This temple was erected by the Mexica (Aztecs) living in Tlatelolco as one of the temples in their ceremonial-ritual complex. The Temple R was dedicated to their wind deity, Ehécatl-Quetzalcoatl. This deity was linked to the main Mexica god Tlaloc, in charge of rain and earth's fertility. As such, ceremonies associated with fertility, rain, and the successful maintenance of agricultural cycles were carried out at this temple. In the 1980s, a team of INAH specialists encountered the remains of several individuals during their excavations at this temple. The individuals, including infants, children and adults, had been sacrificed and placed in particular burial contexts: on the ground and inside pots with several artifacts and ecofacts. This ...
International audienceBloodletting, together with a variable amount of pain, was probably common pra...
The Olmec civilization thrived in what is now the present-day Gulf Coast of Mexico. They developed r...
textNear the edge of the Aztec empire, about sixty-eight miles from Mexico City-Tenochtitlan, the te...
This temple was erected by the Mexica (Aztecs) living in Tlatelolco as one of the temples in their c...
The Great Temple of Tenochtitlan was built by the Mexica (Aztecs) once they settled on an island (Te...
Recent excavations of Temple R, dedicated to the Aztec god of wind and rain, Ehecatl-Quetzalcoatl, a...
View of the remains of the Templo Mayor; The Great Temple was at the center of Tenochtitlán, the for...
Cette thèse à caractère anthropologique dans le contexte du Doctorat, concerne les rituels dans les ...
This study interrogates the ritual function of Aztec agricultural deities across various media to di...
Xipe Totec is an Aztec god often associated with agriculture and fertility. It is a deity type that ...
A paradox of sorts existed in Mesoamerica around the time following the demise of Tula, one that inv...
La ville préhispanique de Cantona, située dans la vallée d’Oriental dans l’état de Puebla au Mexique...
The New Fire Ceremony is one of the few Aztec rituals documented in both the archaeological and hist...
For decades, archaeologists have researched the fascinating finds of Aztec sacrifice. Evidence of th...
The Huichol are native inhabitants of what are now the Mexican States of Jalisco, Nayarit, Zacatecas...
International audienceBloodletting, together with a variable amount of pain, was probably common pra...
The Olmec civilization thrived in what is now the present-day Gulf Coast of Mexico. They developed r...
textNear the edge of the Aztec empire, about sixty-eight miles from Mexico City-Tenochtitlan, the te...
This temple was erected by the Mexica (Aztecs) living in Tlatelolco as one of the temples in their c...
The Great Temple of Tenochtitlan was built by the Mexica (Aztecs) once they settled on an island (Te...
Recent excavations of Temple R, dedicated to the Aztec god of wind and rain, Ehecatl-Quetzalcoatl, a...
View of the remains of the Templo Mayor; The Great Temple was at the center of Tenochtitlán, the for...
Cette thèse à caractère anthropologique dans le contexte du Doctorat, concerne les rituels dans les ...
This study interrogates the ritual function of Aztec agricultural deities across various media to di...
Xipe Totec is an Aztec god often associated with agriculture and fertility. It is a deity type that ...
A paradox of sorts existed in Mesoamerica around the time following the demise of Tula, one that inv...
La ville préhispanique de Cantona, située dans la vallée d’Oriental dans l’état de Puebla au Mexique...
The New Fire Ceremony is one of the few Aztec rituals documented in both the archaeological and hist...
For decades, archaeologists have researched the fascinating finds of Aztec sacrifice. Evidence of th...
The Huichol are native inhabitants of what are now the Mexican States of Jalisco, Nayarit, Zacatecas...
International audienceBloodletting, together with a variable amount of pain, was probably common pra...
The Olmec civilization thrived in what is now the present-day Gulf Coast of Mexico. They developed r...
textNear the edge of the Aztec empire, about sixty-eight miles from Mexico City-Tenochtitlan, the te...