Aztec golden wolf sacrifice yields rich trove in Mexico City
A sacrificial wolf elaborately adorned with some of the finest Aztec gold ever found and buried more than five centuries ago has come to light in the heart of downtown Mexico City, once home to the Aztec empire's holiest shrines.
Held in a stone box, the cache was discovered in April near the capital city's bustling main square, the Zocalo, behind the colonial-era Roman Catholic cathedral and off the steps of what was once the most important Aztec ceremonial temple, now known as the Templo Mayor.
Remains of a sacrificed young wolf elaborately adorned with some of the finest Aztec gold [Credit: Reuters/Henry Romero] |
Not long after the roughly eight-month-old wolf was killed, it was likely dressed with golden ornaments as well as a belt of shells from the Atlantic Ocean, then carefully placed in a stone box by Aztec priests above a layer of flint knives, according to Lopez.
INAH archaeologist Alejandra Molina works on the skull of the young wolf [Credit: Reuters/Henry Romero] |
The Templo Mayor would have been as high as a 15-story building before it was razed along with the rest of the Aztec capital Tenochtitlan after the 1521 Spanish conquest of Mexico.
Detail of flint knives, shells and wolf bones [Credit: Reuters/Henry Romero] |
"What they're doing is they're communicating with those levels of the environment that they live in because they know that they've been given the gift of life," said David Carrasco, a Harvard University historian of religion and Aztec scholar.
Detail of gold pieces formed into symbols in wolf burial [Credit: Reuters/Henry Romero] |
The box was damaged in 1900 when a sewage line was laid down next to it, Lopez said, and city workers must have had no inkling of what lay inside if they even noticed it at the time.
Detail of gold and shells in wolf burial [Credit: Reuters/Henry Romero] |
The Aztecs, who called themselves "Mexica," prized gold, though nearly their entire supply was looted by the Spanish and melted into bars for easier transport to Europe. Objects made of jade and feathers of the quetzal were considered even more valuable.
INAH archaeologist Alejandra Molina excavates the wolf burial [Credit: Reuters/Henry Romero] |
The golden wolf was buried during the 1486-1502 reign of King Ahuitzotl, the most feared and powerful ruler of the Mexica, who extended the empire as far south as present-day Guatemala. The reign of Ahuitzotl was particularly brutal, which may also explain the fate of the young wolf.
The excavation pit where a sacrificed young wolf elaborately adorned with some of the finest Aztec gold has been discovered [Credit: Reuters/Henry Romero] |
But this was no ordinary violence, noted Carrasco.
"These people didn't just kill these things. They didn't just kill people and throw them away," he said. "They took elaborate, symbolic care for them because they knew that the presence that they represented, the presence of god, had to be nurtured."
Author: David Alire Garcia | Source: Reuters [July 08, 2017]
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