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Are Toci and Tlazolteotl separate deities?

Are Toci and Tlazolteotl separate deities?

Aztec grandmother goddess Toci, Codex Ríos fol. 48v

ORIGINAL QUESTION received from - and thanks to - Rae: Why are Toci and Tlazolteotl identified so close to each other and why do they have so many overlapping aspects/myths, they seem to be separate deities? Or were they? The link between them is confusing. Also, could Toci or Tlazolteotl be considered as deities being able to cure ailments in general, even if it wouldn’t seem to fit in their specific domain? (Answered by Ian Mursell/Mexicolore)

Both of these Mexica goddesses are invocations of the supreme female creator goddess Tonacacíhuatl (partner of Tonacatecuhtli); in that sense they share common status at the top of the Aztec pantheon, and both are directly associated with birth, with the steam bath and with the ‘Sweeping’ festival Ochpaniztli. However, Toci has a wider brief than Tlazolteotl. Toci means ‘Our Grandmother’ in Nahuatl: whereas Tlazolteotl is a goddess of procreation - and by extension of adultery, sexual excess and confession - Toci is not only patroness of maternity in its broadest, most ancient and fundamental sense, but also of medicine, of fortune-telling, magic and sorcery. She was invoked by anyone and everyone in Aztec society when suffering from an illness of any kind.
Both can be called Mother of the four great Mexica creator gods.

Picture sources:-
• Main: image scanned from Enciclopedia gráfica del México antiguo: Los dioses supremos by Salvador Mateos Higuera (Mexico, 1992), based on an image in the Codex Ríos/Vaticanus A
• Second image from the Codex Magliabechiano scanned from our own copy of the ADEVA facsimile edition, Graz, Austria, 1970.

Comments (1)

R

Rae

9th Jan 2024

Thank you so much for the reply! Although, now it’s a bit more confusing: Tlazolteotl was created as a result of a flint to which Tonacacihuatl gave birth to, and Toci is a result of a sacrifice of a Culhua princess. How are they both parts of Omecihuatl, which evidence seems to suggest that? They also seemed to have a distinct worship and roles, but I feel like if they would be a part of the same thing, they would be less distinct? For now, a lack of distinction between them seem to be historical confusions. But if they are indeed one, does Tlazolteotl-Toci aspect make sense, when they both unite their functions? Were they worshipped like that? That would mean they are not separate at all, maybe much like with Teteo Innan. Or are they rather separate incarnations of the same power, so they are separated and distinct but united and very connected? Honestly, I feel like the more I learn about Aztec mythology the less I actually know something

M

Mexicolore

It is confusing! Our take on this is that the two goddesses are related and have some common associations, but are definitely distinct from each other. Tlazolteotl had several festive days dedicated to her, Toci mainly the ‘veintena’ (‘month’) of Ochpaniztli. Tlazolteotl was worshipped mainly by penitent individuals who had to undertake bloodletting, fasts and punishments, Toci by ‘the people in general’ (Mateos Higuera), at least when feeling unwell in any way. Whereas both carry spindles in their headdresses, Toci always carries a broom in one hand (and her devotees simulated sweeping and cleaning in honour of her).
The two were part of a complex of mother deities which included Teteo Innan and Coatlicue. Each had distinctive features...

Are Toci and Tlazolteotl separate deities?

Aztec grandmother goddess Toci, Codex Ríos fol. 48v

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