Loading...

Migration and Creation in Aztec and Maya literature

by Victoria R. Bricker (Author)
©2023 Monographs XVIII, 134 Pages

Summary

Migration and Creation in Aztec and Maya Literature provides a new perspective on migration and creation episodes in the Popol Vuh of the Quiché Maya Indians of highland Guatemala, demonstrating that they are largely borrowed from Aztec sources. These findings upend previous interpretations resulting from the widely held belief that the Popol Vuh is the most "authentic" Maya book. Victoria Bricker’s careful historical analysis explains the origin of these borrowings, which stemmed from the expansion of the Aztec empire southward from the Central Valley of Mexico into the highlands of what is today the Mexican state of Chiapas and continuing into highland Guatemala as far south as the town of Utatlán, whose rulers then intermarried with members of the Aztec royal family.
This innovative volume explores new ground, comparing Aztec pictorial representations of migration with Maya written descriptions of the same events and showing that they have much in common. Bricker’s exploration of creation narratives demonstrates that the Aztec treatment of multiple creations is more coherent than the Popol Vuh version because it describes the end of each creation before embarking on a new creation, whereas the Popol Vuh version refers to the end of all creations only once. Bricker also provides a new interpretation of creation texts from the archaeological sites of Quirigua and Palenque that challenges models suggesting that the Precolumbian Maya, like the Aztecs, believed in multiple creations. Students of Latin American history will find fresh insights regarding interactions and cultural contact in Late Prehispanic Mesoamerica in Bricker’s study.

Victoria Bricker, one of the most accomplished scholars in the field of Mesoamerican studies, presents a fascinating hypothesis about creation legends in this new book. Synthesizing references to Mesoamerican migration and creation accounts in the Colonial period and ethnographic literature, she concludes that the multiple creation events recorded in the Popol Vuh, a colonial-period Quiché Maya text, were derived from Central Mexican traditions. Bricker finds no evidence for multiple creation events in Classic period Maya texts, and suggests that the narrative recorded in the Popol Vuh was probably transferred from the Aztec outpost in Zinacantán, Chiapas, to Quiché nobility, who aspired to increase their status by linking their creation narrative to Aztec accounts. This book provides a stimulating new look at the exchange of ideas across Mesoamerica, and will certainly lead scholars to reexamine the often-claimed link between the Popol Vuh and Classic Maya iconography.
—Dr. Susan Milbrath, Emeritus Curator of Latin American Art and Archaeology Florida Museum of Natural History, University of Florida, Gainesville
This is an extraordinary book. Only Victoria Bricker–with her mastery of Maya linguistics, hieroglyphics, and colonial sources, and her knowledge of Aztec texts–could have compared Aztec and Maya creation literature in the probing and thoughtful way she has. The short chapters, each with its clear focus, carry her analysis naturally forward to a deeper understanding of the Popol Vuh and, indeed, much migration and creation literature in Mesoamerica.
—Dr. Elizabeth Hill Boone, Professor Emerita, Tulane University

Table Of Contents

  • Cover
  • Title
  • Copyright
  • About the author
  • About the book
  • This eBook can be cited
  • Contents
  • Figures
  • Preface
  • Acknowledgments
  • 1 Introduction
  • 2 On Translation
  • 3 Aztec Migrations
  • 4 Migration in The Popol Vuh
  • 5 Migration in the Books of Chilam Balam
  • 6 Aztec Creation
  • 7 Creation in the Popol Vuh
  • 8 Creation in Tzotzil Oral Tradition
  • 9 Creation in the Book of Chilam Balam of Chumayel
  • 10 Creation in Precolumbian Maya Inscriptions
  • 11 External Influences on Maya Migration and Creation Literature
  • References
  • Index

Figures

Figure 2.1. The House of Knives on Borgia 32. Drawing by Christine Hernández.

Figure 2.2. South Side of Altar at Ocotelolco. Drawing by Christine Hernández.

Figure 2.3. Cognate Martian Instruments in the Dresden and Madrid Codices. (a) Mars Table on Dresden 43b–45b. (b) Mars Almanac on Madrid 2a–2b (after Villacorta C. and Villacorta 1976:98, 100, 228).

Figure 2.4. Cognate Copulation Almanacs in the Dresden and Madrid Codices. (a) Copulation Almanac on Dresden 22c–23c. (b) Copulation Almanac on Madrid 93a–94a (after Villacorta C. and Villacorta 1976:54, 56, 410, 412).

Figure 2.5. Cognate Almanacs on (a) Madrid 51b and (b) Madrid 95b (after Villacorta C. and Villacorta 1976:326, 414).

Figure 3.1. Aztec Homeland in Mapa de Cuauhtinchan No. 2. Photograph of the 1892 copy. Reproduction authorized by the Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia, SECRETARIA DE CULTURA-INAH.-MEX.

Figure 3.2. Departure of Chichimecs from Chicomoztoc (Codex Vaticanus A/Ríos folio 66 verso; after Loubat and de los Rìos 1900).

Figure 3.3. Departure from Aztlan (Mapa Sigüenza). Reproduction authorized by the Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia, SECRETARIA DE CULTURA-INAH.-MEX.

Figure 3.4. Codex Boturini 7–8(1). Reproduction authorized by the Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia, SECRETARIA DE CULTURA-INAH.-MEX.

Figure 5.1. Migration Text on Page 74 of Book of Chilam Balam of Chumayel (after Gordon 1913:74).

Figure 5.2. Continuation of Migration Text on Page 75 of Book of Chilam Balam of Chumayel (after Gordon 1913:75).

Figure 5.3. Tablets of Tenango (after Caso 1967:162, Fig. 19; drawing by Edmonson 1988:39).

Figure 5.4. Central Mexican Venus Sign on Mausoleum III at Chicħen Itza (after Seler 1961[1910]:367, Fig. 243).

Figure 5.5. Inscription on Lintel Over East Doorway of East Wing of Monjas at Chicħen Itza (redrawn with modifications after Seler 1961[1910]:228, Figs. 40, 41).

Figure 5.6. Detail of Central Portion of chac Mask from the Chenes Temple of the Adivino at Uxmal, Showing Venus Signs and Bar-Dot 8’s (modified from Seler 1917:103, Fig. 95).

Figure 6.1. Codex Vaticanus A/Ríos, folio 4 verso (after Loubat and de los Rìos 1900).

Figure 6.2. Codex Vaticanus A/Ríos, folio 6 verso (after Loubat and de los Rìos 1900).

Figure 6.3. Codex Vaticanus A/Ríos, folio 6 recto (after Loubat and de los Rìos 1900).

Table 6.1. Comparison of the Names of the Suns in the Anales de Cuauhtitlán and the Leyenda de los Soles.

Figure 7.1. Great Ballcourt at Chicħen Itza. Drawing by Linda Schele. © David Schele. Courtesy of Ancient Americas of LACMA (ancientamericas.org).

Figure 7.2. Yaxchilán, Hieroglyphic Stairway 2, Step VII, drawing by Ian Graham. © President and Fellows of Harvard College, Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology, 2004.15.6.7.21.

Figure 8.1. Some Junior Entertainers in Zinacantán. (left to right) Tree Mosses, Feathered Serpents, Lacandons. Photo by Frank Cancian (with permission of photographer).

Figure 8.2. Quetzalcoatl in His Ehecatl (Wind God) Aspect (after folio 61r, Codex Magliabecchiano 1904).

Details

Pages
XVIII, 134
Year
2023
ISBN (PDF)
9781433198656
ISBN (ePUB)
9781433198663
ISBN (Softcover)
9781433198670
DOI
10.3726/b20819
Language
English
Publication date
2023 (September)
Keywords
Creation literature translation Aztec Maya Chiapas Yucatan Guatemala Migration Migration and Creation in Aztec and Maya Literature Victoria R. Bricker
Published
New York, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Oxford, Wien, 2023. XVIII, 134 pp., 35 b/w ill., 1 table.

Biographical notes

Victoria R. Bricker (Author)

Victoria R. Bricker (Professor Emeritus, Tulane) received her PhD in Cultural Anthropology from Harvard University. She is widely published and has received awards for several of her books, including The Indian Christ, the Indian King: The Historical Substrate of Maya Myth and Ritual. In 1991, she was elected to the National Academy of Sciences and in 2002 to the American Philosophical Society.

Previous

Title: Migration and Creation in Aztec and Maya literature