Tequitlacomolco (CQ)
This iconographic example seems to refer to a toponym, Tequitlacomolco ("In the Gully [Cut by a Road?]"). It shows a thick and curving line painted reddish brown but also with patches of white that are segmented. This may be a gully (judging by the part of the place that is "tlacomolco"). Perhaps a road or path (somewhat more brown) cuts through the gully. Both the gully and the road are represented from a bird's eye view. A nopal cactus also appears at the edge of what may be the gully.
Stephanie Wood
The glyph is a challenge to decipher. The name might suggest "to cut" (tequi] "through the gully" (tlacomolco). For support that the thick red band implies a ravine or gully, see Xochitzin Atlauhco from the same manuscript (below), where that ravine is a thick red band.
Stephanie Wood
tequitlacomolco
Tequitlacomolco
Stephanie Wood
covers ruling men and women of Tecamachalco through 1593
Stephanie Wood and Randall Rodríguez
places, lugares, roads, caminos, crossroads, cruces de caminos, cactuses, cactus, barrancas, ravines, gullies
tequi, to cut, https://nahuatl.wired-humanities.org/content/tequi
tlacomol(li), ravine, gully, https://nahuatl.wired-humanities.org/content/tlacomolli
tlacomolco, in the gully, or perhaps in the middle, https://nahuatl.wired-humanities.org/content/tlacomolco
-co (locative suffix), at or in, https://nahuatl.wired-humanities.org/content/co
[P]ueblo Tequitlacomolco “In the Ravine of Labor.” Matthew T. McDavitt, “Placenames in the Codex Quetzalecatzin,” unpublished essay shared 2-21-2018.
en la división de la quebrada.
Ofelia Cruz Morales
The Codex Quetzalecatzin, aka Mapa de Ecatepec-Huitziltepec, Codex Ehecatepec-Huitziltepec, or Charles Ratton Codex. Library of Congress. https://www.loc.gov/item/2017590521/
The Library of Congress, current custodian of this pictorial Mexican manuscript, hosts a digital version online. It is not copyright protected.