atlan miquiliztli (TR42r)
This multicolored example of iconography show roughly seventeen men in profile, facing toward the viewer's right. Their eyes are closed, an indication that they are deceased. In front of some of their faces are six white circles, each one with a smaller concentric circle inside, also white. These may be war shields, judging from some comparative examples (below). Below their heads are seven stones with their usual oval shape, curling ends, and diagonal stripes of alternating colors (gray and brown). On the left-most stone, a bird is perched in a profile view, looking to the right, with feathers of red and dark yellow, a white eye, and a white hooked beak. Below the stones is a horizontal flow of water with the diagnostic droplets and turbinate shells splashing off the water from underneath, plus five large turbinate shells on the right, on the leading edge of the water. The water also contains three horizontal dark yellow feathers.
Stephanie Wood
We are naming this incident in Nahuatl as a "drowning," drawing from the Nahuatl translation for the Spanish-language term, "el ahogamiento," given that the gloss states that these people drowned ("se ahogaron").
Stephanie Wood
se ahogaron
ca. 1550–1563
Jeff Haskett-Wood
ahogamientos, drownings, Oaxaca, Mixteca, warriors, guerreros, rodelas, shields, plumas, piedras
atlan miquiliztli, death by drowning in water, https://nahuatl.wired-humanities.org/content/atlan-miquiliztli
el ahogamiento
Stephanie Wood
Telleriano-Remensis Codex, folio 42 recto, MS Mexicain 385, Gallica digital collection, https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/btv1b8458267s/f109.item.zoom
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