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Find out moreDid they send post (mail)?? Asked by Fleetville Junior School. Chosen and answered by Our In-House Team
At its height Mexica (Aztec) society was highly organised, and required a swift and efficient system of communication between imperial centre (Tenochtitlan) and the outlying regions and tribute centres on which it depended. The Mexica were a warrior people, and their success in war rested largely on the huge support structure - from loadbearers carrying supplies to couriers (runners) taking vital messages of command and information as fast as possible to and from the heart of the empire.
News was generally sent by word of mouth, only on occasion ‘written’ using glyphs on blocks of wood or folded bark paper sheets. Messengers - paynani in Náhuatl - constituted a skilled and well-trained profession, often building up their fitness from a young age. A bit like London cab drivers, they knew the local highways and byways (there’s a special mention of ‘short cuts’ in the Florentine Codex!) like the backs of their hands. Many routes were peppered with staging posts - techialoyan - at regular (roughly 5-mile) intervals; these acted as store houses and bases from which a runner could be quickly despatched, covering the next section of the route at amazing speed as part of a relay of runners.
Dress codes were important among the Mexica/Aztecs, and messengers proved no exception: couriers actually ‘dressed the part’ according to the news they carried. If a messenger approached the emperor’s palace with untied, messy hair it was a sign that the Aztecs had suffered a military defeat, and no-one spoke to him. If he arrived with his hair neatly plaited, with coloured ribbon attached, and brandishing shield and club, it was a sure sign that he bore good news, and people would follow him to the palace to share in the excitement...
Picture sources:-
• Photo by Ian Mursell/Mexicolore
• Image from the Codex Mendoza (original in the Bodleian Library, Oxford) scanned from our copy of the 1938 James Cooper Clark facsimile edition, London
• Native runner illustration from www.paynani.com
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