Top-Rated Free Essay
Preview

aztec, human sacrifice

Powerful Essays
1584 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
aztec, human sacrifice
Introduction
When you think of the Aztec, what comes to mind? Perhaps you think of the Spanish conquistadors or their beautiful capital at Tenochtitlan. What comes to mind for a lot of people is their practice of human sacrifice. In class, we learned a lot about the civilizations of the Maya and the Inca but not much about the Maya. Chapter 13 of the assigned readings talks about the Aztec and how they came to power and their collapse. One paragraph in the chapter, although morbid and disturbing, caught my attention. “The victim was stretched out over the sacrificial stone. In seconds, a priest with an obsidian knife broke open his chest and ripped out his still beating heart, dashing it against the sacrificial stone.” These sentences refer to the ritual of human sacrificed practiced by the Aztec priests.
Body
The Aztec believed that they owed everything to the gods who created themselves as well as the world around them. The would perform sacrifices in order for a good crop yield or good weather among other things. They believed that the best way to repay them was to offer up blood to them in regular rituals. Although many just assume this was human blood, they also sacrificed animals as well. Some offerings weren’t outright killings as well. They would have been cutting oneself and offering the blood shed to the gods. Archaeologists estimate that a few thousand people would have been sacrificed each year. Some were members of the Aztec community but they believe that most were prisoners of war. Instead of killing their enemies in battle, they would sometimes capture them and take them back to the capital to be offered up to the gods. In one ritual, the prisoners were forced to walk up the many stairs of the temple. Once they reached the top, the priest would cut open their stomach from throat to stomach. They would rip out their heart to offer it to the gods. The bodies were then pushed down the stairs. At the bottom, the body would be dismembered or carried off depending on the ritual.
Its hard to believe this sort of activity happened regularly, especially as a public event where people would gather in the square to watch. Human sacrifice was not only an Aztec event. It happened all over the world in several different cultures. It was a part of their religion and a way to please the gods so the Aztecs would avoid disaster. No amount of human sacrifice could have stopped their collapse at the hands of the Spaniards.
Human sacrifice was practiced to some extent by many peoples in Mesoamerica (and for that matter, around the world) for many centuries. But it was the Aztec empire that really took the ritual to new heights. How many people were sacrificed by the Aztecs? We don't know how many were sacrificed over the years - it's possible that some accounts are exaggerated - but it was probably thousands each year - tens of thousands or more all together. Some estimates claim 20,000 a year.

The Aztecs had 18 months in one cycle, and for each of the 18 months there was ritual sacrifice. The victim would be painted as a part of the ritual, they would be placed on a slab where their heart would be removed and held up to the sun. The body would be thrown down the stairs of the temple/pyramid.

The body would be disposed of in various ways, such as feeding animals at the zoo or putting on display (the heads). There are some accounts of cannibalism, but it's uncertain if this was practiced to any great extent.

Life is because of the gods; with their sacrifice they gave us life.... They produce our sustenance... which nourishes life.

What the Aztec priests were referring to was a central Mesoamerican belief: that a great, on-going sacrifice sustains the Universe. Everything is tonacayotl: the "spiritual flesh-hood" on earth. Everything —earth, crops, moon, stars and people— springs from the severed or buried bodies, fingers, blood or the heads of the sacrificed gods. Humanity itself is macehualli, "those deserved and brought back to life through penance". A strong sense of indebtedness was connected with this worldview. Indeed, nextlahualli (debt-payment) was a commonly used metaphor for human sacrifice, and, as Bernardino de Sahagún reported, it was said that the victim was someone who "gave his service".
Human sacrifice was in this sense the highest level of an entire panoply of offerings through which the Aztecs sought to repay their debt to the gods. Both Sahagún and Toribio de Benavente (also called "Motolinía") observed that the Aztecs gladly parted with everything: burying, smashing, sinking, slaying vast quantities of quail, rabbits, dogs, feathers, flowers, insects, beans, grains, paper, rubber and treasures as sacrifices. Even the "stage" for human sacrifice, the massive temple-pyramids, was an offering mound: crammed with treasures, grains, soil and human and animal sacrifices that were buried as gifts to the deities. Adorned with the land's finest art, treasure and victims, these temples had become buried offerings under new structures every half a century.
The sacrifice of animals was a common practice for which the Aztecs bred dogs, eagles, jaguars and deer. Objects also were sacrificed by being broken and offered to the gods. The cult of Quetzalcoatl required the sacrifice of butterflies and hummingbirds.
Self-sacrifice was also quite common; people would offer maguey thorns, tainted with their own blood and, like the Maya kings, would offer blood from their tongue, ear lobes, or genitals. Blood held a central place in Mesoamerican cultures. The Florentine Codex reports that in one of the creation myths Quetzalcóatl offered blood extracted from a wound in his own genital to give life to humanity. There are several other myths in which Nahua gods offer their blood to help humanity.
Common people would offer maguey thorns with their blood.
Much like the role of sacrifice elsewhere in the world, it thus seems that these rites functioned as a type of atonement for Aztec believers. Their sacrificial hymns describe the victim as "sent (to death) to plead for us", or "consecrated to annul all sin".[14] In one such poem, a warrior-victim announces that "I embrace mankind... I give myself to the community". Aztec society viewed even the slightest tlatlacolli ('sin' or 'insult') as an extremely malevolent supernatural force. For instance, if an adulterer were to enter a house, it was believed that all turkey chicks would perish from tlazomiquiztli ("filth-death"). To avoid such calamities befalling their community, those who had erred punished themselves by extreme measures such as slitting their tongues for vices of speech or their ears for vices of listening, and "for a slight [sin they] hanged themselves, or threw themselves down precipices, or put an end to themselves by abstinence".
A great deal of cosmological thought seems to have underlain each of the Aztec sacrificial rites. The most common form of human sacrifice was heart-extraction. The Aztec believed that the heart (tona) was both the seat of the individual and a fragment of the Sun's heat (istli). To this day, the Nahua consider the Sun to be a heart-soul (tona-tiuh): "round, hot, pulsating". In the Aztec view, humanity's "divine sun fragments" were considered "entrapped" by the body and its desires:
Where is your heart?
You give your heart to each thing in turn.
Carrying, you do not carry it...
You destroy your heart on earth
—Nahua poem
Tezcatlipoca, Huitzilopochtli, Tlacahuepan, Cuexcotzin
Sacrifice of captives by extraction of the heart
Tláloc, Quetzalcoatl
Sacrifice by drowning and extraction of the heart
Huixtocihuatl, Xochipilli
Sacrifice by extraction of the heart

Xilonen, Quilaztli-Cihacóatl, Ehécatl, Chicomelcóatl

Sacrifice of a decapitated woman and extraction of her heart
Huitzilopochtli, Tezcatlipoca, Mictlantecuhtli
Sacrifice by starvation in a cave or temple
Xiuhtecuhtli, Ixcozauhqui, Otontecuhtli, Chiconquiáhitl, Cuahtlaxayauh, Coyolintáhuatl, Chalmecacíhuatl
Sacrifices to the fire gods by burning the victims
Toci, Teteoinan, Chimelcóatl-Chalchiuhcíhuatl, Atlatonin, Atlauhaco, Chiconquiáuitl, Cintéotl
Sacrifice of a decapitated young woman to Toci, she was skinned and a young man wore her skin; sacrifice of captives by hurling from a height and extraction of the heart
Xochiquétzal
Sacrifices by fire; extraction of the heart
Tláloc-Napatecuhtli, Matlalcueye, Xochitécatl, Mayáhuel, Milnáhuatl, Napatecuhtli, Chicomecóatl, Xochiquétzal
Sacrifices of children, two noble women, extraction of the heart and flaying; ritual cannibalism
Mixcóatl-Tlamatzincatl, Coatlicue, Izquitécatl, Yoztlamiyáhual, Huitznahuas
Sacrifice by bludgeoning, decapitation and extraction of the heart
Huitzilopochtli
Massive sacrifices of captives and slaves by extraction of the heart
Tlaloques
Sacrifices of children, and slaves by decapitation
Tona-Cozcamiauh, Ilamatecuhtli, Yacatecuhtli, Huitzilncuátec
Sacrifice of a woman by extraction of the heart and decapitated afterwards
Ixozauhqui-Xiuhtecuhtli, Cihuatontli, Nancotlaceuhqui
Sacrifices of victims representing Xiuhtecuhtli and their women (each four years), and captives. Hour: night, New Fire

The sacrifice would then be laid on a stone slab by four priests, and his/her abdomen would be sliced open by a fifth priest with a ceremonial knife made of flint. The cut was made in the abdomen and went through the diaphragm. The priest would grab the heart and tear it out, still beating. It would be placed in a bowl held by a statue of the honored god, and the body thrown down the temple's stairs. The body would land on a terrace at the base of the pyramid called an apetlatl
Conclusion
In this research project I learned that they have high religious significance to the Aztec sacrifice. And I learned that the incredible loss of human life because of the sacrifices would weaken an otherwise powerful nation.

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Satisfactory Essays

    One difference between the Aztec and Spanish was that the Aztec sacrificed people to nourish their gods.…

    • 510 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Aztec Dbq Analysis

    • 87 Words
    • 1 Page

    It is 1519 in Tenochtitlan, the Aztec capital. An Aztec priest is holding an obsidian knife. Soon he will plunge it into his victim's’ chest, which he will rip open to remove his heart. Whenever one thinks of the Aztecs, human sacrifices come into mind. However, besides this bloody practice, the Aztecs were intelligent and resourceful. After all, they did manage to control most of Mesoamerica in less than 200 years. If anything the Aztecs should be remembered as a highly organized and ingenious civilization.…

    • 87 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Broken Spears Quotes

    • 472 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Montezuma, who was the ruler of the Aztecs, had a funny feeling about them. Not too long after they arrived, the Aztecs realized that the Spanish could be killed just like their other enemies, so they went to war. They caught some of the Spanish, killed some of them, even ate some. The Spanish won out because of their preparation, and because they brought so many diseases with them, it killed some of the Aztecs as well. The Spanish came to the Aztecs land, and the Aztecs thought that this was the 'God' that they had been waiting for. They treated the Spanish with riches and lavish food, as they would a God. They only treated them to the finest of treasures because they were sure this was what they were looking for. The Spanish reported that they 'were sickened by the people's shocking routines', which was mentioning toward the sacrifice they saw. Then, when the Spanish tried to take advantage of what the Aztecs had given them, they realized they weren’t the Gods they thought they were looking for. So they cut them off. Conversely, the Spaniards had the horses, firearms, and they had most of the people of the Aztec society on their side. With that being said, the Spaniards didn’t like how the Aztec land was being run. With these people and the Spanish's knowledge expansions, they overthrew the Aztec Empire. After the Aztecs were conquered by the Spaniards, they were turned into…

    • 472 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Why Did Montezuma Fall

    • 1079 Words
    • 5 Pages

    First, killing thousands of people, the loss of people in a loss that can't be calculated (war). Although the Aztecs certainly weren't the first people ever to sacrifice humans, the fact that they did and the incredible number they sacrificed led to the hatred of some of the surrounding peoples. The powerful city-state of Tlaxcala was one of these. Many of their own had been sacrificed, and in the end they joined the Spaniards to fight the Aztecs. It may be that the Spanish simply was an excuse to start what was already an inevitable civil…

    • 1079 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Aztec DBQ Essay

    • 758 Words
    • 4 Pages

    There are many aspects of life that one can focus on for a certain population or in a country. Two main aspects of everyday life for the Aztecs were agriculture and human sacrifice. Of course both are highly important and part of the Aztecs society, but with an astonishing 10,000,000 people in the Aztec population, could one really put more emphasize one or the other? This is defiantly a tough question for historians to answer… or is it? To decide on great agriculture or brutal sacrifices, it would have made this decision much easier to choose from if we saw a first person document written by someone that was going to be sacrificed. For three important reasons, greater emphasis should be placed on agriculture: the enormous chinampas were out of this world, the amazing construction of the chinampas, and that it leads to be part of everyday life for the Aztec people.…

    • 758 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Aztec people were fiercely religious. Many of their practices were brutal and violent, such as their Tlacaxpieualiztli feast, where captives where captives were painfully put to death by priests as people danced and celebrated.…

    • 1029 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Aztecs were a Native American tribe that lived in Tenochtitlan. Tenochtitlan was the capital of the Aztec empire. The only weapons that Aztecs had were arrows, spears, rocks and anything that they were able to make to protect themselves. The Aztecs were people who believed in sacrifice, human sacrifice to be exact. The Aztecs were kind people but they were also barbarians. They welcomed the Spanish into their city, which showed their kindness.…

    • 489 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Three Dominate Empires

    • 1042 Words
    • 5 Pages

    The 15th c.e Aztecs of Central and Southern Mexico utilized their religious upper hand to develop a military culture of war and human sacrifice for their sun God. They maintained their empire by backing their agriculture and tribute system with force and conquering ethnic peoples and regions to become givers of labor, raw materials, food and valuable items. This can be derived from an Aztec “Tlacochcalcatl” (military general), depicted in the Aztec manuscript ‘Codex Mendoza,’ 16th c.e, which is a primary source. The other evidence found of the tribute system is the Tribute-Roll section of the ‘Codex Mendoza,’ 16th c.e (compiled by a Spaniard). It shows specifically the Aztec religious sacrificial items needed such as animal pelts, and colored feathers. This empire was able to stay in control long enough to become one of the greatest empires of the World because of it’s definite military clout and coordinated economic…

    • 1042 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    The connection between the ritual sacrifice and the ballgame is evident in the Mayan language. According to Stern, the Mayan translation for the word ball, quiq, means sap or blood (35). The sap which flows out of the tree can be seen as the implication of the ritual sacrifice of the ballgame. The notion that the ball, of the ballgame, is round can be symbolized and interpreted as the human head. Which implies that death is important for the completion of the ritual.…

    • 1158 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    The citations relate to the hypothesis due to the fact that the Mayans used the Ball game as a replacement for warfare, settling territory and issues, and to predict the future. Captives or prisoners of wars were forced to play games that resulted in their sacrifice when they lost against an opponent. The Mayan Ball game would go on for days and was apart of the Mayans faith. These games could go on for days, and the first person to score was usually decided who to sacrifice.…

    • 962 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    And the human sacrifice was being performed by a god name Huehuetteotl. Huehuetteotl was the Aztec god of warmth, cold and lastly death. He was responsible for two things and they were food and light in the darkness. The people that were part of the Aztec religion, there were special sacrifices that held for Huehuetteotl. The first thing they did to the victim is throw them in the fire, and then pull them back out with hooks right before he was dead, so he can be tortured. While he was alive, they would take his heart and throw it in the fire while he was suffering.…

    • 822 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Aztec Vs Inca

    • 590 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Both the Incas and Aztecs highly prized the Sun god, because in their world he controlled sunrise and therefore if the universe would continue. The Aztec Sun god was Huitzilopochtli. Aztecs believed that gods could be kind, but that demons and ghosts prowled in the night and could appear as skulls or miniature dolls (Strange Histories, The Aztecs). The Incas had many gods including Mama Pacha, Cocha, and Quilla, Mother Earth, Mother of Water, and Mother of Storms, respectively. The Sun god, Inti, was most important, but unlike in Aztec culture, they had a separate creator, Viracocha. Aztecs and Incas, however, differed more in rituals than they did in gods. The Aztecs would sacrifice humans, cutting out their hearts with an obsidian dagger, then sacrificing their blood to the gods, and finally throwing them down the steps of the temple (Doc. I). The Incas had other rituals, for example, when an emperor was killed, all of his servants would be killed too, so they could accompany him into the afterlife. They would also mummify deceased rulers. They had many levels of priests, including a High Priest, ten lower priests that counseled the ten religious districts, and then ordinary priests in towns. Finally, Incas had Acllas, young girls who are taken from their homes at early ages to serve in shrines and…

    • 590 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    “The dismal drum of Huichilobos sounded again, accompanied by conches, horns, and trumpet-like instruments. It was a terrifying sound, and when we looked at the tall cue (temple-pyramid) from which it came we saw our comrades who had been captured in Cortes’ defeat being dragged up the steps to be sacrificed. When they had haled them up to a small platform in front of the shrine where they kept their accursed idols we saw them put plums on the heads of many of them; and then they made them dance with a sort of fan in front of Huichilobos. Then after they had danced the papas (Aztec priests) laid them down on their backs on some narrow stones of sacrifice and, cutting open their chests, drew out their palpitating hearts which they offered to the idols before them. Then they kicked the bodies down the steps, and the Indian butchers who were waiting below cut off…

    • 1596 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    The traditional Aztec religion was on that focused on the services provided by a series of gods, all to whom a debt was owed. The debt was perpetual and came to be when the gods made the decision to sacrifice themselves to enable human life. “Life for humankind was only possible with a moving sun, and this the gods provided. It then became the responsibility of humanity to feed the sun thereafter, lest it stop and the universe stop with it (Holly Peters-Golden, 2012)”. The Aztec’s shared belief in this theory gave rise to a number of traditions and ceremonies involving human sacrifice. These ceremonies were conducted frequently and were often scheduled in accordance with their ritual calendar. These rituals were sacred to the Aztecs and were performed without hesitation or remorse. In every situation, those who were to be sacrificed were held in high regard for their contribution to the continuity of human life entitled them to great honor and the promise of a rewarded afterlife. In addition, the remains of the sacrificed individuals were also seen as divine and were often consumed by nobles during ritual feasts.…

    • 558 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Sacrifice In Aztec

    • 998 Words
    • 4 Pages

    My role in the Aztec community is to sacrifice for the sun god (Huitzilopochtli) so that he may bring prosperity & life to our people. We sacrifice to our gods as they did when they sacrificed themselves to bring us here, & in a way we are repaying our debt to the heavens. I am a priest of the city of gold and this is my life..…

    • 998 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Better Essays