The 'Calmecac' ( "the house of the lineage") was a school for the children of
Aztec nobility (''pīpiltin'' ) in the
Late Postclassic period of
Mesoamerican history, where they would receive rigorous religious and military training. The calmecac is to be contrasted with the
Telpochcalli ( "house of youth") where mostly commoners received military training. Only a few commoners (''mācehualtin'' ) entered the Calmecac, and those who did only trained for priesthood.
[1]
The calmecac of the Aztec capital,
Tenochtitlan, was located in the ceremonial center of the city and it was dedicated to
Quetzalcoatl.
[1]
The ''calmecac'' was the students' home for the duration of their training, and they would enter the school as young as five to seven years of age. The students received instruction in songs, rituals, reading and writing, the
calendar (''
tonalpohualli'' ) and all the basic training which was also taught in the telpochcalli.
Students commenced formal military training around age fifteen.
[3]
Promising sons of nobles would be trained especially by the military orders of the
Jaguar warriors (''ocelomeh'' ) or
Eagle warriors (''cuauhtin'' ) in their quarters, the ''cuauhcalli'' ).
[4]
Notes
1. Hassig (1988), p.34.
2. Hassig (1988), p.34.
3. Hassig (1988), p.35.
4. Hassig (1988), p.36.
Sources
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