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Burning offerings to the gods, an Aztec brazier of Chicomecoatl

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    (jazzy piano music)
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    - [Steven] We're in the
    National Museum of Anthropology
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    in Mexico City, looking at one of four
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    large ceramic braziers,
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    vessels that were containers for burning.
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    This one represents a goddess
    associated with maize,
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    with ripe corn.
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    - [Lauren] The one we're
    looking at is Chicomecoatl,
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    or Seven Serpent.
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    And she is a very popular deity
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    in the Aztec or Mexica pantheon.
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    And we see her not only in ceramic,
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    but also in stone sculpture.
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    - [Steven] The association
    with maize is immediate.
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    We can see that she's framing her face
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    with four ears of corn.
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    But this is such a
    wonderfully dense sculpture.
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    - [Lauren] Beyond
    holding the ears of corn,
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    which I should note are
    red and dark blue or black,
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    making reference to the
    different types of maize,
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    we see her face here behind the corn,
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    her eyes painted looking out at us,
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    her mouth open with these large ear spools
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    and then framed by this fantastic
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    and very elaborate headdress.
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    - [Steven] Well, we know
    that costume was tremendously
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    important for the Aztecs, and
    this is a great example of it.
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    We can see, for instance,
    four circles that would,
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    in physical costume,
    have been pleated paper.
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    - [Lauren] Exactly, and so
    while all of this is in ceramic
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    it's referencing the
    types of ritual regalia
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    that would have been used.
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    - [Steven] And this is exceptional
    because we have so much
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    of the polychrome, that is of the paint,
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    of the color, that still survives.
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    We can see reds and blues
    and whites and blacks.
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    - [Lauren] Which are some
    of the primary colors
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    that you see in Aztec art.
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    And what's wonderful here is
    not only that we have this
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    elaborate headdress fairly intact,
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    but also the rest of her
    costume, like her skirt.
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    In this very rectangular
    block-like construction,
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    much of the polychrome still exists
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    where we have these red bands.
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    - [Steven] It reminds me of architecture.
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    It seems as if the
    headdress is so elaborate,
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    it is as if she is wearing a building.
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    - [Lauren] They're almost obscuring
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    or really downplaying the face.
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    - [Steven] Although
    the face is so present,
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    she's coming out at us
    with a kind of intensity
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    that captures my attention.
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    - [Lauren] This particular
    face would have emphasized
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    this experience that one
    would have if you were to walk
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    into a temple and to
    see an object like this
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    that's emitting burning
    materials in its body.
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    - [Steven] And the
    smoke would be rising up
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    from behind this, it would have
    been tremendously dramatic.
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    Corn is so central to the development
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    of Mesoamerican culture
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    - [Lauren] Maize is the staple food crop.
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    And that is very true
    of the Aztecs as well,
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    because we don't only see
    this particular goddess
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    whose name again is Seven Serpent
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    or Chicomecoatl in Nahuatl,
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    but we see other versions
    of maze deities like Xilonen
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    who is the maize goddess
    affiliated with young corn.
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    And we even see corn in a
    variety of other objects
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    because as the cornerstone of the diet,
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    it also became invested
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    with these important sacred meanings.
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    - [Steven] And the cobs themselves
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    are so beautifully articulated.
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    And it reminds me of so
    many other sculptures
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    by the Aztecs of other foodstuffs.
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    In the same gallery this marvelous
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    representation of a squash.
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    And corn and squash together with beans
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    create a perfect protein.
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    - [Lauren] And so if we're
    talking about this deity
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    within the religious
    practices of the Aztecs,
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    they had a very active ritual calendar.
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    And many of these monthly
    festivals would revolve
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    around maze deities,
    including Seven Serpent here.
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    - [Steven] And it would've
    been on those feast days
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    that corn would have been enjoyed.
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    - [Lauren] And so there would
    have been special tamales
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    distributed to people to be
    eaten during these festivals
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    as a very potent, very
    sensual in terms of using many
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    different senses, reminder
    of the centrality of maize.
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    (jazzy piano music)
Title:
Burning offerings to the gods, an Aztec brazier of Chicomecoatl
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
Khan Academy
Duration:
03:44

English subtitles

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