Page:Mexican Archæology.djvu/292

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
234
MEXICAN ARCHÆOLOGY

in the underworld, i.e. the sun after its setting. The presence of the sun-attributes is necessitated by the fact that without them the death-face would be indistinguishable from that of the death-god, whereas the head of the other god requires no special identification marks, There are a good many additional points which support this view, but I will mention two only. The magnificent carved lintel from Tikal, now at Basle, shows a figure with all the attributes of the death-god beneath a particularly elaborate example of the double-headed monster. The position of the monster here 1s unusual, since it is usually shown as a support rather than as a canopy, but I think that in this case 1t emphasizes the fact that the home of the death-god 1s below the earth. The other point is the following: in the relief at Palenque, known as the cross, the conventional tree (for such it is in reality), springs from the head with the combined death-and sun-symbols (Fig. §1). In this case the part is taken for the whole, the head represents the earth-monster, and the whole scene is an exact parallel to the Borgia codex, in which the trees of the world-directions are shown rooted in the body of the monstrous earth-goddess (Fig. 10; p. 79). The Vaticanus B codex is an even closer parallel, since the trees representing the quarters are there depicted as springing from a cipactli head, and it will be remembered that the Mexicans believed the earth to have been created from a monstrous cipactli (p. §9). It is true that the "foliated cross" is supported by a head of another type, but there is a particular reason for this; the "foliated cross" is in reality a maize-plant, the head is that of a rain-or water-god (of whom parallels are found at Chichen Itza and other places), and the combination symbolizes the dependence of the maize-crop upon the water-supply. The finest example of the double-headed earth-monster is the remarkable monolith, designated P, at Quirigua (Pl. XXVI, 1; p.