cacahuatl (Osu10v)
This simplex glyph for a cacahuatl (cacao bean) stands for a larger quantity, as shown in the contextualizing image, both from folio 10 verso of the Codex Mendoza (also Image 24). This glyph is expressed as part of a large debt that the Nahuas were expecting Viceroy don Luis de Velasco to pay them for 4,141 loads of grass that they collected and delivered to serve as food for the colonizers’ horses. The full debt is laid out in groups of twenty pesos (in the form of six flags, each one a tecpantli), four individual pesos, seven tomines (and each tomin was an eighth of a peso), and, finally, 415 cacao beans (the number being expressed with a centzontli, for 400, and three horizontal rows of five small circles, for the final 15 cacao beans). The beans are a tan color, and the circles representing the number 15 are painted a light red (almost a pink).
Stephanie Wood
In our Online Nahuatl Dictionary entry for the term cacahuatl, we see that one tomín (eighth of a peso) could be worth 200 quality cacao beans or 230 shrunken beans. That was in Tlaxcala in 1545. In Guatemala in 1572, a load of firewood cost 20 to 40 cacao beans.
Stephanie Wood
1551–1565
Jeff Haskett-Wood
cacao, monedas, dinero, divisa, valor
cacahua(tl), a cacao bean, https://nahuatl.wired-humanities.org/content/cacahuatl-0
un grano de cacao
Stephanie Wood
Library of Congress Online Catalog and the World Digital Library, Osuna Codex, or Painting of the Governor, Mayors, and Rulers of Mexico (Pintura del Gobernador, Alcaldes y Regidores de México), https://www.loc.gov/resource/gdcwdl.wdl_07324/. The original is located in the Biblioteca Nacional de España.
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