Page:A Study of the Manuscript Troano.djvu/125

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thomas]
ASSIGNMENT OF DAYS TO THE CARDINAL POINTS.
73

follows: for the groups marked "first," Ix, and for those marked "second," Gauac, and the order in which they succeed each other, as follows:

1st. Ix, Cauac, Kan, Muluc.
2d. Cauac, Kan, Muluc, Ix.

The first agrees exactly with the order of the days referred to by Plates 25-28 of this Codex, and the second precisely with Plates XXXXIII of the Manuscript taken in reverse order to the paging. The first also agrees exactly with the order in which the first four characters in the second line of the title page of the Manuscript come, if read from left to right as the numbers above them indicate. If we turn to Plate XXXII* of the last-mentioned Manuscript[1] we will see that the left-hand column of the upper division consists of the four dominical days placed in the following order, reading from the top downward: Ix, Cauac, Kan, Muluc, precisely in the order of the four plates of the Dresden Codex; we also find in the space of this division the characters which I have supposed mark the cardinal points, but placed as shown here.

Landa, speaking of the ceremonies connected with the making of idols of wood, remarks (p. 308) that "they offered incense to the four gods called Acantunes, which they had placed at the four parts of the world" (the four cardinal points). But these were of stone, as we have already learned from the extracts referring to the festivals of the supplemental days.

In the lowest division of Plate XXV* there are four idols over which are these four characters; the first, or left-hand one, is the headless figure seen on Plate XXIII, the character over it that which denotes the west; the second the spotted dog seen on Plates XX and XXI, the character over it signifies the north; the third a monkey, possibly the same as seen in the lower division of Plate XXI, the character over it the east; the fourth a bird, the character over it the south.


  1. Roman numerals refer to the plates of the Manuscript; Arabics to those of the Codex.