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Blood, obsidian, and the Teotihuacan cult of the mirror

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 March 2024

Trenton D. Barnes*
Affiliation:
Department of Art, Williams College, Williamstown, MA 01267, United States
*
Corresponding author: Email: tdb3@williams.edu
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Abstract

Drawing upon iconological theory, this article argues that mirrors and blood were regarded as a conceptually linked pair within the imperial ideology of Teotihuacan, Mexico from the second century onward. The relationship between blood and mirrors is shown to have codified with the construction of the Pyramid of the Feathered Serpent, Teotihuacan's third largest edifice. This monument's facade was adorned with hundreds of monumental sculptures of oracular mirrors, some number of which incorporated actual mirrors formed of obsidian. I demonstrate that the Teotihuacan mirror sign took obsidian, a form of black volcanic glass that was intensively worked in the city, as a key referent. This monument was also the site of a historically large human sacrifice of more than 200 individuals, an event argued here to have involved bloodletting with obsidian knives and blades. I note that Teotihuacan interest in the mirror icon increased in concert with the city's residents’ application of the reflective material of obsidian to warring and other blood-spilling behaviors. The mirror icon evoked both obsidian as a radiant material, as well as obsidian's potential for application to forceful martial actions. The article concludes that this icon in part signified imperial force, which was made real through the weaponization of the smoking glass.

Resumen

Resumen

Basándose en la teoría iconológica, este artículo argumenta que los espejos y la sangre fueron considerados como un par, vinculado conceptualmente dentro de la ideología imperial de Teotihuacan, México, desde el siglo dos en adelante. Se muestra que la relación entre la sangre y los espejos se codificó con la construcción de la Pirámide de la Serpiente Emplumada, el tercer edificio más grande de Teotihuacan. La fachada de este monumento estaba adornada con cientos de esculturas monumentales de espejos oraculares, algunos de los cuales incorporaron espejos reales hechos de obsidiana. Demuestro que el signo del espejo de Teotihuacan tomó como referente clave la obsidiana, una forma de vidrio volcánico negro que fue intensamente trabajado en la ciudad. Este monumento también fue el sitio de un sacrificio humano históricamente grande de más de 200 personas, un evento que se argumenta aquí que involucró derramamiento de sangre con cuchillos y hojas de obsidiana. Observo que el interés de Teotihuacán en el ícono del espejo aumentó en concierto con la aplicación del material reflectante de obsidiana por parte de los residentes de la ciudad a los comportamientos de guerra y otros derramamientos de sangre. El ícono del espejo evocaba tanto la obsidiana como un material radiante como el potencial de este material para su aplicación en acciones marciales contundentes.

El artículo introduce primero la metodología de la iconología. Tal como lo define Panofsky, la iconología se diferencia de la iconografía porque no intenta interpretar el significado de los signos sino comprender cómo ciertos signos reflejan el carácter de una sociedad determinada. La iconología tiene como objetivo identificar los factores culturales que ayudan a explicar por qué un ícono creció en importancia junto con los cambios históricos contemporáneos en una sociedad determinada. El artículo utiliza corpus icónicos y arqueológicos como conjuntos de datos paralelos para interpretar el lugar del ícono del espejo dentro de la ideología imperial teotihuacana. Se sugiere que el giro hacia la minería intensiva del material reflectante de obsidiana y la militarización de este material ayudan a comprender la centralidad del ícono del espejo en Teotihuacan.

El estudio comparativo de los programas escultóricos de la Pirámide de la Serpiente Emplumada y el Palacio de Quetzalpapalotl sugiere que los espejos de obsidiana se utilizaron ampliamente en el diseño de la pirámide. El uso de la obsidiana en estos contextos de élite indica que las élites teotihuacanas valoraban este material por encima de otros materiales reflectantes de uso frecuente. Se examinan otras co-ocurrencias icónicas y arqueológicas de obsidiana y espejos para mostrar la profundidad de su asociación dentro de la cosmovisión teotihuacana.

Pasando a una consideración del programa de sacrificios humanos de la Pirámide de la Serpiente Emplumada, se examinan los restos humanos desarticulados, la presencia de implementos de obsidiana “esparcidos” y la iconografía del agua del monumento. Estos aspectos de la pirámide conducen a una interpretación del programa de sacrificio como si se hubiera formado a través de la aplicación de obsidiana como arma. El análisis de obras de arte que muestran movimientos de “dispersión” en asociación con íconos de espejos y cuchillos de obsidiana corrobora aún más esta lectura. El documento concluye que el ícono del espejo de Teotihuacan significaba la fuerza imperial, que se hizo realidad a través de la militarización de la obsidiana.

Information

Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press
Figure 0

Figure 1. Western facade of the Pyramid of the Feathered Serpent, Teotihuacan. Photo by the author.

Figure 1

Figure 2. Detail of tenon heads of the western facade of the Pyramid of the Feathered Serpent, Teotihuacan. One Feathered Serpent head (right) retains its original obsidian inlay in the eyes. Photo by the author.

Figure 2

Figure 3. (a) An unadorned Teotihuacan slate mirror back. Perforations on either side permitted its attachment to another object, likely for wear. (b) An ornamented mirror back thought to have originated in the Escuintla Department, Guatemala. Photos by the author.

Figure 3

Figure 4. Reconstruction of Grave 5 of the human sacrificial program of the Pyramid of the Feathered Serpent. Museo Nacional de Antropología, Mexico City. Photo by the author.

Figure 4

Figure 5. The Las Colinas bowl. A Feathered Serpent passes through a mirror (right). Photo by the author.

Figure 5

Figure 6. (a) The columns of the patio of the Palace of Quetzalpapolotl retain obsidian mirrors in three key details: (1) as the eyes of mythological birds (upper right), (2) as disembodied eye disks (bottom left), and (3) as ornaments on profile mirror bowls, which are compositionally embedded into a portion of a bird's tail (center left; see Figure 6b for a detail of this passage). Photos by the author.

Figure 6

Figure 7. A Teotihuacan incense burner, featuring six mirrors inset with reflective mica disks and two circlets. Photo by the author.

Figure 7

Figure 8. Olmec jade figurine with inlaid mirror disk in chest, Mound A-2, La Venta, Tabasco. Photo by the author.

Figure 8

Figure 9. Portico 3 of the White Patio, Atetelco Apartment Compound. Hooked obsidian blades spring from oracular mirrors (right); a dancing warrior priest holds a hooked obsidian knife that spears a bloody heart (center). Photo by the author.

Figure 9

Figure 10. Tepantitla apartment compound. A deity or deity impersonator appears upon a mirror bowl marked with zigzags denoting obsidian. A cluster of obsidian spears is held in the extended right hand. At the center of the headdress the painter shows a mirror disk, atop which are superimposed eyes, a sign for reflectivity, and trilobes of blood. Photo by the author.

Figure 10

Figure 11. (a) A Maya ruler “scatters,” Maya sculptor(s), Stela 22, Tikal, Guatemala. (b) A “scattering” elite wears a lower-back mirror between rows of bloodied maguey spines and beneath a bicephalic serpent, Tlacuilopaxco Apartment Compound. (c) A row of priestly elites “scatter” in procession, Tepantitla Apartment Compound; reflectivity is indicated by the eye sign at the figures' middle torsos. (d) A deity or deity impersonator scatters jades while emerging from a mirror and wearing a headdress bearing a mirror and blood allusions, Tetitla Apartment Compound. (e) Disembodied hands wearing a headdress “scatter” red droplets onto a fringed disk with diagonal stripes, a probable mirror. A blue trilobe speared on a “trapeze and ray” sign appears above another fringed mirror in the upper right of the headdress, Tetitla Apartment Compound. Photos by the author.

Figure 11

Figure 12. (a) A striding figure holds a bloody heart on an obsidian blade in their right hand and an obsidian spear point in their left. (b) A faunal deity wears a headdress of three obsidian spears with droplets, possibly water or blood. Photos by the author.

Figure 12

Figure 13. Assorted Teotihuacan obsidian objects: (left and bottom right) spear points; (center) a human figurine; (top right) a trilobe. Photo by the author.

Figure 13

Figure 14. A smoking mirror bowl, obsidian spear, and bloody heart trilobe compound from Pyramid B, Tula, Hidalgo. Redrawn from López Luján and colleagues (1995:Figure 141:3).