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Find out more29th Sep 2017
Aztec new-born babe in arms
We’ve taken this information from the excellent book Everyday Life of the Aztecs by Warwick Bray, who’s on our Panel of Experts. (Compiled by Ian Mursell/Mexicolore)
‘Each child had a calendar name taken from the date of his/her birth and also a personal name, which belonged to him/her alone. The famous ruler of Texcoco, for instance, was usually called Nezahualcoyotl (‘Hungry Coyote’), but he occasionally appears under the calendar name Ce-Mazatl (One-Deer).
‘Animals appear often in Mexican names, and the chronicles are filled with the deeds of such leaders as Angry Turkey, Bee in the Reeds, Speaking Eagle, or Fire Coyote.
Other men took their names from pieces of clothing (Tiger Lip Plug), or from personal qualities like the unfortunately named Moquihuix (Drunkard). Some names, such as Black Hill, are based on features of the landscape.
‘Girls were given more feminine names like Jade Doll, or Precious Broken Plume of the Quetzal Bird, which in its original Aztec language form (Tziquetzalpoztectzin) is almost as long a mouthful as in English!
‘Flower names for girls were especially popular - for example, Azcalxochitzin (Ant Flower), Miahuaxiuitl (Turquoise Maize-Flower), or Quiauhxochitl (Rain Flower). All these personal names, like those of towns and cities, can be written in the form of pictograms.’
...what are the most common Aztec names still used in Mexico today?
Find outQ. What did Hungry Coyote’s wife reply when someone asked her how many husbands she had?
A. ‘Just one-deer’...
Kat
10th May 2018
i was born on the 7th day of the 9th month, what would my name be?
Mexicolore
Go straight to www.azteccalendar.com and enter your birth details...
Aztec new-born babe in arms
...what are the most common Aztec names still used in Mexico today?
Find out