
Introduction to the Aztec Calendar
The Calendar and the Sun Stone
Mistakenly, one often refers to the Sun Stone, or the
Stone of Axayacatl, as the Aztec Calendar. This sculpure
does depict the 20 daysigns, and even the four era's of
Suns that preceeded the current Fifth Sun but is was not
used as a calendar. Instead it was used as a sacrifical
altar. So, what actually is the Aztec calendar?
Not just one calendar
There is not just one Aztec
calendar, there are two more or less independent
systems. One calendar, called the xiuhpohualli, has 365
days. It describes the days and rituals related to the
seasons, and therefor might be called the agricultural
year or the solar year. The other calendar has 260 days.
In Nahuatl, the language of the Aztecs, it is called the
tonalpohualli or, the day-count. Most information on
this Internet-site refers to the tonalpohualli, which is
the sacred calendar.
The tonalpohualli and Aztec
cosmology
The tonalpohualli, or
day-count, has been called a sacred calendar because its
main purpose is that of a divinatory tool. It divides
the days and rituals between the gods. For the Aztec
mind this is extremely important. Without it the world
would soon come to an end. According to Aztec cosmology,
the universe is in a very delicate equilibrium. Opposing
divine forces are competing for power. This equilibrium
is in constant danger of being disrupted by shifting
powers of the gods, of the elemental forces that
influence our lifes. This struggle cannot be won by any
god. The notion that everything ultimately consists of
two opposing forces is essential to the Aztec worldview.
The world is always on the brink of going under in a
spiritual war, a war of gods competing for supreme
power. To prevent this from happening, the gods have
been given their own space, their own time, their own
social groups, etcetera, to rule over. The tonalpohualli
tells us how time is divided among the gods.
The system of the
tonalpohualli
The system of the tonalpohualli
can be best understood by imagining two wheels that are
connected to each other. One wheel has the numbers "one"
to "thirteen" written on it. The second wheel has twenty
symbols on it. In the initial situation, number "one"
combines with the first symbol. This is the first day of
the tonalpohualli. Now the wheels start moving and
number "two" combines with the second glyph. This is the
second day. After fourteen days, an Aztec week (trecena
in Spanish) of thirteen days has passed. The wheel with
the numbers shows number "one" again. The other wheel
now shows the fourteenth symbol. After 260 days, the two
wheels have returned to their initial position. The
tonalpohualli starts all over again.
Dividing time among gods
A day (tonalli) in the
tonalpohualli consists of a number and a symbol or
daysign. Each daysign is dedicated to a god. The twenty
dayssigns and their gods are successively:
Each daysign is ruled by a god. The nature
of a day is also influenced by its number.
More important, each trecenas has a god
that rules over that very 13-day period. The twenty
trecenas and their associated gods or elemental forces
are successively:
The xiuhpohualliThe 365-day year or xihuitl
consists of 18 months (meztli) of 20 days plus five
extra (unlucky) days. The last day of the last month of
the year gives its (tonalpohualli-) name to the xihuitl.
This name is the "Xihuitl" information that is displayed
by the calendar. A simple calculation learns that only
four daysigns can "bear" (i.e. give their name to) the
year. These are
Calli,
Tochtli,
Acatl
and
Tecpatl
for the Aztec calendar. A similar calculation tells us
that the number of the xihuitl is raised every year. So
year 1-Calli is followed by 2-Tochtli, etcetera. This
means that every 52 years (4 times 13) the name of the
year will be the same. A combination of 52 years is
called a calendar round or xiuhmolpilli (bundle).
|