ontecpantli (Osu3v)
This simplex glyph and notation for the number 40 (ontecpantli) comes from the Codex Osuna folio 3 verso (image 9). It consists of two vertical flags (pamitl) in a horizontal row. The two (ome, which, when combined with -tecpantli, changes to on-) flags are flying toward the viewer’s right. The flag posts are painted tan, suggestive of wood. A horizontal line at the bases of the flags connects them.
Stephanie Wood
A flag (pamitl) used to be held up by a labor boss who was in charge of gathering and supervising 20 men (or groups of 20). This may be how it came to be equated with the number twenty, which is the base of the vigesimal numbering system of the Nahuas.. See two examples of the macuiltecpanpixqui labor boss, below, who held up five flags (5 x 20) that called for 100 laborers.
Stephanie Wood
1551–1565
Jeff Haskett-Wood
notación, números, veinte, cuarenta, banderas, tributos
ome, two ; https://nahuatl.wired-humanities.org/content/ome
-tecpantli, twenty, https://nahuatl.wired-humanities.org/content/tecpantli
pam(itl), flag, https://nahuatl.wired-humanities.org/content/pamitl
cuarenta o 40
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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