[Aztlan] UPDATE ON TOLTEC CHILD SACRIFICE

michael ruggeri michaelruggeri at mac.com
Fri Jun 15 12:23:59 CDT 2007




Ancient Tomb Found in Mexico Reveals Mass Child Sacrifice
Kelly Hearn
for National Geographic News
June 12, 2007

The skeletons of two dozen children killed in an ancient mass  
sacrifice have been found in a tomb at a construction site in Mexico.

The find reveals new details about the ancient Toltec civilization  
and adds to an ongoing debate over ritualistic killing in historic  
Mesoamerica.

Construction crews unearthed the burial chamber this spring near the  
town of Tula, the ancient Toltec capital, 50 miles (80 kilometers)  
north of Mexico City (see Mexico map).

The chamber contained 24 skeletons of children believed to have been  
sacrificed between A.D. 950 and 1150, according to Luis Gamboa, an  
archaeologist at Mexico's National Institute of Anthropology and  
History.

All but one of the children were between 5 to 15 years of age, and  
they were likely killed as an offering to the Toltec rain god Tlaloc,  
Gamboa said.

The Toltec, a pre-Aztec civilization that thrived from the 10th to  
12th centuries, had not been previously thought to have sacrificed  
children.

But the ritualistic placement of the skeletons, cut marks on bones,  
and the presence of a figurine of Tlaloc led Gamboa to conclude the  
children had been sacrificed to bring rain.

"To try and explain why there are 24 bodies grouped in the same  
place, well, the only way is to think that there was a human  
sacrifice," Gamboa told the Reuters news agency.

"You can see evidence of incisions, which make us think they possibly  
used sharp-edged instruments to decapitate them."

Elaborate Burials

The skeletons were each found in a seated position looking east to  
face the sunrise, Gamboa said.

Several artifacts were also found around the bodies, some of which  
suggest that the children had been brought in from another region, he  
added.

"We believe that based on the comparison of archaeological materials  
that accompanied the human burials," Gamboa told National Geographic  
News.

In particular, he said, his team discovered some vessels that bore  
markings "similar to those found in the southern region of the Basin  
of Mexico."

Two of the children also appear to have been given especially  
elaborate burials, based on the quality of vessels and other  
artifacts found nearby, including turquoise that may have originated  
in the present-day southwestern United States.

Gamboa's discovery requires some important changes to the time line  
of Mesoamerican history, said Traci Ardren, an archaeologist at  
University of Miami who was not involved in the research.

"This new discovery at Tula pushes back the evidence for a  
relationship between child sacrifice and the [appeasement] of the  
rain god Tlaloc at least 300 years," she said.

Evidence suggests the children sacrificed to Tlaloc were in very poor  
health when they died and that the sacrifices were not punitive, she  
added.

Children of "young age and greater purity" were "more powerful  
mechanisms for the petitions of the living," Ardren said.

Signs of sacrifice are not unique at this time and place, noted  
Robert Carmack, an anthropologist at the University of Albany, but  
Gamboa's findings demonstrate the influence that the Toltec had in  
the region.

"[Cultures during this] period in Central Mexico, especially the  
Aztecs, were profoundly influenced by the Toltecs, so the existence  
of Toltec child sacrifice is not at all surprising," he said.

Carmack said early Toltec influence was also pervasive in the  
highlands of what is now Guatemala, and Maya documents from the  
region refer to child sacrifice.

(See a video about Maya violence in the movie Apocalypto.)

"There is sound evidence of the existence of child sacrifice there,  
although perhaps not on a grand scale," he said.



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