词条 | Tlaximaltepoztli | |||||||||||||||
释义 |
|name= Tepoztli | image= Tepoztli Codex Laud p. 43.png | image_size = 150 |caption= Bronze axe from Mexica culture in the Codex Laud |origin= Mexico |type= Axe |is_bladed= yes |service= Pre-classic to Post-Classic period (900–1570) |used_by= Aztecs, Mayans, Purépecha, Mixtecs |wars=Spanish conquest of the Aztec Empire, Aztec expansionism, Mesoamerican Wars |weight= 1.5–3.0 kg |length= 30-45 cm |blade_type= Curved, thick, single-edged, tapered |hilt_type= Single-handed swept |sheath_type= unknown |head_type= Trapezoidal |haft_type= Straight or Curved, of a single metallic piece or wooden }} The tlaximaltepoztli (tlāximaltepōztli; in Nahuatl, tlaximal=carpentry and tepoztli=metal axe) or simply tepoztli was a common weapon used by civilizations from Mesoamerica which was formed by a wooden haft in which the poll of the bronze head was inlaid in a hole in the haft. It was used for war or as a tool. Its use is documented by the Codex Mendoza and the Codex Fejérváry-Mayer. Tax collectors from the Aztec Empire demanded this kind of axe as tribute from the subjugated kingdoms. In Aztec mythology, the tepoztli was used by the god Tepoztécatl, god of fermentation and fertility.[1] In Codex Borgia he is represented with a bronze axe. DescriptionThe tepoztli, was a weapon used by some kingdoms in Mesoamerica, this weapon was used during the Spanish conquest of the Aztec Empire in the XVI. It was famously used by the Purépecha Empire from which many original pieces have been discovered. According to the size of the bronze axe heads exhibited by the National Anthropology Museum and also to the images of the Codex Fejérváry-Mayer, the tepoztli was estimated to be 1 foot 3 inches to 3 foot long, and 1 inch and a half wide, it had a hole in the shaft where the head of the axe head was inserted and strongly attached with a natural adhesive based in pine tree sap and coal. A decorative version of the tepoztli were the axe-monies which were highly prized in the late post-classic. However these objects were not war effective due to their small thickness and also because of their brittle or soft mechanical properties.[2] This weapon was also used as a tool for the manufacture of wooden objects and it was a regular house hold in the Aztec homes. The axe was part of the marriage dowry between commoners in Tenochtitlan, where it was presented to the wife along with other house hold items MetallurgicsMesoamerican axes were mostly made of bronze in the Post-classic period,with high Vickers Hardness values (VHN) ranging from 130 to 297 VHN in the bronze alloys. Only the old and more primitive Pre-classic copper axes the VHN value ranged from 80-135[3] Metallurgics introduced in West Mexico via maritime trade during the Classic period, since most found objects are near the coast during this period.[4] This technology seems to have been imported due to the League of Merchants that traded articles as south as Ecuador to the coast of Culiacán, Mexico.[5] Ecuador and west Mexico objects shows that the artifacts were found in analogous archeological context, share identical chemical composition and manufacturing techniques and design are very similar.[6] The grain size of the metallic alloy is variable along the body, showing intensive cold work by hammering in the edges.[7] This cold work treatment increased the hardness of the axe in this important area, while leaving the rest of the structure more soft so it could resist the impacts of daily use.
Historical ReferencesDuring the invasion of West Mexico, it was reported that locals built boats for Hernan Cortez with the help of axes.[9] Also in the Lienzo de Jucutacato it is represented the migration of a metallurgical guild from the Golf coast to Uruapan.[10] {{Quote|text="Tenían cierto azófar blanco con alguna mezcla de oro de que hacían hachuelas de fundición y unos cascavelazos con que bailaban. Este azófar y otras planchas o láminas más duras las traían a rescatar los de Tabasco por las cosas (de Yucatán que eran)". They had certain white brass with some mixture of gold which they made cast hatchets and big rattles which they used to dance. This brass and other plates or more strong metal sheets were recovered from Tabasco (they came from Yucatán)|sign=Diego de Landa|source=Relación de las cosas de Yucatán[11]}}Origin and distributionThe tlaximaltepoztli was widely used in many regions of Mesoamerica since many different cultures were very specialized in metallurgics,[12][13] they also used bronze for making tools in order to create stone sculptures and gravestones. Several copper alloys ore mines were to be found around the Purépecha state in what is now the Mexican state of Michoacan, such mines were also used by the Spanish during the New Spain rule. Bronze axes were also weapons of the Inca empire and other civilizations of South America that were also used as weapons to dominate local kingdoms or to defend from foreign invasions. Popular cultureThe bronze axe is mentioned in the Relación de Michoacán, in the story of the Purepecha's Princess Erendira, who resisted the Spanish invasion. In one part of the story, it is described how the local women started to dress the princess and gave her axes to cut firewood, in preparation for her wedding. Also from the Relación de Michoacán, it is stated that a man who remarried was required to spend four days gathering wood beforehand as a kind of penance. See also
References1. ^{{cite book|title=Dictionary of Gods and Goddesses|editor=Library of Congress|author=Michael Jordan|year=2004|location=EE.UU|page=309|isbn=0-8160-5923-3}} 2. ^Hosler, D. (1988). "Ancient West Mexican Metallurgy: South and Central American Origins and West Mexican Transformations". American Anthropologist, New Series, 90(4), p. 832-855 3. ^1 {{cite book|last1=Hosler|first1=Dorothy|title=The sounds and colors of Power: The sacred metallurgica technology of ancient West Mexico|date=1994|publisher=MIT Press|location=London|isbn=0-262-08230-6|page=160}} 4. ^{{cite book|last1=Hosler|first1=Dorothy|title=The sounds and colors of Power: The sacred metallurgica technology of ancient West Mexico|date=1994|publisher=MIT Press|location=London|isbn=0-262-08230-6|page=46}} 5. ^{{cite book|last1=Norton|first1=Presley|title=El señorío de Salangone y la liga de mercaderes. Miscelánia Antropológica Ecuatoriana 6|date=1986|location=Ecuador|pages=131–143}} 6. ^{{cite book|last1=Mountjoy|first1=Joseph|title=On the Origin of West Mexican Metallurgy: Mesoamerican Studies 4|date=1969|pages=26–42}} 7. ^{{cite book|last1=Hosler|first1=Dorothy|title=The sounds and colors of Power: The sacred metallurgica technology of ancient West Mexico|date=1994|publisher=MIT Press|location=London|isbn=0-262-08230-6|page=76}} 8. ^Smithells Metals Reference Book, 8th Edition, ch. 22 9. ^{{cite book|last1=Durán|first1=Fray Diego|title=Historia de las indias de Nueva España e islas de la tierra firme. Vol.2|date=1588|publisher=Editorial Porrúa|location=Mexico|edition=1967}} 10. ^{{cite book|last1=Jiménez|first1=Wigberto|title=Historia antigua de la zona tarasca|date=1948|publisher=Sociedad Mexicana de Antropología|location=Mexico}} 11. ^{{cite book|last1=Landa|first1=Fray Diego|title=Relación de las cosas de Yucatán|date=1566|publisher=Editorial Porrúa|location=Mexico|edition=11th Edition. 1978}} 12. ^{{cite book |title= Art popular mexicano al estilo FONART/FONART’s style in Mexican popular art |year=1992 |publisher= Fondo Nacional para el Fomento de las Artesanías |location=Mexico City |isbn=968 29 4019 2|pages= V1–V17 }} 13. ^Aprahamian, p 58 2 : Axes|Aztec warfare |
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