Building dedications, burials, marriages, and births all required bloodletting. Kings performed bloodletting at every major political event. Ī proposed translation of the Epi-Olmec culture's La Mojarra Stela 1, dated to roughly AD 155, tells of the ruler's ritual bloodletting by piercing his penis and his buttocks, as well as what appears to be a ritual sacrifice of the ruler's brother-in-law. However, solid evidence for its practice exists in the jade and ceramic replicas of stingray spines and shark teeth as well as representations of such paraphernalia on monuments and stelae and in iconography. Unlike later cultures, there is no representation of actual bloodletting in Olmec art. 1500-300 BC Depictions of bloodletting in Mesoamerican cultures Olmec-style jadeite "spoon", believed to be a perforator, from Guerrero. The rulers are giving their blood to empower the gods in return for giving them life. Thus, in order to continually maintain the order of their universe, the Maya believed that blood had to be given back to the gods. Within their belief system, human blood was partially made up of the blood of the gods, who sacrificed their own divine blood in creating life in humans. The second is the central focus of their mythology on human blood, which signified life among the Maya. The first is the notion that the gods had given life to humankind by sacrificing parts of their own bodies. Its ability of bloodletting to do this is based on two intertwined concepts that are prevalent in the Maya belief system. Īt its core, sacrifice symbolized the renewal of divine energy and, in doing so, the continuation of life. The social structure was maintained by showing that rulers blood sacrifice to the gods showed the power they had. Various kinds of sacrifice were performed within a range of sociocultural contexts and in association with a variety of activities, from mundane everyday activities to those performed by the elites and ruling lineages with the aim of maintaining social structure. See also: Maya mythology and Maya religionĪmong all the Mesoamerican cultures, sacrifice, in whatever form, was a deeply symbolic and highly ritualized activity with strong religious and political significance. In front of her, her husband and the ruler of Yaxchilan, Shield Jaguar, is shown holding a torch. One of the best-known lintels from Mesoamerica, Yaxchilan Lintel 24 (right), shows Lady Xoc drawing a barbed rope through her tongue. The El Perú tomb of a female (called the "Queen's Tomb") contains among its many grave goods a ceremonial stingray spine associated with her genital region. While usually carried out by a ruling male, prominent females are also known to have performed the act. This was done so as to demonstrate the connection the person performing the auto-sacrifice had with the sacred sphere and, as such, a method used to maintain political power by legitimizing their prominent social, political, and/or ideological position. The rituals were enacted on the summits of pyramids or on elevated platforms that were usually associated with broad and open plazas or courtyards (where the masses could congregate and view the bloodletting). Ritualized bloodletting was typically performed by elites, settlement leaders, and religious figures (e.g., shamans) within contexts visible to the public. Lintel 24 at Yaxchilan, depicting Lady Xoc drawing a barbed rope through her tongue. For example, drawing blood from the genitals, especially the male sex organs, would be done with the intent of increasing or representing human fertility. The location of the bloodletting on the body often correlated with an intended result or a corresponding symbolic representation. Some of these jade artifacts have rather dull points but might have been used once the initial cut was made, or might purely be ritualistic objects not used in actual bloodletting. Jade or stone spines and teeth have been found in the archaeological record. Under some circumstances, a rope with attached thorns or obsidian flakes would be pulled through the tongue. Piercing was accomplished using obsidian prismatic blades, stingray spines, or shark's teeth. The act of burning the sacrificed blood symbolized the transferral of the offering to the gods via its transformation into the rising smoke. Mexico, probably Guerrero, Olmec Blood-letter Handle, 1000-600BCīloodletting was performed by piercing a soft body part, generally the tongue, and scattering the blood or collecting it on amate, which was subsequently burned.
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