or priest, was wont to utter publicly at the end of certain prolonged periods a
prophecy forecasting the character of the similar period to come, and there is reason to
believe that some distant rumours of the coming of the white man had reached the ears of
several of the seers.
These vague intimations that the seas separated them from a
great continent where dwelt beings like themselves seem to have been common to white and red
men alike. And who shall say by what strange magic of telepathy they were inspired in the
minds of the daring explorers and the ascetic priests who gave expression to them in act and
utterance? The discovery of America was much more than a mere scientific
process, and romance rather than the cold speculations of mediæval geography urged men
to tempt the dim seas of the West in quest of golden islands seen in dreams.
The
Type of Mexican Civilisation
The first civilised American people with whom the
discoverers came into contact were those of the Nahua or ancient Mexican race. We use the
term "civilised" advisedly, for although several authorities of standing have
refused to regard the Mexicans as a people who had achieved such a state of culture as would
entitle them to be classed among civilised communities, there is no doubt that they had
advanced nearly as far as it was possible for them to proceed when their environment and the
nature of the circumstances which handicapped them are taken into consideration. In
architecture they had evolved a type of building, solid yet wonderfully graceful, which, if
not so massive as the Egyptian and Assyrian, was yet more highly decorative. Their artistic
outlook as expressed in their painting and pottery was more versatile and less conventional
than that of the ancient people of the Orient, their social system was of a more advanced
type, and a less rigorous attitude was evinced by the ruling caste toward the subject
classes. Yet, on the other hand, the picture is darkened by the terrible if picturesque
rites which attended their religious ceremonies, and the dread shadow of human sacrifice
which eternally overhung their teeming populations. Nevertheless, the standard of morality
was high, justice was even-handed, the forms of government were comparatively mild, and but
for the fanaticism which demanded such troops of victims, we might justly compare the
civilisation of ancient Mexico with that
of the peoples of old China or
India,
if the literary activity of the Oriental states be discounted.
The Mexican
Race
The race which was responsible for this varied and highly coloured civilisation
was that known as the Nahua (Those who live by Rule), a title adopted by them to distinguish
them from those tribes who still roamed in an unsettled condition over the contiguous plains
of New Mexico and the more northerly tracts. This term was employed by them to designate the
race as a whole, but it was composed of many diverse elements, the characteristics of which
were rendered still more various by the adoption into one or other of the tribes which
composed it of surrounding aboriginal peoples. Much controversy has raged round the question
regarding the original home of the Nahua, but their migration legends consistently point to
a northern origin; and when the close affinity between the art-forms and mythology of the
present-day natives of British Columbia and those of the Nahua comes to be considered along
with the very persistent legends of a prolonged pilgrimage from the North, where they dwelt
in a place "by the water," the conclusion that the Nahua emanated from the region
indicated is well-nigh irresistible. [See Payne, History of the New World called
America, vol. ii. pp 373 et
seq.]
In Nahua tradition the name of the locality whence the race commenced its
wanderings is called Aztlan (The Place of Reeds), but this place-name is of little or no
value as a guide to any given region, though probably every spot betwixt Behring Strait and
Mexico
has been identified with it by zealous antiquarians. Other names discovered in the migration
legends are Tlapallan (The Country of Bright Colours) and Chicomoztoc (The Seven Caves), and
these may perhaps be identified with New Mexico or
Arizona.
Legends
of Mexican Migration
All early writers on the history of Mexico agree that the
Toltecs were the first of the several swarms of Nahua who streamed upon the Mexican plateau
in ever-widcning waves. Concerning the reality of this people so little is known that many
authorities of standina have regarded them as wholly mythical, while others profess to see
in them a veritable race, the founders of Mexican civilisation. The author has already
elaborated his theory of this difficult question elsewhere,' but will briefly refer to it
when he comes to deal with the subject of the Toltec civilisation and the legends concerning
it. For the present we must regard the Toltecs merely as a race alluded to in a migration
myth as the first Nahua immigrants to the region of Mexico. Ixtlilxochitl, a native chronicler who
flourished shortly after the Spanish conquest of Mexico, gives two separate accounts of the early Toltec
migrations, the first of which goes back to the period of their arrival in the fabled
land of Tlapallan, alluded to above. In this account Tlapallan
is described as a region near the sea, which the Toltecs reached by voyaging southward,
skirting the coasts of California.
This account must be received with the
greatest caution. But we know that the natives of British Columbia have been expert in the use of the canoe
from an early period, and that the Mexican god Quetzalcoatl, who is probably originally
derived from a common source with their deity Yed, is represented as being skilled in the
management of the craft. It is, therefore, not outside the bounds of possibility that the
early swarms of Nahua immigrants made their way to Mexico by sea, but it is much more probable that their
migrations took place by land, following the level country at the base of the Rocky Mountains.
The Toltec Upheaval
Like nearly all
legendary immigrants, the Toltecs did not set out to colonise distant countries from any
impulse of their own, but were the victims of internecine dissension in the homeland, and
were expelled from the community to seek their fortunes elsewhere. Thus thrust forth, they
set their faces southward, and reached Tlapallan in the year 1 Tecpatl (A.D. 387). Passing
the country of Xalisco, they effected a landing at Huatulco, and journeyed down the coast
until they reached Tochtepec, whence they pushed inland to Tollantzinco. To enable them to
make this journey they required no less than 104 years. Ixtlilxochitl furnishes another
account of the Toltec migration in his Relaciones, a work dealing with the early history of
the Mexican races. In this he recounts how the chiefs of Tlapallan, who had revolted against
the royal power, were banished from that region inA. D. 439. Lingering near their ancient
territory for the space of eight years, they then journeyed to Tlapallantzinco, where they
halted for three years before setting out on a prolonged pilgrimage, which occupied the
tribe for over a century, and in the course of which it halted at no less than thirteen
different resting-places, six of which can be traced to stations on the Pacific coast, and
the remainder to localities in the north of Mexico.
Artificial Nature of the
Migration Myths
It is plain from internal evidence that these two legends of the
Toltec migrations present an artificial aspect. But if we cannot credit them in detail, that
is not to say that they do not describe in part an actual pilgrimage. They are specimens of
numerous migration myths which are related concerning the various branches of the Mexican
races. Few features of interest are presented in them, and they are chiefly remarkable for
wearisome repetition and divergence in essential details.
Myths of the
Toltecs
But we enter a much more fascinating domain when we come to peruse the myths
regarding the Toltec kingdom and civilisation, for, before entering upon the origin or
veritable history of the Toltec race, it will be better to consider the native legends
concerning them. These exhibit an almost Oriental exuberance of imagination and colouring,
and forcibly remind the reader of the gorgeous architectural and scenic descriptions in the
4rabian Nights. The principal sources of these legends are the histories of Zumarraga and
Ixtlilxochitl. The latter is by no means a satisfactory authority, but he has succeeded in
investing the traditions of his native land with no inconsiderable degree of charm. The
Toltecs, he says, founded the magnificent city of Tollan in the year 566 of the Incarnation. This city, the
site of which is now occupied by the modern town of Tula, was situated north-west of the mountains which bound
the Mexican valley. Thither were the Toltecs guided by the powerful necromancet Hueymatzin
(Great Hand), and under his direction they decided to build a city upon the site of what bad
been their place of bivouac. For six years they toiled at the building of Tollan, and
magnificent edifices, palaces, and temples arose, the whole forming a capital of a splendour
unparalleled in the New World. The valley wherein it stood
was known as the "Place of Fruits," in allusion to its great fertility. The
surrounding rivers teemed with fish, and the hills which encircled this delectable site
sheltered large herds of game. But as yet the Toltecs were without a ruler, and in the
seventh year of their occupation of the city the assembled chieftains took counsel together,
and resolved to surrender their power into the hands of a monarch whom the people might
elect. The choice fell upon Chalchiuh Tlatonac (Shining Precious Stone), who reigned for
fifty-two years.
Legends of Toltec Artistry
Happily settled in their new
country, and ruled over by a king whom they could regard with reverence, the Toltecs made
rapid progress in the various arts, and their city began to be celebrated far and wide for
the excellence of its craftsmen and the beauty of its architecture and pottery. The name of
"Toltec," in fact, came to be regarded by the surrounding peoples as synonymous
with "artist," and as a kind of hall-mark which guaranteed the superiority of any
article of Toltec workmanship. Everything in and about the city was eloquent of the taste
and artistry of its founders. The very walls were encrusted with rare stones, and their
masonry was so beautifully chiselled and laid as to resemble the choicest mosaic. One of the
edifices of which the inhabitants of Tollan were most justly proud was the temple wherein
their high-priest officiated. This building was a very gem of architectural art and mural
decoration. It contained four apartments. The walls of the first were inlaid with gold, the
second with precious stones of every description, the third with beautiful sea-shells of all
conceivable hues and of the most brilliant and tender shades encrusted in bricks of silver,
which sparkled in the sun in such a manner as to dazzle the eyes of beholders. The fourth
apartment was formed of a brilliant red stone, ornamented with shells.
The House of
Feathers
Still more fantastic and weirdly beautiful was another edifice, "The
House of Feathers." This also possessed four apartments, one decorated with feathers of
a brilliant yellow, another with the radiant and sparkling hues of the Blue Bird. These were
woven into a kind of tapestry, and placed against the walls in graceful hangings and
festoons. An apartment described as of entrancing beauty was that in which the decorative
scheme consisted of plumage of the purest and most dazzling white. The remaining chamber was
hung with feathers of a brilliant red, plucked from the most beautiful birds.
Huemac
the Wicked
A succession of more or less able kings succeeded the founder of the
Toltec monarchy, until in A.D. 994 Huemac II ascended the throne of Tollan. He ruled first
with wisdom, and paid great attention to the duties of the state and religion. But later he
fell from the high place he had made for himself in the regard of the people by his
faithless deception of them and his intemperate and licentious habits. The provinces rose in
revolt, and many signs and gloomy omens foretold the downfall of the city. Toveyo, a cunning
sorcerer, Collected a great concourse of people near Tollan, and by dint of beating upon a
magic drum until the darkest hours of the night, forced them to dance to its sound until,
exhausted by their efforts, they fell headlong over a dizzy precipice into a deep ravine,
where they were turned into stone. Toveyo also maliciously destroyed a stone bridge, so that
thousands of people fell into the river beneath and were drowned. The neighbouring volcanoes
burst into eruption, presenting a frightful aspect, and grisly apparitions could be seen
among the flames threatening the city with terrible gestures of menace.
The rulers of
Tollan resolved to lose no time in placating the gods, whom they decided from the portents
must have conceived the most violent wrath against their capital. They therefore ordained a
reat sacrifice of war-captives. But upon the first orthe victims being placed upon the altar
a still more terrible catastrophe occurred. In the method of sacrifice common to the Nahua
race the breast of a youth was opened for the purpose of extracting the heart, but no such
organ could the officiating priest perceive. Moreover the veins of the victim were
bloodless. Such a deadly odour was exhaled from the corpse that a terrible pestilence arose,
which caused the death of thousands of Toltecs. Huemac, the unrighteous monarch who had
brought all this suffering upon his folk, was confronted in the forest by the Tlalocs, or
gods of moisture, and humbly petitioned these deities to spare him, and not to take from him
his wealth and rank. But the go,is were disgusted at the callous selfishness displayed in
his desires, and departed, threatening the Toltec race with six years of plagues.
The Plagues of the Toltecs
In the next winter such a severe frost visited the
land that all crops and plants were killed. A summer of torrid heat followed, so intense in
its suffocating fierceness that the streams, were dried up and the very rocks were melted.
Then heavy rain-storms descended, which flooded the streets and ways, and terrible tempests
swept through the land. Vast numbers of loathsome toads invaded the valley, consuming the
refuse left by the destructive frost and heat, and entering the very houses of the people.
In the following year a terrible drought caused the death of thousands from starvation, and
the ensuing winter was again a marvel of severity. Locusts descended in cloud-like swarms,
and hail- and thunder-storms completed the wreck. During these visitations nine-tenths of
the people perished, and all artistic endeavour ceased because of the awful struggle for
food.
King Acxitl
With the cessation of these inflictions the wicked Huemac
resolved upon a more upright course of life, and became most assiduous for the welfare and
proper government of his people. But he had announced that Acxitl, his illegitimate son,
should succeed him, and had further resolved to abdicate at once in favour of this youth.
With the Toltecs, as with most primitive peoples, the early kings were regarded as divine,
and the attempt to place on the throne one who was not of the royal blood was looked upon as
a serious offence against the gods. A revolt ensued, but its two principal leaders were
bought over by promises of preferment. Acxitl ascended the throne, and for a time ruled
wisely. But he soon, like his father, gave way to a life of dissipation, and succeeded in
setting a bad example to the members of his court and to the priesthood, the vicious spirit
communicating itself to all classes of his subjects and permeating every rank of society.
The iniquities of the people of the capital and the enormities practised by the royal
favourites caused such scandal in the outlying provinces that at length they broke into open
revolt, and Huehuetzin, chief of an eastern viceroyalty, joined to himself two other
malcontent lords and marched upon the city of Tollan at the head of a strong force. Acxitl
could not muster an army sufficiently powerful to repel the rebels, and was forced to resort
to the expedient of buying them off with rich presents, thus patching up a truce. But the
fate of Tollan was in the balance. Hordes of rude Chichimec savages, profiting by the civil
broils in the Toltec state, invaded the lake region of Anahuac, or Mexico, and settled upon its
fruitful soil. The end was in sight!
A Terrible Visitation
The wrath of the
gods increased instead of diminishing, and in order to appease them a great convention of
the wise men of the realm met at Teotihuacan, the sacred city of the Toltecs. But during
their deliberations a giant of immense proportions rushed into their midst, and, seizing
upon them by scores with his bony hands, hurled them to the ground, dashing their brains
out. In this manner he slew great numbers, and when the panic-stricken folk imagined
themselves delivered from him he returned in a different guise and slew many more. Again the
grisly monster appeared, this time taking the form of a beautiful child. The people,
fascinated by its loveliness, ran to observe it more closely, only to discover that its head
was a mass of corruption, the stench from which was so is fatal that many were killed
outright. The fiend who had thus plagued the Toltecs at length deigned to inform them that
the gods would listen no longer to their prayers, but had fully resolved to destroy them
root and branch, and he further counselled them to seek safety in flight.
Fall of
the Toltec State
By this time the principal families of
Tollan had deserted the country, taking refuge in neighbouring states. Once more Huehuetzin
menaced Tollan, and by dint of almost superhuman efforts old King Huemac, who had left his
retirement, raised a force sufficient to face the enemy. Acxitl's mother enlisted the
services of the women of the city, and formed them into a regiment of Amazons. At the head
of all was Acxitl, who divided his forces, despatching one portion to the front under his
commander-in-chief, and forming the other into a reserve under his own leadership. During
three years the king defended Tollan against the combined forces of the rebels and the
semi-savage Chichimecs. At length the Toltecs, almost decimated, fled after a final
desperate battle into the marshes of Lake Tezcuco
and the fastnesses of the mountains. Their other cities were given over to destruction, and
the Toltec empire was at an end.
The Chichimec Exodus
Meanwhile the rude
Chichimecs of the north, who had for many years carried on a constant warfare with the
Toltecs, were surprised that their enemies sought their borders no more, a practice which
they had engaged in principally for the purpose of obtaining captives for sacrifice. In
order to discover the reason for this suspicious quiet they sent out spies into Toltec
territory, who returned with the amazing news that the Toltec domain for a distance of six
hundred miles from the Chichimec frontier was a desert, the towns ruined and empty and their
inhabitants scattered. Xolotl, the Chichimec king, summoned his chieftains to his capital,
and, acquainting them with what the spies had said) proposed an expedition for the purpose
of annexing the abandoned land. No less than 3,202,000 people composed this migration, and
only 1,6oo,ooo remained in the Chichimec territory.
The Chichimecs occupied most of
the ruined cities, many of which they rebuilt. Those Toltecs who remained became peaceful
subjects, and through their knowledge of commerce and handicrafts amassed considerable
wealth. A tribute was, however, demanded from them, which was peremptorily refused by
Nauhyotl, the Toltec ruler of Colhuacan; but he was defeated and slain, and the Chichimec
rule was at last supreme.
The Disappearance of the Toltecs
The transmitters
of this legendary account give it as their belief which is shared by some authorities of
standing, that the Toltecs, fleein-a from the civil broils of their city and the inroads of
the Chichimecs, passed into Central America, where they became the founders of the
civilisation of that country, and the architects of the many wonderful cities the ruins of
which now litter its plains and are encountered in its forests. But it is time that we
examined the claims put forward on behalf of Toltec civilisation and culture by the aid of
more scientific methods.
Did the Toltecs Exist?
Some authorities have
questioned the existence of the Toltecs, and have professed to see in them a race which had
merely a mythical significance. They base this theory upon the circumstance that the
duration of the reigns of the several Toltec monarchs is very frequently stated to have
lasted for exactly fifty-two years, the duration of the great Mexican cycle of years which
had been adopted so that the ritual calendar might coincide with the solar year. The
circumstance is certainly suspicious, as is the fact that many of the names of the Toltec
monarchs are also those of the principal Nahua deities, and this renders the whole dynastic
list of very doubtful value. Dr. Brinton recognised in the Toltecs those children of the sun
who, like their brethren in Peruvian mythology, were sent from heaven to civilise the human
race, and his theory is by no means weakened by the circumstance that Quetzalcoatl, a deity
of solar significance, is alluded to in Nahua myth as King of the Toltecs. Recent
considerations and discoveries, however, have virtually forced students of the subject to
admit the existence of the Toltecs as a race. The author has dealt with the question at some
length elsewhere, [see Civilization of Ancient Mexico, chap ii] and is not of those
who are free to admit the definite existence of the Toltecs from a historical point of view.
The late Mr. Payne of Oxford, an authority entitled to every respect, gave it as his opinion
that " the accounts of Toltec history current at the conquest contain a nucleus of
substantial truth, and he writes convincingly: "To doubt that there once existed in
Tollan an advancement superior to that which prevailed among the Nahuatlaca generally at the
conquest, and that its people spread their advancement throughout Anahuac, and into the
districts eastward and southward, would be to reject a belief universally entertained, and
confirmed rather than shaken by the cfforts made in later times to construct for the Pueblo
something in the nature of a history." [Payne, Hist. New
World, vol ii. p. 430]
A Persistent Tradition
The theory of
the present author concerning Toltec historical existence is rather more non-committal. He
admits that a most persistent body of tradition as to their existence gained general
credence among the Nahua, and that the date (1055) of their alleged dispersal admits of the
approximate exactness and probability of this body of tradition at the time of the conquest.
He also admits that the site of Tollan contains ruins which arc undoubtedly of a date
earlier than that of the architecture of the Nahua as known at the conquest, and that
numerous evidences of an older civilisation exist. He also believes that the early Nahua
having within their racial recollection existed as savages, the time which elapsed between
their barbarian condition and the more advanced state which they achieved was too brief to
admit of evolution from savagery to culture. Hence they must have adopted an older
civilisation, especially as through the veneer of civilisation possessed by them they
exhibited every sign of gross barbarism.
A Nameless People
If this be true
it would go to show that a people of comparatively high culture existed at a not very remote
period on the Mexican tableland. But what their name was or their racial affinity the writer
does not profess to know. Many modern American scholars of note have conferred upon them the
name of "Toltecs," and speak freely of the "Toltec period" and of
"Toltec art." It may appear pedantic to refuse to recognisc that the cultured
people who dwelt in Mexico in pre-Nahua times were "the
Toltecs." But in the face of the absence of genuine and authoritative native written
records dealing with the question, the author finds himself compelled to remain unconvinced
as to the exact designation of the mysterious older race which preceded the Nahua. There are
not wanting authorities who appear to regard the pictorial chronicles of the Nahua as quite
as worthy of credence as written records, but it must be clear that tradition or even
history set down in pictorial form can never possess that degree of definiteness contained
in a written account.
Toltec Art
As has been stated above, the Toltecs of
tradition were chiefly remarkable for their intense love of art and their productions in its
various branches. Ixtlilxochitl says that they worked in gold, silver, copper, tin, and
lead, and as masons employed flint, porphyry, basalt, and obsidian. In the manufacture of
jewellery and objets d'art they excelled, and the pottery of Cholula, of which specimens are frequently recovered, was
of a high standard.
Other Aboriginal Peoples
Mexico contained other
aboriginal races besides the Toltecs. Of these many and diverse peoples the most remarkable
were the Otomi, who still occupy Guanajuato and Queretaro,
and who, before the coming of the Nahua, probably spread over the entire valley of Mexico. In the south we find the Huasteca, a people
speaking the same language as the Maya of Central America, and on the Mexican Gulf the Totonacs and Chontals. On the Pacific side of
the country the Mixteca and Zapoteca, were responsible for a flourishing civilisation which
exhibited many original characteristics, and which in some degree was a link between the
cultures of Mexico and Central America. Traces of a still older population than any of these
are still to be found in the more remote parts of Mexico, and the Mixe, Zaque, Kuicatec, and
Popolcan are probably the remnants of prehistoric races of vast antiquity.
The
Cliff-dwellers
It is probable that a race known as "the Cliff. dwellers,"
occupying the plateau country of Arizona, New Mexico, Colorado, and Utah, and even extending in its ramifications to Mexico itself, was
related ethnologically to the Nahua. The present-day Pueblo Indians dwelling to the north of
Mexico
most probably possess a leaven of Nahua blood. Ere the tribes who communicated this leaven
to thewhole had intermingled with others, of various origin, it would appear that they
occupied' with others those tracts of country now inhabited by the Pueblo Indians, and in
the natural recesses and shallow caverns found in the faces of the cliffs erected dwellings
and fortifications, displaying an architectural ability of no mean order. These communities
extended as far south as the Gila river, the most southern affluent of the Colorado, and the remains they have
left there appear to be of a later date architecturally than those situated farther north.
These were found in ruins by the first Spanish explorers, and it is thought that their
builders were eventually driven back to rejoin their kindred in the north. Fartner to the
south in the caflons of the Piedras Verdes river in Chihuahua., Mexico,
are cliff-dwellings corresponding in many respects with those of the Pueblo region, and Dr. Hrdlicka has examined others so far south as the
State of Jalisco, in Central
Mexico. These may be the ruins of dwellings erected either by the early Nahua or
by some of the peoples relatively aboriginal to them, and may display the architectural
features general among the Nahua prior to their adoption of other alien forms. Or else they
may be the remains of dwellings similar to those of the Tarahumare, a still existing tribe
of Mexico, who, according to Lumholtz, [Unknown Mexico, vol. i., 1902; also see
Bulletin 30, Bureau of American Ethnology, p. 309] inhabit similar structures at the present
day. It is clear from the architectural development of the cliff-dwellers that their
civilisation developed generally from south to north, that this race was cognate to the
early Nahua, and that it later withdrew to the north, or became fused with the general body
of the Nahua peoples. It must not be understood, however, that the race arrived in the
Mexican plateau before the Nahua, and the ruins of Jalisco and other mid-Mexican districts
may merely be the remains of comparatively modern cliff-dwellings, an adaptation by
mid-Mexican communities of the "Cliff-dweller" architecture, or a local
development of it owing to the exigencies of early life in the district.
The Nahua
Race
The Nahua peoples included all those tribes speaking the Nahuatlatolli (Nahua
tongue), and occupied a sphere extending from the southern borders of New Mexico to the
Isthmus of Tehuantepec on the south, or very much within the limits of the modern Republic
ot Mexico. But this people must not be regarded as one race of homogeneous origin. A very
brief account of their racial affinities must be sufficient here. The Chichimecs were
probably related to the Otomi, whom we have alluded to as among the first-comers to the
Mexican valley. They were traditionally supposed to have entered it at a period subsequent
to the Toltec occupation. Their chief towns were Tezcuco and Tena, yucan, but they later
allied themselves with the Nahua in a great confederacy, and adopted the Nahua language.
There are circumstances which justify the assumption that on their entrance to the Mexican
valley they consisted of a number of tribes loosely united, presenting in their general
organisation a close resemblance to some of the composite tribes of modern American
Indians.
The Aculhuaque
Next to them in point of order of tribal arrival
were the Aculhuaque,orAcolhuans. The name means "tall" or strong" men,
literally "People of the Broad Shoulder," or "Pushers," who made a way
for themselves. Gomara states in his Conquista de Mexico that they arrived in the
valley from Acolhuacan about A.D. 780, and founded the towns of Tollan, Colhuacan, and
Mexico
itself. The Acolhuans were pure Nahua, and may well have been the much-disputed Toltecs, for
the Nahua people always insisted on the fact that the Toltecs were of the same stock as
themselves, and spoke an older and purer form of the Nahua tongue. From the Acolhuans sprang
the Tlascalans, the inveterate enemies of the Aztecs, who so heartily assisted Cortés
in his invasion of the Aztec capital, Tenochtitlan, or
Mexico.
The Tecpanecs
The
Tecpanecs were a confederacy of purely Nahua tribes dwelling in towns situated upon the
Lake of Tezcuco, the principal of which were Tlacopan and
Azcapozalco. The name Tecpanec signifies that each settlement possessed its own chief's
house, or tecpan. This tribe were almost certainly later Nahua immigrants who arrived
in Mexico after the Acolhuans, and were great rivals
to the Chichimec branch of the race.
The Aztecs
The Aztecâ or Aztecs,
were a nomad tribe of doubtful origin, but probably of Nahua blood. Wandering over the
Mexican plateau for generations, they at length settled in the marshlands near the
Lake of Tezcuco, hard by Tlacopan. The name Aztecâ means
" Crane People," and was bestowed upon the tribe by the Tecpanecs, probably
because of the fact that, like cranes, they dwelt in a marshy neighbourhood. They founded
the town of Tenochtitlan, or Mexico, and for a while paid
tribute to the Tecpanecs. But later they became the most powerful allies of that people,
whom they finally surpassed entirely in power and splendour.
The Aztec
Character
The features of the Aztecs as represented in the various Mexican paintings
are typically Indian, and argue a northern origin. The race was, and is, of average height,
and the skin is of a dark brown hue. The Mexican is grave, taciturn, and melancholic, with a
deeply rooted love of the mysterious, slow to anger, yet almost inhuman in the violence of
his passions when aroused. He is usually gifted with a logical mind, quickness of
apprehension, and an ability to regard the subtle side of things with great nicety. Patient
and imitative, the ancient Mexican excelled in those arts which demanded such qualities in
their execution. He had a real affection for the beautiful in nature and a passion for
flowers, but the Aztec music lacked gaiety, and the national amusements were too often of a
gloomy and ferocious character. The women are more vivacious than the men, but were in the
days before the conquest very subservient to the wills of their husbands. We have already
very briefly outlined the trend of Nahua civilisation, but it will be advisable to examine
it a little more closely, for if the myths of this people are to be understood some
knowledge of its life -and general culture is essential.
Legends of the Foundation
of Mexico
At the period of the conquest of
Mexico
by Cortés the city presented an imposing appearance. Led to its neighbourhood by
Huitzilopochtli, a traditional chief, afterwards deified as the god of war, there are
several legends which account for the choice of its site by the Mexicans. The most popular
of these relates how the nomadic Nahua beheld perched upon a cactus plant an eaale of Lreat
size and majesty, grasping in its talons a huge serpent, and spreading its wings to catch
the rays of the rising sun. The soothsayers or medicine-men of the tribe, readina a zood
omen in the spectacle, advised the leaders of the-people to settle on the spot, and,
hearkening to the voice of what they considered divine authority, they proceeded to drive
piles into the marshy ground, and thus laid the foundation of the great city of
Mexico.
An elaboration of this legend
tells how the Aztecs had about the year 1325 sought refuge upon the western shore of the
Lake of Tezcuco, in an island aniong the marshes on which they
found a stone on which forty years before one of their priests had sacrificed a prince of
the name of Copal, whom they had made prisoner. A nopal plant [cactus] had sprung from an
earth-filled crevice in this rude altar, and upon this the royal eagle alluded to in the
former account had alighted, grasping the serpent in his talons. Beholding in this a good
omen, and urged by a supernatural impulse which he could not explain, a priest of high rank
dived into a pool close at hand, where he found himself face to face with Tlaloc, the god of
waters. After an interview with the deity the priest obtained permission from him to found a
city on the site, from the humble beginnings of which arose the metropolis of
Mexico-Tenochtitlan.
Mexico at the Conquest
At the period of
the conquest the city of Mexico had a
circumference of no less than twelve miles, or nearly that of modern Berlin without its suburbs. It
contained 60,000 houses, and its inhabitants were computed to number 300,000. Many other
towns, most of them nearly half as large, were grouped on the islands or on the margin
orLake Tezcuco, so that the population of what might almost be called "Greater
Mexico" must have amounted to several millions. The city was intersected by four great
roadways or avenues built at right angles to one another, and laid four-square with the
cardinal points. Situated as it was in the midst of a lake, it was traversed by numerous
canals, which were used as thoroughfares for traffic. The four principal ways described
above were extended across the lake as dykes or viaducts until they met its shores. The
dwellings of the poorer classes were chiefly composed of adobes, but those of the nobility
were built of a red porous stone quarried close by. They were usually of one story only, but
occupied a goodly piece of ground and had flat roofs, many of which were covered with
flowers. In general they were coated with a hard, white cement, which gave them an added
resemblance to the Oriental type of building.
Towering high among these, and a little
apart from the vast squares and market-places, were the teocallis, or temples. These
were in reality not temples or covered-in buildings, but "high places," great
pyramids of stone, built platform on platform, around which a staircase led to the summit,
on which was usually erected a small shrine containing the tutelar deity to whom the
teocalli had been raised. The great temple of Huitzilopochtli, the war-god, built by King Ahuizotl,
was, besides being typical of all, by far the greatest of these votive piles. The enclosing
walls of the building were 4,800
feet in circumference, and strikingly decorated by carvings
representing festoons of intertwined reptiles, from which circumstance they were called
coetpantli (walls of serpents). A kind of gate-house on each side gave access to the
enclosure. The teocalli, or great temple, inside the court was in the shape of a
parallelogram, measuring 375
feet by 300
feet, and was built in six platforms, growing smaller in area as they
descended. The mass of this structure was composed of a mixture of rubble, clay, and earth,
covered with carefully worked stone slabs, cemented together with infinite care, and coated
with a hard gypsum. A flight Of 340 steps circled round the terraces and led to the upper
platform, on which were raised two three-storied towers 56 feet in height, in which stood the great statues of
the tutelar deities and the jasper stones of sacrifice. These sanctuaries, say the old
Conquistadores who entered them, had the appearance and odour of shambles, and human blood
was bespattered every. where. In this weird chapel of horrors burned a fire the extinction
of which it was supposed would have brought about the end of the Nahua power. It was tended
with a care as scrupulous as that with which the Roman Vestals guarded their sacred flame.
No less than 600 of these sacred braziers were kept alight in the city of
Mexico
alone.
A Pyramid of Skulls
The principal fane of Huitzilopochtli was
surrounded by upwards of forty inferior teocallis and shrines. In the Tzompantli
(Pyramid of Skulls) were collected the grisly relics of the countless victims to the
implacable war-god of the Aztecs, and in this horrid structure the Spanish conquerors
counted no less than 136,000 human skulls. In the court or teopan which surrounded the
temple were the dwellings of thousands of priests, whose duties included the scrupulous care
of the temple precincts, and whose labours were minutely apportioned.
Nahua
Architecture and Ruins
As we shall see later, Mexico is by no means so rich in architectural antiquities as
Guatemala or Yucatan, the reason being that the
growth of tropical forests has to a areat extent protected ancient stone edifices in the
latter countries from destruction. The ruins discovered in the northern regions of the
republic are of a ruder type than those which approach more nearly to the sphere of Maya
influence, as, for example, those of Mitla, built by the Zapotecs, which exhibit such
unmistakable signs of Maya influence that we prefer to describe them when dealing with the
antiquities of that people.
Cyclopean Remains
In the mountains of Chihuahua, one of the most northerly
provinces, is a celebrated group called the Casas Grandes (Large Houses), the walls of which
are still about 30
feet in height. These approximate in general appearance to the
buildings of more modern tribes in New Mexico and
Arizona, and may be
referred to such peoples rather than to the Nahua. At Quemada, in Zacatecas, massive ruins
of Cyclopean appearance have been discovered. These consist of extensive terraces and broad
stone causeways, teocallis which have weathered many centuries, and gigantic pillars,
18 feet in height
and 17 feet in
circumference. Walls 12
feet in thickness rise above the heaps of rubbish which litter the
ground. These remains exhibit little connection with Nahua architecture to the north or
south of them. They are more massive than either, and must have been constructed by some
race which had made considerable strides in the art of building.
Teotihuacan
In the district of
the Totonacs, to the north of Vera Cruz, we find many architectural remains of a highly
interesting character. Here the teocalli or pyramidal type of building is occasionally
crowned by a coveredin temple with the massive roof characteristic of Maya architecture. The
most striking examples found in this region are the remains of Teotihuacan and Xochicalco. The former
was the religious Mecca of the Nahua races, and in its
proximity are still to be seen the teocallis of the sun and moon, surrounded by extensive
burying-grounds where the devout of Anahuac were laid in
the sure hope that if interred they would find entrance into the paradise of the sun. The
teocalli of the moon has a base covering 426 feet and a height Of 137 feet. That of the sun is of greater dimensions,
with a base Of 735
feet and a height Of 203 feet. These pyramids were divided into four stories,
three of which remain. On the summit of that of the sun stood a temple containing a great
image of that luminary carved from a rough block of stone. In the breast was inlaid a star
of the purest gold, seized afterwards as loot by the insatiable followers of Cortés.
From the teocalli of the moon a path runs to where a little rivulet flanks the
"Citadel." This path is known as "The Path of the Dead," from the
circumstance that it is surrounded by some nine square miles of tombs and tumuli, and.,
indeed, forms a road through the great cemetery. The Citadel, thinks Charnay, was a vast
tennis or tlachtli court, where thousands flocked to gaze at the national sport of
the Nahua with a zest equal to that of the modern devotees of football. Teotihuacan was a flourishing centre
contemporary with Tollan. It was destroyed, but was rebuilt by the Chichimec king Xolotll
and preserved thenceforth its traditional sway as the focus of the Nahua national religion.
Charnay identifies the architectural types discovered there with those of Tollan. The result
of his labours in the vicinity included the unearthing of richly decorated pottery, vases,
masks, and terra-cotta figures. He also excavated several large houses or palaces, some with
chambers more than 730
feet in circumference, with walls over 7Ѕ feet thick, into which were
built rings and slabs to support torches and candles. The floors were tessellated in various
rich designs, "like an Aubusson carpet." Charnay concluded that the monuments of
Teotihuacan were partly standing at the time of the conquest.
The Hill of
Flowers
Near Tezcuco is Xochicalco (The Hill of Flowers), a teocalli the
sculpture of which is both beautiful and luxuriant in design. The porphyry quarries from
which the great blocks, 12
feet in length, were cut lie many miles away. As late as 1755 the
structure towered to a height of five stories, but the vandal has done his work only too
well, and a few fragmentary carvings of exquisite design are all that to-day remain of one
of Mexico's most magnificent pyramids.
Tollan
We have already indicated that
on the site of the "Toltec" city of Tollan ruins have been discovered which prove
that it was the centre of a civilisation of a type distinctly advanced. Charnay unearthed
there gigantic fragments of caryatides, each some 7 feet high. He also found columns of two pieces, which were
fitted together by means of mortise and tenon, bas-reliefs of archaic figures of undoubted
Nahua type, and many fragments of great antiquity. On the hill of Palpan, above Tollan, he
found the ground-plans of several houses with numerous apartments, frescoed, columned, and
having benches and cisterns recalling the impluvium of a Roman villa. Water-pipes
were also actually unearthed, and a wealth of pottery, many pieces of which were like old
Japanese china. The ground-plan or foundations of the houses unearthed at Palpan showed that
they had been designed by practical architects, and had not been built in any merely
haphazard fashion. The cement which covered the walls and floors was of excellent quality,
and recalled that discovered in ancient Italian excavations. The roofs had been of wood,
supported by pillars.
Picture-Writing
The Aztecs, and indeed the entire
Nahua race., employed a system of writing of the type scientifically described as
"pictographic," in which events, persons, and ideas were recorded by means of
drawings and coloured sketches. These were executed on paper made from the agave plant, or
were painted on the skins of animals. By these means not only history and the principles of
the Nahua mythology were communicated from generation to generation, but the transactions of
daily life, the accountings of merchants, and the purchase and ownership of land were placed
on record. That a phonetic system was rapidly being approached is manifest from the method
by which the Nahua scribes depicted the names of individuals or cities. These were
represented by means of several objects, the names of which resembled that of the person for
which they stood. The name of King Ixcoatl, for example, is represented by the drawing of a
serpent (coatl) pierced by flint knives (iztli), and that of Motequauhzoma
(Montezuma) by a mouse-trap (montli), an eagle (quauhtli), a lancet
(zo), and a hand (maitl). The phonetic values employed by the scribes varied
exceedingly, so that at times an entire syllable would be expressed by the painting of an
object the name of which commenced with it. At other times only a letter would be
represented by the same drawing. But the general intention of the scribes was undoubtedly
more ideographic than phonetic; that is, they desired to convey their thoughts more by
sketch than by sound.
Interpretation of the Hieroglyphs
These
pinturas, as the Spanish conquerors designated them, offer no very great difficulty
in their elucidation to modern experts, at least so far as the general trend of their
contents is concerned. In this they are unlike the manuscripts of the Maya of Central
America with which we shall make acquaintance further on. Their interpretation was largely
traditional, and was learned by rote, being passed on by one generation of amamatini
(readers) to another, and was by no means capable of elucidation by all and sundry.
Native Manuscripts
The pinturas or native manuscripts which remain to us
are but few in number. Priestly fanaticism, which ordained their wholesale destruction, and
the still more potent passage of time have so reduced them that each separate example is
known to bibliophiles and Americanists the world over. In such as still exist we can observe
great fullness of detail, representing for the most part festivals, sacrifices, tributes,
and natural phenomena, such as eclipses and floods, and the death and accession of monarchs.
These events, and the supernatural beings who were supposed to control them, were depicted
in brilliant colours, executed by means of a brush of feathers.
The Interpretative
Codices
Luckily for future students of Mexican history, the blind zeal which
destroyed the majority of the Mexican manuscripts was frustrated by the enlightenment of
certain European scholars, who regarded the wholesale destruction of the native records as
little short of a calamity, and who took steps to seek out the few remaining native artists,
from whom they procured copies of the more important paintings, the details of which were,
of course, quite familiar to them. To those were added interpretations taken down from the
lips of the native scribes themselves, so that no doubt might remain regarding the contents
of the manuscripts. These are known as the "Interpretative Codices," and are of
considerable assistance to the student of Mexican history and customs. Three only are in
existence. The Oxford Codex, treasured in the Bodleian Library, is of a historical nature,
and contains a full list of the lesser cities which were subservient to Mexico in its palmy
days. The Paris or Tellerio-Remensis Codex, so called from having once been the property of
Le Tellier, Archbishop of Rheims, embodies many facts concerning the early settlement of the
various Nahua city-states. The Vatican MSS. deal chiefly with mythology and the intricacies
of the Mexican calendar system. Such Mexican paintings as were unassisted by an
interpretation are naturally of less value to present-day students of the lore of the Nahua.
They are principally concerned with calendric matter, ritualistic data, and astrological
computations or horoscopes.
The Mexican "Book of the Dead"
Perhaps
the most remarkable and interesting manuscript in the Vatican collection is one the last
pages of which represent the journey of the soul after death through the gloomy dangers of
the Other-world. This has been called the Mexican "Book of the Dead." The corpse
is depicted dressed for burial, the soul escaping from its earthly tenement by way of the
mouth. The spirit is ushered into the presence of Tezcatlipoca, the Jupiter of the Aztec
pantheon, by an attendant dressed in an ocelot skin, and stands naked with a wooden yoke
round the neck before the deity, to receive sentence. The dead person is given over to the
tests which precede entrance to the abode of the dead, the realm of Mictlan, and so that he
may not have to meet the perils of the journey in a defenceless condition a sheaf of
javelins is bestowed upon him. He first passes between two lofty peaks, which may fall and
crush him if he cannot skilfully escape them. A terrible serpent then intercepts his path,
and, if he succeeds in defeating this monster, the fierce alligator Xochitonal awaits him.
Eight deserts and a corresponding number of mountains have then to be negotiated by the
hapless spirit, and a whirlwind sharp as a sword, which cuts even through solid rocks, must
be withstood. Accompanied by the shade of his favourite dog, the harassed ghost at length
encounters the fierce Izpuzteque, a demon with the backward-bent legs of a cock, the evil
Nextepehua, the fiend who scatters clouds of ashes, and many another grisly foe, until at
last he wins to the gates of the Lord of Hell, before whom he does reverence, after which he
is free to greet his friends who have gone before.
The Calendar System
As
has been said, the calendar system was the source of all Mexican science, and regulated the
recurrence of all religious rites and festivals. In fact, the entire mechanism of Nahua life
was resident in its provisions. The type of time-division and computation exemplified in the
Nahua calendar was also found among the Maya peoples of Yucatan and Guatemala and the Zapotec people of the boundary
between the Nahua and Maya races. By which of these races it was first employed is unknown.
But the Zapotec calendar exhibits signs or both Nahua and Maya influence, and from this it
has been inferred that the calendar systems of these races have been evolved from it. It
might with equal probability be argued that both Nahua and Maya art were offshoots of
Zapotec art, because the characteristics of both are discovered in it, whereas the
circumstance merely illustrates the very natural acceptance by a border people, who settled
down to civilisation at a relatively later date, of the artistic tenets of the two greater
peoples who environed them. The Nahua and Maya calendars were in all likelihood evolved from
the calendar system of that civilised race which undoubtedly existed on the Mexican plateau
prior to the coming of the later Nahua swarms, and which in general is loosely alluded to as
the "Toltec."
The Mexican Year
The Mexican year was a cycle Of 365
days, without any intercalary addition or other correction. In course of time it almost lost
its seasonal significance because of the omission of the extra hours included in the solar
year, and furthermore many of its festivals and occasions were altered by high-priests and
rulers to suit their convenience. The Mexican nexiuhilpilitztli (binding of years)
contained fifty-two years, and ran in two separate cycles-one of fifty-two years Of 365 days
each, and another of seventy-three groups of 260 days each. The first was of course the
solar year, and embraced eighteen periods of twenty days each, called "months " by
the old Spanish chroniclers, with five nemontemi (unlucky days) over and above. These
days were not intercalated, but were included in the year, and merel overflowed the division
of the year into periods of twenty days. The cycle of seventy-three groups of 260 days,
subdivided into groups of thirteen days, was called the "birth-cycle."
Lunar Reckoning
People in a barbarous condition almost invariably reckon time by
the period between the waxing and waning of the moon as distinct from the entire passage of
a lunar revolution, and this period of twenty days will be found to be the basis in the
time-reckoning of the Mexicans, who designated it cempohualli. Each day included in
it was denoted by a sign, as "house", "snake", "wind", and so
forth. Each cempohualli was subdivided into four periods of five days each, sometimes
alluded to as "weeks" by the early Spanish writers, and these were known by the
sign their middle or third day. These day-names ran on without reference to the length of
the year. The year itself was designated by the name of the middle day of the week in which
it began. Out of twenty day-names in the Mexican "month " it was inevitable that
the four calli (house), tochtli (rabbit), acatl (reed), and
tecpati (flint) should always recur in sequence because of the incidence of these
days in the Mexican solar year. Four years made up a year of the sun. During the
nemontemi (unlucky days) no work was done, as they were regarded as ominous and
unwholesome.
We have seen that the civil year permitted the day-names to run on
continuously rom one year to another. The ecclesiastical authorities, however, had a
reckoning of their own, and made the year begin always on the first day of their calendar,
no matter what sign denominated that day in the civil system.
Groups of Years
As has been indicated, the years were formed into groups. Thirteen years constituted a
xiumalpilli (bundle), and four of these a nexiuhilpilitztli (complete binding
of the years). Each year had thus a double aspect, first as an individual period of time,
and secondly as a portion of the "year of the sun," and these were so numbered and
named that each year in the series of fifty-two possessed a different description.
The Dread of the Last Day
With the conclusion of each period of fifty-two years
a terrible dread came upon the Mexicans that the world would come to an end. A stated period
of time had expired, a period which was regarded as fixed by divine command, and it had been
ordained that on the completion of one of those series of fifty-two years earthly time would
cease and the universe be demolished. For some time before the ceremony of
toxilmolpilia (the binding up of the years) the Mexicans abandoned themselves to the
utmost prostration, and the wicked went about in terrible fear. As the first day of the
fifty-third year dawned the people narrowly observed the Pleiades, for if they passed the
zenith time would procee and the world would be respited. The gods were placated or
refreshed by the slaughter of the human victim, on whose still living breast a fire of wood
was kindled by friction, the heart and body being consumed by the flames so lighted. As the
planets of hope crossed the zenith loud acclamations resounded from the people, and the
domestic hearths, which had been left cold and dead, were rekindled from the sacred fire
which had consumed the sacrifice. Mankind was safe for another period.
The
Birth-Cycle
The birth-cycle, as we have said, consisted of 260 days. It had
originally been a lunar cycle of thirteen days, and once bore the names of thirteen moons.
It formed part of the civil calendar, with which, however, it had nothing in common, as it
was used for ecclesiastical purposes only. The lunar names were abandoned later, and the
numbers one to thirteen adopted in their places.
Language of the Nahua
The
Nahua language represented a very low state of culture. Speech is the general measure of the
standard of thought of a people, and if we judged the civilisation of the Nahua by theirs,
we should be justified in concluding that they had not yet emerged from barbarism. But we
must recollect that the Nahua of the conquest period had speedily adopted the older
civilisation which they had found awaiting them on their entrance to Mexico, and had
retained their own primitive tongue. The older and more cultured people who had preceded
them probably spoke a more polished dialect of the same lanzuage, but its influence had
evidently but little on the rude Chichimecs and Aztecs. The Mexican tongue, like most
American languages, belongs to the "incorporative" type, the genius of which is to
unite all the related words in a sentence into one conglomerate term or word, merging the
separate words of which it is composed one into another by altering their forms, and so
welding them together as to express the whole in one word. It will be at once apparent that
such a system was clumsy in the extreme, and led to the creation of words and names of the
most barbarous appearance and sound. In a narrative of the Spanish discovery written by
Chimalpahin, the native chronicler of Chalco, born in 1579, we have, for example, such a
passage as the following: Oc chiucnauhxihuitl inic onen quilantimanca España camo
niman ic yuh ca omacoc ihuelitiliztli inic niman ye chiuhcnauhxiuhtica, in oncan
ohualla. This passage is chosen quite at random, and is an average specimen of literary
Mexican of the sixteenth century. Its purport is, freely translated: "For nine years he
[Columbus] remained in vain in Spain. Yea, for nine years there he waited for
influence." The clumsy and cumbrous nature of the language could scarcely be better
illustrated tnan by pointing out that chiucnauhxihuitl signifies "nine
years"; quilantimanca, " he below remained"; and omacoc
ihuelitiliztli, "he has got his powerfulness." It must be recollected that
this specimen of Mexican was composed by a person who had had the benefit of a Spanish
education, and is cast in literary form. What the spoken Mexican of preconquest times was
like can be contemplated with misgiving in the grammars of the old Spanish missionaries,
whose greatest glory is that they mastered such a language in the interests of their
faith.
Aztec Science
The science of the Aztecs was, perhaps, one of the most
picturesque sides of their civilisation. As with all peoples in a semi-barbarous state, it
consisted chiefly in astrology and divination. Of the former the wonderful calendar system
was the basis, and by its aid the priests, or those of them who were set apart for the study
of the heavenly bodies, pretended to be able to tell the future of new-born infants and the
progress of the dead in the other world. This they accomplished by weighing the influence of
the planets and other luminaries one against another, and extracting the net result. Their
art of divination consisted in drawing omens from the song and flight of birds, the
appearance of grains of seed, feathers, and the entrails of animals, by which means they
confidently predicted both public and private events.
Nahua Government
The
limits of the Aztec Empire may be defined, if its tributary states are included, as
extending over the territory comprised in the modern states of Mexico, Southern Vera Cruz,
and Guerrero. Among the civilised peoples of this extensive tract the prevailing form of
government was an absolute monarchy, although several of the smaller communities were
republics. The law of succession, as with the Celts of Scotland, prescribed that the eldest
surviving brother of the deceased monarch should be elected to his throne, and, failing him,
the eldest nephew. But incompetent persons were almost invariably ignored by the elective
body, although the choice was limited to one family. The ruler was generally selected both
because of his military prowess and his ecclesiastical and political knowledge. Indeed, a
Mexican monarch was nearly always a man of the highest culture and artistic refinement, and
the ill-fated Montezuma was an example of the true type of Nahua sovereign. The council of
the monarch was composed of the electors and other personages of importance in the realm. It
undertook the government of the provinces, the financial affairs of the country, and other
matters of national import. The nobility held all the highest military, judicial, and
ecclesiastical offices. To each city and province judges were delegated who exercised
criminal and civil jurisdiction, and whose opinion superseded even that of the Crown itself.
Petty cases were settled by lesser officials, and a still inferior grade of officers acted
as a species of police in the supervision of families.
Domestic Life
The
domestic life of the Nahua was a peculiar admixture of simplicity and display. The mass of
the people led a life of strenuous labour in the fields, and in the cities they wrought hard
at many trades, among which may be specified building, metal-working, making robes and other
articles of bright featherwork and quilted suits of armour, Jewellery, and small wares.
Vendors of flowers, fruit, fish, and vegetables swarmed in the markets. The use of tobacco
was general among the men of all classes. At banquets the women attended, although they were
seated at separate tables. The entertainments of the upper class were marked by much
magnificence, and the variety of dishes was considerable, including venison, turkey, many
smaller birds, fish, a profusion of vegetables, and pastry, accompanied by sauces of
delicate flavour. These were served in dishes of gold and silver. Pulque, a fermented
drink dishes brewed from the agave, was the universal beverage. Cannibalism was indulged in
usually on ceremonial occasions, and was surrounded by such refinements of the table as
served only to render it the more repulsive in the eyes of Europeans. It has been stated
that this revolting practice was engaged in owing solely to the tenets of the Nahua
religion, which enjoined the slaughter of slaves or captives in the name of a deity, and
their consumption with the idea that the consumers attained unity with that deity in the
flesh. But there is good reason to suspect that the Nahua, deprived of the flesh of the
larger domestic animals, practised deliberate cannibalism. It would appear that the older
race which preceded them in the country were innocent of these horrible repasts.
A
Mysterious Toltec Book
A piece of Nahua literature, the disappearance of which is
surrounded by circumstances of the deepest mystery, is the Teo-Amoxtli (Divine Book),
which is alleged by certain chroniclers to have been the work of the ancient Toltecs.
Ixtlilxochitl, a native Mexican author, states that it was written by a Tezcucan wiseman,
one Huematzin about the end of the seventh century, and that it described the pilgrimage of
the Nahua from Asia, their laws, manners, and customs, and their religious tenets, science,
and arts. In 1838 the Baron de Waldeck stated in his Voyage Pittoresque that he bad
it in his possession, and the Abbé Brasseur de Bourbourg identified it with.the Maya
Dresden Codex and other native manuscripts Bustamante also states that the amamatini
(chroniclers) of Tezcuco had a copy in their possession at the time of the taking of their
city. But these appear to be mere surmises, and if the Teo-Amoxtli ever existed,
which on the whole is not unlikely, it has probably never been seen by a European.
A
Native Historian
One of the most interesting of the Mexican historians is Don
Fernando de Alva Ixtlilxochitl., a halfbreed of royal Tezcucan descent. He was responsible
for two notable works, entitled Historia Chichimeca (The History of the Chichimecs)
and the Relaciones, a compilation of historical and semi-historical incidents. He was
cursed, or blessed, however, by a strong leaning toward the marvellous, and has coloured his
narratives so highly that he would have us regard the Toltec or ancient Nahua civilisations
as by far the most splendid and magnificent that ever existed. His descriptions of Tezcuco,
if picturesque in the extreme, are manifestly the outpourings of a romantic and idealistic
mind, which in its patriotic enthusiasm desired to vindicate the country of his birth from
the stigma of savagery and to prove its equality with the great nations of antiquity. For
this we have not the heart to quarrel with him. But we must be on our guard against
accepting any of his statements unless we find strong corroboration of it in the pages of a
more trustworthy and less biased author.
Nahua Topography
The geography of
Mexico is by no means as familiar to Europeans as is that of the various countries of our
own continent, and it is extremely easy for the reader who is unacquainted with Mexico and
the puzzling orthography of its place-names to flounder among them, and during the perusal
of such a volume as this to find himself in a hopeless maze of surmise as to the exact
locality of the more famous centres of Mexican history. A few moments' study of this
paragraph will enlighten him in this respect, and will save him much confusion further on.
He will see from. the map (p. 330) that the city of Mexico, or Tenochtitlan, its
native name, was situated upon an island in the Lake of Tezcuco. This lake has now partially dried up, and the
modern city of Mexico is situated at a considerable distance from it. Tezcuco, the city
second in importance, lies to the north-east of the lake, and is somewhat more isolated, the
other pueblos (towns) clustering round the southern or western shores. To the north
of Tezcuco is Teotihuacan, the sacred city of the gods. To the south-east of Mexico is
Tlaxcallan, or Tlascala, the city which assisted Cortés against the Mexicans, and the
inhabitants of which were the deadliest foes of the central Nahua power. To the north lie
the sacred city of Cholula and Tula, or Tollan.
Distribution of the Nahua
Tribes
Having become acquainted with the relative position of the Nahua cities, we
may now consult for a moment the map which exhibits the geographical distribution of the
various Nahua tribes, and which is self-explanatory (p. 331).
Nahua History
A brief historical sketch or epitome of what is known of Nahua history as apart from mere
tradition will further assist the reader in the comprehension of Mexican mythology. From the
period of the settlement of the Nahua on an agricultural basis a system of feudal government
had evolved, and at various epochs in the history of the country certain cities or groups of
cities held a paramount sway. Subsequent to the "Toltec" period, which we have
already described and discussed, we find the Acolhuans in supreme power, and ruling from
their cities of Tollantzinco and Cholula a considerable tract of country. Later Cholula
maintained an alliance with Tlascala and Huexotzinco.
Bloodless Battles
The
maxim "Other climes, other manners" is nowhere better exemplified than by the
curious annual strife betwixt the warriors of Mexico and Tlascala. Once a year they met on a
prearranged battle-ground and engaged in combat, not with the intention of killing one
another, but with the object of taking prisoners for sacrifice on the altars of their
respective war-gods. The warrior seized his opponent and attempted to bear him off, the
various groups pulling and tugging desperately at each other in the endeavour to seize the
limbs of the unfortunate who had been first struck down, with the object of dragging him
into durance or effecting his rescue. Once secured, theTlascaltec warrior was brought to
Mexico in a cage, and first placed upon a stone slab, to which one of his feet was secured
by a chain or thong. He was then given light weapons, more like playthings than warrior's
gear, and confronted by one of the most celebrated Mexican warriors. Should he succeed in
defeating six of these formidable antagonists, he was set free. But no sooner was he wounded
than he was hurried to the altar of sacrifice, and his heart was torn out and offered to
Huitzilopochtli, the implacable god of war.
The Tlascaltecs, having finally secured
their position by a defeat of the Tecpanecs of Huexotzinco about A.D. 1384, sank into
comparative obscurity save for their annual bout with the Mexicans.
The Lake
Cities
The communities grouped round the various lakes in the valley of Mexico now
command our attention. More than two score of these thriving communities flourished at the
time of the conquest of Mexico, the most notable being those which occupied the borders of
the Lake of Tezcuco. These cities grouped themselves round two nuclei, Azcapozalco and
Tezcuco, between whom a fierce rivalry sprang up, which finally ended in the entire
discomfiture ol Azcapozalco. From this event the real history of Mexico may be said to
commence. Those cities which had allied themselves to Tezcuco finally overran the entire
territory of Mexico from the Mexican Gulf to the Pacific.
Tezcuco
If, as
some authorities declare, Tezcuco was originally Otomi in affinity, it was in later years
the most typically Nahuan of all the lacustrine powers. But several other communities, the
power of which was very nearly as great as that of Tezcuco, had assisted that city to
supremacy. Among these was Xaltocan, a city-state of unquestionable Otomi origin, situated
at the northern extremity of the lake. As we have seen from the statements of Ixtlilxochitl,
a Tezcucan writer, his native city was in the forefront of Nahua civilisation at the time of
the coming of the Spaniards, and if it was practically subservient to Mexico (Tenochtitlan)
at that period it was by no means its inferior in the arts.
The Tecpanecs
The Tecpanecs, who dwelt in Tlacopan, Coyohuacan, and Huitzilopocho, were also typical
Nahua. The name, as we have already explained, indicates that each settlement possessed its
own tecpan (chief's house), and has no racial significance. Their state was probably founded
about the twelfth century, although a chronology of no less than fifteen hundred years was
claimed for it. This people composed a sort of buffer-state betwixt the Otomi on the north
and other Nahua on the south.
The Aztecs
The menace of these northern Otomi
had become acute when the Tecpanecs received reinforcements in the shape of the
Aztecâ, or Aztecs, a people of Nahua blood., who came, according to their own
accounts, from Aztlan (Crane
Land). The name Aztecâ signifies
"Crane People," and this has led to the assumption that they came from Chihuahua,
where cranes abound. Doubts have been cast upon the Nahua origin of the Aztecâ. But
these are by no means well founded, as the names of the early Aztec chieftains and kings are
unquestionably Nahuan. This people on their arrival in Mexico were in a very inferior state
of culture, and were probably little better than savages. We have already outlined some of
the legends concerning the coming of the Aztecs to the land of Anahuac, or the valley of
Mexico, but their true origin is uncertain, and it is likely that they wandered down from
the north as other Nahua immigrants did before them, and as the Apache Indians still do to
this day. By their own showing they had sojourned at several points en route, and were
reduced to slavery by the chiefs of Colhuacan. They proved so truculent in their bondage,
however, that they were released, and journeyed to Chapoultepec, which they quitted because
of their dissensions with the Xaltocanecs. On their arrival in the district inhabited by the
Tecpanecs a tribute was levied upon them, but nevertheless they flourished so exceedingly
that the swamp villages which the Tecpanecs had permitted them to raise on the borders of
the lake soon grew into thriving communities, and chiefs were provided for them from among
the nobility of the Tecpanecs.
The Aztecs as Allies
By the aid of the Aztecs
the Tecpanecs greatly extended their territorial possessions. City after city was added to
their empire, and the allies finally invaded the Otomi country, which they speedily subdued.
Those cities which had been founded by the Acolhuans on the fringes of Tezcuco also allied
themselves with the Tecpanecs with the intention of freeing themselves from the yoke of the
Chichimecs, whose hand was heavy upon them. The Chichimecs or Tezcucans made a stern
resistance, and for a time the sovereignty of the Tecpanecs hung in the balance. But
eventually they conquered, and Tezcuco was overthrown and given as a spoil to the
Aztecs.
New Powers
Up to this time the Aztecs had paid a tribute to
Azcapozalco, but now, strengthened by the successes of the late conflict, they withheld it,
and requested permission to build an aqueduct from the shore for the purpose of carrying a
supply of water into their city. This was refused by the Tecpanecs, and a policy ol
isolation was brought to bear upon Mexico an embargo being placed upon its goods and
intercourse with its people being forbidden. War followed, in which the Tecpanecs were
defeated with great slaughter. After this event, which may be placed about the year 1428,
the Aztecs gained round rapidly, and their march to the supremacy of the entire Mexican
valley was almost undisputed. Allying themselves with Tezcuco and Tlacopan, the Mexicans
overran many states far beyond the confines of the valley, and by the time of Montezuma I
had extended their boundaries almost to the limits of the present republic. The Mexican
merchant followed in the footsteps of the Mexican warrior, and the commercial expansion of
the Aztecs rivalled their military fame. Clever traders, they were merciless in their
exactions of tribute from the states they conquered, manufacturing the raw material paid to
them by the subject cities into goods which they afterwards sold again to the tribes under
their sway. Mexico became the chief market of the empire, as
well as its political nucleus. Such was the condition of affairs when the Spaniards arrived
in Anahuac. Their coming has been deplored by certain
historians as hastening the destruction of a Western Eden. But bad as was their rule, it was
probably mild when compared with the cruel and insatiable sway of the Aztecs over their
unhappy dependents.
The Spaniards found a tyrannical despotism in the conquered
provinces, and a faith the accessories of which were so fiendish that it cast a gloom over
the entire national life. These they replaced by a milder vassalage and the earnest
ministrations of a more enlightened priesthood.