Tlacuilollan (LTlax302v)
This simplex glyph shows a piece of paper with lines of "writing" (tlacuilolli) which are really just illegible wavy lines. A hand--with partial arm showing, and either wearing a shirt with a ruffled sleeve or wearing a bracelet--holds an implement that is making the wavy lines.
Stephanie Wood
This image is useful for analyzing how writing is shown in Nahua glyphs and in iconography. This one appears to be influenced by European ways of writing in lines on a single sheet of paper, not screen-folded. The writing, although illegible, has the appearance of alphabetic writing, not hieroglyphic writing.
Marc Thouvenot identifies the verb icuiloa (or ihcuiloa, with the glottal stop), which means to paint, write, or print, as having a root of -cuil-. He notes how it also appears in tlacuiloliztli (writing), tlacuilo (writer), and cuicuiltic (mottled). He goes on to show various uses of icuiloa that take it beyond the simple definitions just given, resulting in something like the action of creating a design (e.g., on leather, ceramics, sculpture, or in textiles). It can also be something like the action of decorating (e.g., to put a flower on a cup of atole). He associates icuiloa and tlacuilolli with "cultural artifacts," such as arts and crafts or examples of writing and painting, but cuicuiltic with effects created by "nature." This short summary barely does his article justice; it is worth reading the entire piece. How Thouvenot's study might connect with the concept of bent or curved mentioned by Prem (1974: 555, 682) raises an interesting question. Perhaps the bent or curved lines of writing, painting, carving, embroidery, and so on, fall with in the realm of expressions of -cuil-. See
Marc Thouvenot, "Imágenes y escritura entre los nahuas del inicio del XVI," Estudios de Cultural Náhuatl 41 (2010).
Stephanie Wood
tlaquilula
Tlacuilollan
Stephanie Wood
c. 1580s
Jeff Haskett-Wood
papel, escribir, escrituras, nombres de lugares

tlacuilol(li), a piece of writing, https://nahuatl.wired-humanities.org/content/tlacuilolli
-tlan (locative suffix), near, https://nahuatl.wired-humanities.org/content/tlan
Junto a La Escritura
Stephanie Wood
"Reconstrucción histórica digital del Lienzo de Tlaxcala," UNAM, https://lienzodetlaxcala.unam.mx/
This manuscript can be reproduced for non-profit purposes, as long as the images are not mutilated, and with full citation and link to the source. Please also cite this Visual Lexicon of Aztec Hieroglyphs (see splash page for recommended citation format)..
