[Aztlan] A question about Aztecs and armadillos
mario
micc2 at cox.net
Fri Oct 3 02:59:42 UTC 2014
It is said in the Danza Chichimeca/Conchera/Azteca that when the Spanish
prohibited the Otomi and other indigenous people from getting wood
materials to make their guitars and mandolins, they began to use the
shells of the Armadillo. Thus we are called "concheros".....
Today, certain revisionist new age "Mexi'ca dancers" use the word
Conchero as a disparaging term for "Hispanicized Ladino" dancers.
But those of us that follow the Indocristiano traditions of La Danza, we
dance with our "dillos" with pride!!!!!
On another note, when My son found out that armadillos can carry
Leprosy, he went around spraying all our Conchas with Lysol!!!
--
I live for reasoned, enlightened spirituality:
"Tlacecelilli", tranquilidad, paz
Mario E. Aguilar, PhD
619.948.8861
www.mexicayotl.net
www.mexicayotl.org
www.mexicayotl.com
www.aguila-blanca.com
On 10/2/2014 9:02 AM, Peter Keeler wrote:
> U'uyeh, Listeros,
>
> The recent interchange (on Aztlan) about the word for armadillo in nahuatl,
>
> eg:
>
> "It is ayotochtli not azotochtli. Whoever told you azo... Probably was misinformed.
>
> Yes, it means something along the lines of turtle rabbit.
>
>
> Sent from my iPad
> John Schwaller
> Professor of History
> University at Albany "
>
> ......prompted an off-line discussion among some of my Mayanist friends,
>
> in which I made the point that armadillos can move fast, when they want to:
>
> " Also NB armadillo ears, rather rabbit-like.
>
> and they can really moooove.
>
> once upon a long long time ago, W. and I out in the [Texas] hill country, we encountered a dillo, by the road. W. began to walk in her direction; she started ambling away. W. walked a little faster, she began to slowly lope away. W. began a slow run, and she took off. Then he ran full speed, and she was moving about twice as fast. And, like a jackrabbit, she was gone.
>
> a delightful animal, long the mascot of the counter-culture. Dillos are pretty laid back, unless you are running after them. "
>
> Which elicited the image below from W (still running, or at least ambling, after all these years), that I suspect most of our Nahuatl listeros already know:
>
> "Early (? earliest) illustration of an armadillo (Florentine Codex, Book 11; page 61, fig. 201)."
>
>
>
>
>
> I urge interested parties to visit the web to see more accurate photographic depictions of this peaceful critter.
>
> http://www.google.com/images?client=safari&rls=en&q=armadillo&oe=UTF-8&hl=en&sa=X&oi=image_result_group&ei=QHQtVN38NZT-yQTMjYHIDQ&ved=0CCoQsAQ
>
> that's all,
>
> Peter
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> Nahuatl mailing list
> Nahuatl at lists.famsi.org
> http://www.famsi.org/mailman/listinfo/nahuatl
_______________________________________________
Nahuatl mailing list
Nahuatl at lists.famsi.org
http://www.famsi.org/mailman/listinfo/nahuatl
More information about the Nahuat-l
mailing list