Polychromed ceramic vessel from the Great Temple of Tenochtitlan depicting Tlaloc, the rain god. Museo del Templo Mayor, Mexico.
Click on image for full size
Image courtesy of the Museo del Templo Mayor, Mexico.
Tlaloc
Tlaloc was an important deity of rain and fertility in the Aztec mythology. Aztec people were living in Mexico during the fifteenth and sixteenth century. Tlaloc was depicted as a man wearing a net of
clouds, a crown of heron feathers, foam sandals and
carrying rattles to make thunder. He ruled a paradise, called Tlalocan, intended for those who have drowned.
Children with special day names were sacrificed to the rain god Tlaloc in the first month of the Aztec year that corresponds to the period between February 12 to March 4. The children were led by the priests to the top of certain mountains that circle the valley of Mexico City and there sacrificed to Tlaloc. The tears of the mothers were said to be a prediction of the coming rain.
Tlaloc brought on great wrath upon the Aztec people. He often used his lightning bolts to make the people sick. It is said that he had four different jugs of water in his possession. When he emptied the first one, it brought life to plants. The second would cause blight, the third brought on frost, and the fourth would bring total destruction.
You might also be interested in:
Rain is precipitation that falls to the Earth in drops of 5mm or greater in diameter according to the US National Weather Service. Virga is rain that evaporates before reaching the ground. Raindrops form
...moreThough not the largest kingdom, with a mere 300,000 species catalogued, many might argue that the Kingdom Plantae just may be the most important group of living organisms. In the process known as "photosynthesis",
...moreAhsonnutli was the sky father and chief deity of the Navajo Indians. He created heaven, Earth, and the sky. Each of the four cardinal directions was supported by a giant. Each direction was also associated
...moreAmphitrite was one of the fifty Nereids, the attendants of the sea-god Poseidon. Poseidon (Neptune) had fallen in love with Amphitrite after seeing her dancing on the island of Naxos. Amphitrite rejected
...moreAphrodite was the Greek goddess of love and beauty. She was known to the Romans as Venus. There were actually two different Aphrodites, one was the daughter of Uranus, the other the daughter of Zeus and
...more In Greek mythology, Apollo was the son of Jupiter(in Greek Zeus) and Leto (Letona). He was the god of the Sun, logic, and reason, and was also a fine musician and healer. Leto travelled all over Greece
...moreAccording to an ancient Greek legend, the figure of a gigantic crab was placed in the nighttime sky by the goddess Hera to form the constellation Cancer. Hera was the jealous wife of the sky god, Zeus.
...more