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Know_files/FINGERPRINTS OF THE GODS.pdf - D Ank Unlimited

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Graham Hancock – <strong>FINGERPRINTS</strong> <strong>OF</strong> <strong>THE</strong> <strong>GODS</strong><br />

Olmecs, the so-called ‘mother-culture’ of Central America, and it was<br />

more than 3000 years old. A block of solid granite about four feet thick,<br />

its sides bore reliefs of four men wearing curious head-dresses. Each man<br />

carried a healthy, chubby, struggling infant, whose desperate fear was<br />

clearly visible. The back of the altar was undecorated; at the front another<br />

figure was portrayed, holding in his arms, as though it were an offering,<br />

the slumped body of a dead child.<br />

The Olmecs are the earliest recognized high civilization of Ancient<br />

Mexico, and human sacrifice was well established with them. Two and a<br />

half thousand years later, at the time of the Spanish conquest, the Aztecs<br />

were the last (but by no means the least) of the peoples of this region to<br />

continue an extremely old and deeply ingrained tradition.<br />

They did so with fanatical zeal.<br />

It is recorded, for example, that Ahuitzotl, the eighth and most<br />

powerful emperor of the Aztec royal dynasty, ‘celebrated the dedication<br />

of the temple of Huitzilopochtli in Tenochitlan by marshalling four lines<br />

of prisoners past teams of priests who worked four days to dispatch<br />

them. On this occasion as many as 80,000 were slain during a single<br />

ceremonial rite.’ 4<br />

The Aztecs liked to dress up in the flayed skins of sacrificial victims.<br />

Bernardino de Sahagun, a Spanish missionary, attended one such<br />

ceremony soon after the conquest:<br />

The celebrants flayed and dismembered the captives; they then lubricated their<br />

own naked bodies with grease and slipped into the skin ... Trailing blood and<br />

grease, the gruesomely clad men ran through the city, thus terrifying those they<br />

followed ... The second-day’s rite also included a cannibal feast for each warrior’s<br />

family. 5<br />

Another mass sacrifice was witnessed by the Spanish chronicler Diego de<br />

Duran. In this instance the victims were so numerous that when the<br />

streams of blood running down the temple steps ‘reached bottom and<br />

cooled they formed fat clots, enough to terrify anyone’. 6 All in all, it has<br />

been estimated that the number of sacrificial victims in the Aztec empire<br />

as a whole had risen to around 250,000 a year by the beginning of the<br />

sixteenth century. 7<br />

What was this manic destruction of human life for? According to the<br />

Aztecs themselves, it was done to delay the coming of the end of the<br />

world. 8<br />

4<br />

Joyce Milton, Robert A. Orsi and Norman Harrison, The Feathered Serpent and the<br />

Cross: The Pre-Colombian God-Kings and the Papal States, Cassell, London, 1980, p. 64.<br />

5<br />

Reported in Aztecs: Reign of Blood and Splendour, Time-Life Books, Alexandria,<br />

Virginia, 1992, p. 105.<br />

6<br />

Ibid., p. 103.<br />

7<br />

The Feathered Serpent and the Cross, p. 55.<br />

8<br />

Mary Miller and Karl Taube, The Gods and Symbols of Ancient Mexico and the Maya,<br />

Thames & Hudson, London, 1993, pp. 96.<br />

102

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