Xochitlicue

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Xochitlicue (meaning in Nahuatl 'the one that has her skirt of flowers') is the Aztec goddess of fertility, patroness of life and death, guide of rebirth, younger sister of Coatlicue, Huitzilopochtli's mother according Codex Florentine; and Chimalma, Quetzalcoatl's mother according Codex Chimalpopoca. [1] One of the three daughters of Tlaltecuhtli and Tlalcihuatl, the couple of the earth gods created by the Tezcatlipocas. [2]

Mother of the twin brothers Xochipilli, 'Prince of Flowers'; and Xochiquetzal, 'Precious Feather Flower', the goddess of beauty and love.

The gloss says that this age began in Tula, there were 5,042 years of intense famine and it rained blood. People died of horror. Here the wretched pretend certain dreams of their blindness by saying that a god who called himself Citlallatonac [Star shine] —which is that sign seen in the sky, the so-called Camino de Santiago or Milky Way— sent an ambassador from heaven with an embassy to a virgin who was in Tula [...], whose name was Chimalman, who had two sisters, one Xochitlicue and the other Coatlicue (Codex Vatican A. Translation of Anders, Jansen and Reyes, 1996: 69). [3] When the ambassadors arrived, Chimalman's sisters died of horror and she had a son, Quetzalcoatl, who caused the hurricanes and was also called Citoladuale. [4]

During the time of the Fourth Sun, the supreme divinity sent a messenger to Chimalma in Tollan to warn him that she would conceive an unrelated child of a man. Chimalma was living with his two sisters, Xochiltlicue and Coatlicue. [5]

Codex Ríos

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  1. Xiuhtecuhtli, god of fire and time.
  2. Tlaltecuhtli, god of the earth.
  3. Chalchiuhtlicue, goddess of water, lakes, rivers, seas, streams, horizontal waters, storms and baptism.
  4. Tonatiuh, god of the sun.
  5. Tlazolteotl, goddess of lust, carnality, sexual misdeeds.
  6. Mictlantecuhtli, god of the underworld.
  7. Centeotl, goddess of maize. Also recognized as Chicomecoatl, goddess of agriculture.
  8. Tlaloc, god of the thunder, rain and earthquakes.
  9. Quetzalcoatl, god of wisdom, life, knowledge, morning star, fertility, patron of the winds and the light, the lord of the West.
  10. Tezcatlipoca, god of providence, matter and the invisible, ruler of the night, Great Bear, impalpable, ubiquity and the twilight, the lord of the North.
  11. Mictecacihuatl, goddess of the underworld.
  12. Tlahuizcalpantecuhtli, god of dawn.
  13. Citlalicue, goddess of the female stars.

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The Toltec Empire, Toltec Kingdom or Altepetl Tollan was a political entity in modern Mexico. It existed through the classic and post-classic periods of Mesoamerican chronology, but gained most of its power in the post-classic. During this time its sphere of influence reached as far away as the Yucatan Peninsula.

References

  1. Adela Fernández (1992). Los Dioses Prehispánicos de México (in Spanish). Editorial Panorama. p. 160. ISBN   968-38-0306-7.
  2. Cecilio A. Robelo (1905). Diccionario de Mitología Nahoa (in Spanish). Editorial Porrúa. ISBN   970-07-3149-9.
  3. Ana Diaz (2015). Cielos e inframundos: Una revisión de las cosmologías mesoamericanas (in Spanish). Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México. p. 89. ISBN   978-607-02-7226-4.
  4. Otilia Meza (1981). El Mundo Mágico de los Dioses del Anáhuac (in Spanish). Editorial Universo. ISBN   968-35-0093-5.
  5. Susan D. Gillespie (1989). Los Reyes Aztecas: La Construcción del Gobierno en la Historia Mexica (in Spanish). Siglo XXI Editores. p. 192. ISBN   968-23-1874-2.