Summary Of Nahua Myth Of The Suns

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Nahua Myth of the Suns

Julie Black stated, “in the mythology of ancient Mexico the world began not with a Genesis overseen by one almighty god, but with a creation resulting from a group effort of many gods and the courageous efforts of two in particular. One of these deities, a deformed god with a humble spirit, became the sun, and the other, the moon” (page 1). There were five different suns, each of them was significant in there own way and how the Aztec believed in them. When I went on Google images about The Sun Gods I saw a picture that caught my attention and it was an image of a group of men holding a man down and ripped his heart out. Also in some cultures, the sun was a vicious god that needed human hearts to shine and they were …show more content…

The general aspect of which presented similarities to the systems of Greece and Egypt. Original influences, however, were strong, and they are especially discernible in the institutions of ritualistic cannibalism and human sacrifice,” stated Lewis Spence in chapter 2. They all looked up to one god. Just like Christians we look up to one god and we do all that we can to be accepted by god. To me it seems like they are very religious and do a lot of rituals. The Aztec calendar has images of the different Sun Gods. Also what I was reading was interesting because it talked about the strong wisdom of the Nahua race, it shows what they truly represent. Which was closely referred by it on every occasion civil or religious. The Aztec Creation myth is explained through the way the world was created and the Aztec culture believed in the myth as the legend of the Fifth Sun. The myth was told in many different forms due to the fact that is was told and passed down to generations by oral tradition which changed the way the Gods were represented depending on which tribe your family was from. Everyone knows that the same story wont be the same story every time that somebody always changes it up. Niocletta Masetri reveals in her article, “According to Aztec mythology, their world was the fifth era of a cycle of creation and destruction, during which different gods first governed the earth through a dominant element, and then destroyed it” (Page

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