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  their feet, they had long beards and their heads were bare ... Kukulkan

  instructed the people in the arts of peace, and caused various important

  edifices to be built ...’14

  Meanwhile Juan de Torquemada recorded this very specific preconquest tradition concerning the imposing strangers who had entered

  Mexico with Quetzalcoatl:

  They were men of good carriage, well-dressed, in long robes of black linen, open

  in front, and without capes, cut low at the neck, with short sleeves that did not

  come to the elbow ... These followers of Quetzalcoatl were men of great

  knowledge and cunning artists in all kinds of fine work.15

  Like some long-lost twin of Viracocha, the white and bearded Andean

  deity, Quetzalcoatl was depicted as having brought to Mexico all the

  skills and sciences necessary to create a civilized life, thus ushering in a

  golden age.16 He was believed, for example, to have introduced the

  knowledge of writing to Central America, to have invented the calendar,

  and to have been a master builder who taught the people the secrets of

  11 Not only obviously related but specifically related. Votan, for example, was often

  referred to as the grandson of Quetzalcoatl. Itzamana and Kukulkan were sometimes

  confused by the Indians who transmitted their legends to Spanish chroniclers shortly

  after the conquest. See Fair Gods and Stone Faces, p. 100.

  12 Mysteries of the Mexican Pyramids, p. 347.

  13 New Larousse Encyclopaedia of Mythology, p. 439.

  14 James Bailey, The God-Kings and the Titans, Hodder and Stoughton, London, 1972, p.

  206.

  15 Fair Gods and Stone Faces, pp. 37-8.

  16 According to the sixteenth century chronicler Bernardino de Sahagun: ‘Quetzalcoatl

  was a great civilizing agent who entered Mexico at the head of a band of strangers. He

  imported the arts into the country and especially fostered agriculture. In his time maize

  was so large in the head that a man might not carry more than one stalk at a time and

  cotton grew in all colours without having to be dyed. He built spacious and elegant

  houses, and inculcated a type of religion which fostered peace.’

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  masonry and architecture. He was the father of mathematics, metallurgy,

  and astronomy and was said to have ‘measured the earth’. He also

  founded productive agriculture, and was reported to have discovered and

  introduced corn—literally the staff of life in these ancient lands. A great

  doctor and master of medicines, he was the patron of healers and

  diviners ‘and disclosed to the people the mysteries of the properties of

  plants’. In addition, he was revered as a lawgiver, as a protector of

  craftsmen, and as a patron of all the arts.

  As might be expected of such a refined and cultured individual he

  forbade the grisly practice of human sacrifice during the period of his

  ascendancy in Mexico. After his departure the blood-spattered rituals

  were reintroduced with a vengeance. Nevertheless, even the Aztecs, the

  most vehement sacrificers ever to have existed in the long history of

  Central America, remembered ‘the time of Quetzalcoatl’ with a kind of

  nostalgia. ‘He was a teacher,’ recalled one legend, ‘who taught that no

  living thing was to be harmed and that sacrifices were to be made not of

  human beings but of birds and butterflies.17

  Cosmic struggle

  Why did Quetzalcoatl go away? What went wrong?

  Mexican legends provided answers to these questions. They said that

  the enlightened and benevolent rule of the Plumed Serpent had been

  brought to an end by Tezcatilpoca, a malevolent god whose name meant

  ‘Smoking Mirror’ and whose cult demanded human sacrifice. It seemed

  that a near-cosmic struggle between the forces of light and darkness had

  taken place in Ancient Mexico, and that the forces of darkness had

  triumphed ...

  The supposed stage for these events, now known as Tula, was not

  believed to be particularly old—not much more than 1000 years anyway—

  but the legends surrounding it linked it to an infinitely more distant

  epoch. In those times, outside history, it had been known as Tollan. All

  the traditions agreed that it had been at Tollan that Tezcatilpoca had

  vanquished Quetzalcoatl and forced him to quit Mexico.

  17 The God-Kings and the Titans, p. 57.

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  Tula

  Fire serpents

  Tula, Hidalgo Province

  I was sitting on the flat square summit of the unimaginatively named

  Pyramid B. The late-afternoon sun was beating down out of a clear blue

  sky, and I was facing south, looking around.

  At the base of the pyramid, to the north and east, were murals

  depicting jaguars and eagles feasting on human hearts. Immediately

  behind me were ranged four pillars and four fearsome granite idols each

  nine feet tall. Ahead and, to my left lay the partially unexcavated Pyramid

  C, a cactus-covered mound about 40 feet high, and farther away were

  more mounds not yet investigated by archaeologists. To my right was a

  ball court. In that long, I-shaped arena, terrible gladitorial games had

  been staged in ancient times. Teams, or sometimes just two individuals

  pitted against each other, would compete for possession of a rubber ball;

  the losers were decapitated.

  The idols on the platform behind me had a solemn and intimidating

  aura. I stood up to look at them more closely. Their sculptor had given

  them hard, implacable faces, hooked noses and hollow eyes and they

  seemed without sympathy or emotion. What interested me most,

  however, was not so much their ferocious appearance as the objects that

  they clutched in their hands. Archaeologists admitted that they didn’t

  really know what these objects were but had tentatively identified them

  anyway. This identification had stuck and it was now received wisdom

  that spearthrowers called atl-atls were held in the right hands of the idols

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  and ‘spears or arrows and incense bags’ in the left hands.18 It didn’t seem

  to matter that the objects did not in any way resemble atl-atls, spears,

  arrows, or incense bags.

  Santha Faiia’s photographs will help the reader to form his or her own

  impression of these peculiar objects. As I studied the objects themselves I

  had the distinct sense that they were meant to represent devices which

  had originally been made out of metal. The right-hand device, which

  seemed to emerge from a sheath or hand-guard, was lozenge-shaped

  with a curved lower edge. The left-hand device could have been an

  instrument or weapon of some kind.

  I remembered legends which related that the gods of ancient Mexico

  had armed themselves with xiuhcoatl, ‘fire serpents’.19 These apparently

  emitted burning rays capable of piercing and dismembering human

  bodies.20 Was it ‘fire serpents’ that the Tula idols were holding? What, for

  that matter, were fire serpents?

  Whatever they were, both devices looked like pieces of technology. And

  bo
th in certain ways resembled the equally mysterious objects in the

  hands of the idols in the Kalasasaya at Tiahuanaco.

  Serpent Sanctuary

  Santha and I had come to Tula/Tollan because it had been closely

  associated both with Quetzalcoatl and with his arch-enemy Tezcatilpoca,

  the Smoking Mirror.21 Ever-young, omnipotent, omnipresent and

  omniscient, Tezcatilpoca was associated in the legends with night,

  darkness and the sacred jaguar.22 He was ‘invisible and implacable,

  appearing to men sometimes as a flying shadow, sometimes as a

  dreadful monster’.23 Often depicted as a glaring skull, he was said to have

  been the owner of a mysterious object, the Smoking Mirror after which he

  was named, which he made use of to observe from afar the activities of

  men and gods. Scholars quite reasonably suppose that it must have been

  a primitive obsidian scrying stone: ‘Obsidian had an especial sanctity for

  the Mexicans, as it provided the sacrificial knives employed by the priests

  ... Bernal Diaz [Spanish chronicler] states that they called this stone

  “Tezcat”. From it mirrors were also manufactured as divinatory media to

  be used by wizards.’24

  Representing the forces of darkness and rapacious evil, Tezcatilpoca

  was said in the legends to have been locked in a conflict with

  18 Mexico, pp. 194-5.

  19 The Gods and Symbols of Ancient Mexico and the Maya, pp. 185, 188-9.

  20 Ibid.

  21 New Larousse Encyclopaedia of Mythology, p. 437.

  22 The Feathered Serpent and the Cross, pp. 52-3.

  23 New Larousse Encyclopaedia of Mythology, p. 436.

  24 The Magic and Mysteries of Mexico, p. 51.

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  Quetzalcoatl that had continued over an immense span of years.25 At

  certain times one seemed to be gaining the upper hand, at certain times

  the other. Finally the cosmic struggle came to an end when good was

  vanquished by evil and Quetzalcoatl driven out from Tollan.26 Thereafter,

  under the influence of Tezcatilpoca’s nightmarish cult, human sacrifice

  was reintroduced throughout Central America.

  As we have seen, Quetzalcoatl was believed to have fled to the coast

  and to have been carried away on a raft of serpents. One legend says, ‘He

  burned his houses, built of silver and shells, buried his treasure, and set

  sail on the Eastern Sea preceded by his attendants who had been changed

  into bright birds.’27

  This poignant moment of departure was supposedly staged at a place

  called Coatzecoalcos, meaning ‘Serpent Sanctuary’.28 There, before taking

  his leave, Quetzalcoatl promised his followers he would return one day to

  overthrow the cult of Tezcatilpoca and to inaugurate an era when the

  gods would again ‘accept sacrifices of flowers’ and cease their clamour

  for human blood.29

  25 World Mythology, p. 237.

  26 New Larousse Encyclopaedia of Mythology, p. 437.

  27 Ibid.

  28 Fair Gods and Stone Faces, pp. 139-40.

  29 The Feathered Serpent and the Cross, pp. 35, 66.

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  Chapter 15

  Mexican Babel

  We drove south-east from Tula, by-passing Mexico City on an anarchic

  series of fast freeways that dragged us through the creeping edge of the

  capital’s eye-watering, lung-searing pollution. Our route then took us up

  over pine-covered mountains, past the snowy peak of Popocatepetl and

  thence along tree-lined lanes amid fields and farmsteads.

  In the late afternoon we arrived at Cholula, a sleepy town with 11,000

  inhabitants and a spacious main square. After turning east through the

  narrow streets, we crossed a railway line and pulled to a halt in the

  shadow of tlahchiualtepetl, the ‘man-made mountain’ we had come here

  to see.

  Once sacred to the peaceful cult of Quetzalcoatl, but now surmounted

  by an ornate Catholic church, this immense edifice was ranked among the

  most extensive and ambitious engineering projects ever undertaken

  anywhere in the ancient world. Indeed, with a base area of 45 acres and a

  height of 210 feet, it was three times more massive than the Great

  Pyramid of Egypt.1 Though its contours were now blurred by age and its

  sides overgrown with grass, it was still possible to recognize that it had

  once been an imposing ziggurat which had risen up towards the heavens

  in four clean-angled ‘steps’. Measuring almost half a kilometre along each

  side at its base, it had also succeeded in preserving a dignified but

  violated beauty.

  The past, though often dry and dusty, is rarely dumb. Sometimes it can

  speak with passion. It seemed to me that it did so here, bearing witness

  to the physical and psychological degradation visited upon the native

  peoples of Mexico when the Spanish conquistador Hernan Cortez almost

  casually ‘beheaded a culture as a passer-by might sweep off the head of a

  sunflower’.2 In Cholula, a great centre of pilgrimage with a population of

  around 100,000 at the time of the conquest, this decapitation of ancient

  traditions and ways of life required that something particularly

  humiliating be done to the man-made mountain of Quetzalcoatl. The

  solution was to smash and desecrate the temple which had once stood on

  the summit of the ziggurat and replace it with a church.

  Cortez and his men were few, the Cholulans were many. When they

  marched into town, however, the Spaniards had one major advantage:

  bearded and pale-skinned, dressed in shining armour, they looked like

  the fulfillment of a prophecy—had it not always been promised that

  1 Figures from Fair Gods and Stone Faces, p. 56.

  2 Ibid., p. 12.

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  Quetzalcoatl, the Plumed Serpent, would return ‘from across the Eastern

  Sea’ with his band of followers?3

  Because of this expectation, the naive and trusting Cholulans permitted

  the conquistadores to climb the steps of the ziggurat and enter the great

  courtyard of the temple. There troupes of gaily bedecked dancing girls

  greeted them, singing and playing on instruments, while stewards moved

  back and forth with heaped platters of bread and delicate cooked meats.

  One of the Spanish chroniclers, an eyewitness to the events that

  followed, reported that adoring townsfolk of all ranks ‘unarmed, with

  eager and happy faces, crowded in to hear what the white men would

  say’. Realizing from this incredible reception that their intentions were

  not suspected, the Spaniards closed and guarded all the entrances, drew

  their weapons of steel and murdered their hosts.4 Six thousand died in

  this horrible massacre5 which matched, in its savagery, the most

  bloodstained rituals of the Aztecs: ‘Those of Cholula were caught

  unawares. With neither arrows nor shields did they meet the Spaniards.

  Just so they were slain without warning. They were killed by pure

  treachery.’6

  It was ironic, I thought, that the conquistadores in both Peru and

  Mexico should have benefited in the same way from local legends that

/>   prophesied the return of a pale, bearded god. If that god was indeed a

  deified human, as seemed likely, he must have been a person of high

  civilization and exemplary character—or more probably two different

  people from the same background, one working in Mexico and providing

  the model for Quetzalcoatl, the other in Peru being the model for

  Viracocha. The superficial resemblance that the Spanish bore to those

  earlier fair-skinned foreigners opened many doors that would otherwise

  certainly have been closed. Unlike their wise and benevolent

  predecessors, however, Pizarro in the Andes and Cortez in Central

  America were ravening wolves. They ate up the lands and the peoples and

  the cultures they had seized upon. They destroyed almost everything ...

  Tears for the past

  Their eyes scaled with ignorance, bigotry and greed, the Spanish erased a

  precious heritage of mankind when they arrived in Mexico. In so doing

  they deprived the future of any detailed knowledge concerning the

  brilliant and remarkable civilizations which once flourished in Central

  America.

  What, for example, was the true history of the glowing ‘idol’ that rested

  3 Ibid., pp. 3-4.

  4 Mysteries of the Mexican Pyramids, p. 6.

  5 Mexico, p. 224.

  6 Contemporary account cited in Mysteries of the Mexican Pyramids, p. 6.

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  in a sacred sanctuary in the Mixtec capital Achiotlan? We know of this

  curious object through the writings of a sixteenth-century eyewitness,

  Father Burgoa:

  The material was of marvellous value, for it was an emerald of the size of a thick

  pepper-pod [capsicum], upon which a small bird was engraved with the greatest

  skill, and, with the same skill, a small serpent coiled ready to strike. The stone was

  so transparent that it shone from its interior with the brightness of a candle flame.

  It was a very old jewel, and there is no tradition extant concerning the origin of its

  veneration and worship.7

  What might we learn if we could examine this ‘very old’ jewel today? And

  how old was it really? We shall never find out because Fr. Benito, the first

  missionary of Achiotlan, seized the stone from the Indians: ‘He had it

  ground up, although a Spaniard offered three thousand ducats for it,

  stirred the powder in water, poured it upon the earth and trod upon it ...’8