Introduction: This post is fourth in our series on Teotihuacán: I. 'City Where the Gods are Made', II. The Shape of Space and Time, III. Seat of Political-Religious Power and V. Palace Murals.
I confess. To the delight of some readers and the consternation of others, I've been immersed in Mesoamerican mythic and spiritual traditions for some weeks now. Coming up for air, I'm tempted to observe, “We’re not in Kansas anymore, Toto.”
The assumptions underlying the Mesoamerican worldview are radically different from those of Western Europe. To try to understand them requires more or less a leap of faith into the unknown. Is it worth it?
The renowned myth scholar Joseph Campbell thought so. Reflecting on Mesoamerican spiritual thought, he wrote: “For myths, by their very nature, function to reveal the inner in terms of the outer.” Campbell then quotes Novalis, “The seat of the soul is there, where the outer and inner worlds meet.”
This post is heavily indebted to the beautifully written, insightful analysis of Roberta H. and Peter T. Markman in their seminal work, “Masks of the Spirit: Image and Metaphor in Mesoamerica.”
Previous posts discuss how Teotihuacán was laid out to replicate on the earthly plane the culture’s vision of the cosmos symbolized by the quincunx—an arrangement of five points in a square or rectangle with one point at each corner and one at the center.
By locating the Citadel at the intersection of
Teotihuacán’s two major thoroughfares—the Avenue of the Dead, representing the
realm of the spirit, and the East-West Avenue, representing the world of humans—the
city’s planners established the symbolic center of the universe. By this act,
they defined the Citadel as the “sacralized political center” of the vast
Teotihuacán Empire.
Temple of Quetzalcóatl
With the pyramid-temple placed at the back of the plaza of the Citadel, the city’s planners faced the challenge
of consecrating this edifice where spirit and matter were to meet in the person of
the priest-king who manifested the divine on the earthly plane. The physical arrangement represented this sacred meeting place, or threshold.
Facing the Citadel's plaza, the positive upward thrust of the pyramid-temple balances the negative "sunken" space of the plaza itself—a repeat of the earlier design of the Pyramid of the Moon and its sunken plaza. These arrangements are surely the symbolic equivalent of the combination of cave and pyramid seen at the Pyramid of the Sun located between the Pyramid of the Moon and the Citadel.
The architectural masks that adorn this pyramid-temple serve to designate it as sacred. Masks symbolize the point of priestly passage
between states of being—Underworld, Earthly Plane, Celestial World.
Sculptured facade of the Temple of Quetzalcóatl |
Originally, the Temple
of Quetzalcóatl was literally covered with masks. The reconstruction (below),
housed in the National Museum of Archaeology and History in Mexico City, shows the
undulating bodies of serpents on the narrow bands between each row of masks.
Transformations Natural and Divine
Central to the
Mesoamerican cosmovision was the process of transformation, by which the world
of spirit entered into the contingent world of man, creating and sustaining
life as we know it. The solar path provides the impetus by which the natural world moves through the annual agricultural cycles of generation, life and death. Over a longer
timeframe, humans are born, live and die. Observation of these natural
phenomena led Mesoamerican spiritual thinkers to conclude that life itself is
cyclic.
As we consider the
masks that adorned the Temple of Quetzalcóatl, it is essential to keep in mind
that Mesoamerican gods are not like the pantheon of Greek gods. They are more
like Hindu gods, who can exist simultaneously in more than one state.
Given the multidimensionalality of these gods, it’s helpful to keep in mind these concepts:
·
Duality—light/dark, life/death, creation/destruction, fire/water, order/disorder;
·
Reciprocity—mutual obligation.
Temple Masks: Tlaloc and Quetzalcóatl
The masks covering the
Temple of Quetzalcóatl alternate in their representation of two gods: Tlaloc
and Quetzalcóatl. Tlaloc is the god of rain. Quetzalcóatl is the plumed
serpent, miraculous synthesis of serpent and bird. The Markmans suggest
that these separate gods are best thought of as part of a continuum.
On the temple frieze,
naturalistic masks of the feathered serpent (Quetzalcóatl) with ruffed collars
alternate with abstract, geometric, “flat” masks of the rain god (Tlaloc).
Dominance of the feathered serpent is evidenced by his masks that line the
staircase ascending to the temple atop the pyramid.
Mythic Transformations
As the
Markmans explain, the masks on this temple represent the story of the relationship
between man/matter and nature/spirit. In sum, the gods transform spirit, that
is, themselves, into matter (rain).
In turn, man reciprocates by transforming matter into spirit.
The ritual burning of
incense sends clouds of smoke into the air, thus reenacting the coming of the
rain clouds needed to begin another cycle of the endless process in which life
[or the life-force, symbolized by ollín] was constantly poised between creation and destruction. Incensarios found at Teotihuacán depict
Huehuetéotl, the old fire god who was also prominent at Cuiculco.
Heuheutéotl, Old Fire God. His hat is a brazier for burning incense. |
These two seemingly
separate gods—Tlaloc and Quetzalcóatl—are best seen as parts of a continuum, a
union of opposites that points to a larger spiritual reality.
Union of Opposed Elemental Forces
At one level, the
temple’s theme appears to be fertility. The unusual texture of the Tlaloc mask may
suggest corn. The circular mouth on the feathered serpent suggests an aspect of
Quetzalcóatl—Ehécatle, who blew winds to clear the way for the coming rains. Tlaloc (rain) and Ehécatle (wind) hence work together to provide man’s sustenance, corn.
But the temple masks may also suggest another unity born of the merging of opposites. The Markmans note that
the serpent is the “quintessential symbol for sacrificial blood,” which leads
them to conclude that Tlaloc as metaphor for rain and the plumed serpent as
metaphor in this instance for sacrificial blood suggest the cyclical process by which life
itself is maintained: in return for rain provided by the gods, man is called upon to
provide the sacrificial blood that metaphorically nourishes the gods.
Tlaloc
Both the Olmec
culture, the ‘mother’ Mesoamerican culture (that is, a community
organized at political/religious levels) and the Zapotec culture (Monte Albán in
Oaxaca was roughly contemporaneous with Teotihuacán) related Tlaloc to rulership.
These cultures recognized in this deity the ability to
provide the divine force from which earthly rulers drew their mandate. For
these early cultures, Tlaloc provided not only man’s sustenance but the
community’s divinely ordained rulers.
In sum, agricultural
fertility (abundant crops and the resulting surplus) gave rise to civilized
life—that is, to civil order. This order was by and inherent in the ruler as
priest-king.
But Tlaloc had another
aspect. As Lord of Times, he also provided for the annual cycle that nourishes
vegetation and hence life. The widely held expert view is that the Temple of
Quetzalcóal originally displayed from 360 to 366 composite masks. In this it is
similar to the Pyramid of Niches constructed at El Tajín on the Gulf Coast in
Veracruz state. El Tajín was built as Teotihuacán declined (600 CE).
Quetzalcóatl
The serpent was used
to define the meeting place of spirit and matter. The use of the serpent to
flank the stairway at the Temple of Quetzalcóatl prefigured the symbolic use of
serpents to flank temple doorways and pyramid stairways elsewhere at
Teotihuacán.
The Markmans:
This use of the serpent to define the liminal meeting place of spirit
and matter coincides with the serpent symbolism associated with blood sacrifice
since it was up these pyramid stairways, after all, that the sacrificial victim
made his way to the temple where his spirit was freed by the act of sacrifice
to return to its home [in the essential life-force] and his body, now merely
matter, was released to tumble back down that same stairway to be reunited with
the earth (Markmans, p. 45).
Over time, the serpent symbol
would come to be used by later cultures in the Valley of Mexico.
Some Final Thoughts
The masks that cover the frieze of the Temple of Quetzalcóatl represent the relationship between the realm of the spirit and the world of man. The message of the images that cover the Temple suggest that for Teotihuacanos, life is made possible in the visible, tangible world of man through the continuous intervention of the invisible, intangible realm of the spirit.
Let me give the scholars the last word:
These [masks] can
only be called graphic symbols…[full of meaning] for those who beheld
them. In this sense [these images were] the expression of a sacerdotal body, the reflection
of a caste of learned clerics concerned with elaborating the concepts of a
pantheon in which the forces of the universe are personified [emphasis added].
Henry Stierlin, 1982
Teotihuacán was a highly developed society, which
...was unquestionably the preeminent ritual center of its time in
Mesoamerica. It seems to have been the most important center of trade and to
have had the most important marketplace. It was the largest and most highly
differentiated craft center. In size, numbers, and density, it was the greatest
urban center and perhaps the most complexly stratified society of its time in
Mesoamerica. It was the seat of an increasingly powerful state that appears to
have extended its domination over wider and wider areas…. Indeed, it appears to
have been the most highly urbanized center of its time in the New World (emphasis added).
René Millon, 1976
Still Curious?
The archaeological excavation continues. This article (Aug 2010) describes initial exploration of a tunnel found under the Temple of Quetzalcóatl.
UTube Video (1:59 sec), produced by the National Institute of Anthropology and History, features excellent close-up views of the temples plumed serpent (ruffed collar) and Tlaloc (goggle-eyes) masks.
UTube video (36 sec), shot from a viewing platform atop the second facade, has a good view of the plumed serpent masks lining the staircase of the Temple of Quetzalcóatl.
UTube (1:09 sec), shot from a viewing platform atop the temple's second west facade, gives excellent views of the entire Citadel complex from the stairway lined with plumed serpent masks, across a long view of the temple masks, panning the area of the residential complex that surrounded the temple on three sides. A view is also given of the sunken plaza in front of the temple with the great altar and temples ranging the plaza's massive exterior walls.
Here's the link to Reed's Picassa photo album, From the Monumental to the Miniature, of Teotihuacán and artifacts found in its site museums. The "miniatures"—small sculptures—are an unexpected delight!
Jenny's Post Quetzalcóatl at Xochicalco (Morelos state) describes the Temple of Quetzalcóatl built by the ruling elite of Xochicalco, which rose to power in the vacuum created by the decline and fall of Teotihuacán.
Jenny's Post Quetzalcóatl at Xochicalco (Morelos state) describes the Temple of Quetzalcóatl built by the ruling elite of Xochicalco, which rose to power in the vacuum created by the decline and fall of Teotihuacán.
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