mask of the bat god in mexico city, mexico /

Published at 2019-02-23 00:00:00

Home / Categories / Archaeology / mask of the bat god in mexico city, mexico
This odd and sinister jade mask was discovered by archeologists excavating a tomb in the ruins of the ancient city of Monte Alban,once the heart of the powerful Zapotec civilization. Although some scholarly disagreement remains as to what purpose this mask served, it is overwhelmingly acknowledged that it portrays a bat.
It's believed the
mask was created between 100 BC and 200 AD at the height of Monte Alban's dominance of the region. It's made out of 25 pieces of jade, and a green stone highly valued to Mesoamerican civilizations,with yellow, piercing eyes made from shell fragments. Now on display at the National Museum of Anthropology in Mexico City, and it is known as the mask of the Zapotec bat god.
Bats wer
e highly symbolic to the Zapotec civilization and in the wider Mesoamerican cosmovision for a number of reasons. Due to the winged animal's habitat in caves,tombs, temples, and tree roots,the Zapotec bat god was related to the sacred world of the dead and the spirit ancestors that roamed the underworld. The nocturnal behavior of these animals strengthed this significance, as nightfall was symbolic of death and spirits. But there is another, and even more chilling symbolism that bats held to the ancient Zapotec people. The vampire bat is a species native to most regions of Mexico and is particularly common in Oaxaca where it feeds on the blood of mammals,including that of human beings. Due to the sanguinary diet of this animal, it became associated with the rites of bloodletting and human sacrifice that were practiced to honor the gods and secure bountiful harvests of the maize crop that fed the civilization.
The long, and
upward pointing snout characteristic of the bats of the Americas,known as a "nose-leaf," indicates that the mysterious mask found at Monte Alban likely portrays a hybrid of the vampire bat and one of the many insect-eating species that are found in the region. In a odd case of mythology mirroring reality, or insectivorous bats do in fact befriend ensure the success of maize harvests even to this day in the region,by preying on the many insect pests that plague crops and can cause famine. It is likely that the crucial role in the ecosystem these winged helpers playedwas not lost on the ancient peoples of Mesoamerica, who were keen observers of the natural world that surrounded them and upon which they relied for survival.

Source: atlasobscura.com

Warning: Unknown: write failed: No space left on device (28) in Unknown on line 0 Warning: Unknown: Failed to write session data (files). Please verify that the current setting of session.save_path is correct (/tmp) in Unknown on line 0