China Daily

Archaeolog­ists find Mexico temple to the god of skinning sacrifices

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MEXICO CITY — Archaeolog­ists in Mexico have found the first temple to the pre-Hispanic deity Xipe Totec, a god of fertility and war who was worshipped by sacrificin­g and skinning captives.

Evidence indicates that priests ritually sacrificed their victims on one of the temple’s two circular altars, then flayed them on the other and draped themselves in their skin, Mexico’s National Institute of Anthropolo­gy and History said in a statement.

Historians have long known that Xipe Totec (“the flayed god”) was worshipped by numerous peoples across what is now central and western Mexico and the Gulf coast.

But the discovery — made among the ruins of the NdachjianT­ehuacan archaeolog­ical site in the central state of Puebla — is the first time a temple dedicated to the god has been found, the institute said.

The artifacts uncovered at the site include three stone sculptures of Xipe Totec: two skinned heads and a torso, whose back is covered in engravings representi­ng the sacrificia­l skins worn by the god.

“Sculptural­ly speaking it’s a very beautiful piece. It measures approximat­ely 80 centimeter­s tall and has a hole in the belly, which according to historical sources is where a green stone was placed to ‘bring it to life’ for ceremonies,” said Noemi Castillo Tejero, the lead archaeolog­ist on the project.

The skulls measure about 70 centimeter­s tall and weigh about 200 kilograms.

The temple would have been used from around the year 1000 until about 1260, the institute said. The Spanish takeover of Mexico began in 1519 with the arrival of the conquistad­or Hernan Cortes.

The institute said Xipe Totec was one of the most important gods in pre-Hispanic Mexico, and was worshipped in a ceremony called Tlacaxipeh­ualiztli, which in the indigenous Nahuatl language means “to wear the skin of the flayed one”.

Sacrificia­l victims were killed either through gladiatori­al combat matches or by being shot with arrows, then flayed to glorify Xipe Totec, it said.

Their skins were then buried at the foot of the altars.

Two holes filled in with earth were found in front of the altars at the Ndachjian-Tehuacan site, it said.

 ?? INAH VIA AFP ?? A Mexican archaeolog­ist shows a sculpture found at the first temple recently discovered of pre-Hispanic fertility god Xipe Totec in the Mexican state of Puebla.
INAH VIA AFP A Mexican archaeolog­ist shows a sculpture found at the first temple recently discovered of pre-Hispanic fertility god Xipe Totec in the Mexican state of Puebla.

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