MEXICO
CITY (Reuters) - A tower of human skulls unearthed beneath the heart of
Mexico City has raised new questions about the culture of sacrifice in
the Aztec Empire after crania of women and children surfaced
among the
hundreds embedded in the forbidding structure.
Archaeologists
have found more than 650 skulls caked in lime and thousands of
fragments in the cylindrical edifice near the site of the Templo Mayor,
one of the main temples in the Aztec capital Tenochtitlan, which later
became Mexico City.
The
tower is believed to form part of the Huey Tzompantli, a massive array
of skulls that struck fear into the Spanish conquistadores when they
captured the city under Hernan Cortes, and mentioned the structure in
contemporary accounts.
Historians
relate how the severed heads of captured warriors adorned tzompantli,
or skull racks, found in a number of Mesoamerican cultures before the
Spanish conquest.
But the archaeological dig in the bowels of old Mexico City that began in 2015 suggests that picture was not complete.
"We
were expecting just men, obviously young men, as warriors would be, and
the thing about the women and children is that you'd think they
wouldn't be going to war," said Rodrigo Bolanos, a biological
anthropologist investigating the find.
"Something is happening that we have no record of, and this is really new, a first in the Huey Tzompantli," he added.
Raul
Barrera, one of the archaeologists working at the site alongside the
huge Metropolitan Cathedral built over the Templo Mayor, said the skulls
would have been set in the tower after they had stood on public display
on the tzompantli.
Roughly
six meters in diameter, the tower stood on the corner of the chapel of
Huitzilopochtli, Aztec god of the sun, war and human sacrifice. Its base
has yet to be unearthed.
There
was no doubt that the tower was one of the skull edifices mentioned by
Andres de Tapia, a Spanish soldier who accompanied Cortes in the 1521
conquest of Mexico, Barrera said.
In
his account of the campaign, de Tapia said he counted tens of thousands
of skulls at what became known as the Huey Tzompantli. Barrera said 676
skulls had so far been found, and that the number would rise as
excavations went on.
The Aztecs and other Mesoamerican peoples performed ritualistic human sacrifices as offerings to the sun.
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