A 'tzompantli' is a type of wooden rack or palisade documented in several
Mesoamerican civilizations, which was used for the public display of human
skulls, typically those of war captives or other
sacrificial victims.
Distribution
General
It was most commonly erected as a linearly-arranged series of vertical posts connected by a series of horizontal crossbeams. The skulls were pierced or threaded laterally along these horizontal stakes. An alternate arrangement, more common in the Maya regions, was for the skulls to be impaled on top of one another along the vertical posts.
''Tzompantli'' are known chiefly from their depiction in Late Postclassic (
13th -
16th centuries) and post-Conquest (
mid-16th -
17th centuries)
codices, contemporary accounts of the
conquistadores, and several other inscriptions. However, there is evidence that a ''tzompantli''-like structure has been excavated from the Proto-Classic
Zapotec civilization at the
La Coyotera,
Oaxaca site, dated from c.
2nd century BCE to
3rd century CE.
[1]
''Tzompantli'' are also noted in other Mesoamerican
pre-Columbian cultures, such as the
Toltec and
Mixtec.
Maya
Other examples are indicated from
Maya civilization sites such as
Uxmal and other
Puuc region sites of the
Yucatán, dating from around the late
9th century decline of the
Maya Classical Era. A particularly fine and intact inscription example survives at the extensive
Chichen Itza site.
[2]
Aztec
There are numerous depictions of ''tzompantli'' in
Aztec codices, dating from around the time or shortly after the
Spanish conquest of Mexico, such as the
Durán Codex,
Ramírez Codex and
Codex Borgia. During the stay of Cortes' expedition in the Aztec capital
Tenochtitlan (initially as guest-captives of the Emperor
Moctezuma II, before the battle which would lead to the conquest), they reported a wooden ''tzompantli'' altar adorned with the skulls from recent sacrifices. Within the complex of the
Great Pyramid of Tenochtitlan (Templo Mayor) itself, a relief in
stucco depicted these sacrifices; the remains of this relief have survived and may now be seen in the ruins in the
Zócalo of present-day
Mexico City.
According to
Bernal Díaz del Castillo's eye-witness account (''
The Conquest of New Spain'') written several decades after the event, after Cortes' expedition was forced to make their initial retreat from Tenochtitlan, the Aztecs erected a makeshift tzompantli to display the severed heads of men and horses they had captured from the invaders. This taunting is also depicted in an Aztec codex which relates the story, and the subsequent battles which led to the eventual capture of the city by the Spanish forces and their allies.
Based on numbers given by the Conquistador
Andrés de Tapia and Fray
Diego Durán, Bernard Ortiz de Montellano
[3] has calculated that there were at most 60,000 skulls on the ''Hueyi Tzompantli'' (great Skullrack) of Tenochtitlan. There were at least five more skullracks in Tenochtitlan but by all accounts they were much smaller.
Association and meaning
Apart from their use to display the skulls of ritualistically-executed war captives, ''tzompantli'' often occur in the contexts of
Mesoamerican ballcourts, which were widespread throughout the region's civilizations and sites. In these contexts it appears that the tzompantli was used to display the losers' heads of this often highly-ritualised game. Not all games resulted in this outcome, however, and for those that did it is surmised that these participants were often notable captives.
Tula, the former
Toltec capital, has a well-preserved ''tzompantli'' inscription on its ballcourt.
The association with ballcourts is also reflected in the ''
Popol Vuh'', the famous
K'iche' Maya religious, mythological and cultural account. When
Hun Hunahpu, father of the
Maya Hero Twins, was killed by the lords of the Underworld (
Xibalba), his head was hung in a
gourd tree next to a ballcourt. The gourd tree is a clear representation of a tzompantli, and the image of skulls in trees as if they were fruits is also a common indicator of a tzompantli and the associations with some of the game's metaphorical interpretations.
Etymology
The name comes from the
Classical Nahuatl language of the
Aztecs, however it is also commonly applied to similar structures depicted in other civilizations. Its precise
etymology is uncertain, although its general interpretation is "skull rack" or "wall of skulls". It may be seen to be a compound of the Nahuatl words ''tzontecomatl'' ("skull"; from ''tzontli'' or ''tzom-'' "hair", "scalp" and ''tecomatl'' ("
gourd" or "container"), and ''pamitl'' ("banner"). This derivation has been ascribed to explain the depictions in several codices which associate these with banners; however, F. Karttunen
[4] has proposed that ''pantli'' means merely "row" or "wall".
Notes
1. Spencer (1982), pp.236-239
2. Miller and Taube (1993), p.176.
3. Ortíz de Montellano 1983
4. Linguist list server Frances Karttunen
References
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