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Eight Deer Jaguar Claw

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mixtec conqueror
Lord Eight Deer Jaguar Claw
Iya (lord, king)
Lord Eight Deer Jaguar Claw (right) meeting withToltec ruler Lord Four Jaguar, in a depiction from theCodex Zouche-Nuttall. His name glyph, a deer head and eight dots, is above his head.
King of Tututepec
(Yucu Dzaa)[1]
Reign1084–1115
SuccessorLord Four Wind Fire Serpent
King of Tilantongo
(Nuu Tnoo)[2]
Reign1097–1115
SuccessorLord Six House Jaguar that Came from the Sky(atTilantongo)
Lord Four Dog Coyote Hunter(atTeozacoalco)
Born5 October 1063
Tilantongo
Died1115
Tilantongo
Spouse
See list
Issue
See list
    • Lord Six House Jaguar that Came from the Sky, King ofTilantongo
    • Lord Four Dog Coyote Hunter, King ofTeozacoalco
    • Lady Ten Flower Rain Spiderweb, Queen ofNuu Yuchi
    • Lady Six Wind Quetzal Feather of Royal Blood, Queen ofJaltepec
    • Lady Six Flint Precious Fire Serpent, Queen ofJaltepec
    • Lord Four Alligator Sacred Serpent
    • Lord Twelve Dog Knife
    • Lady Five Wind Fur and Jade Ornament, Queen ofNuu Yuchi
    • Lady Two Grass Sacred Jade
    • Lord Eight Movement Quetzal Owl
Names
Nacuaa 'Teyusi Ñaña'
FatherLord Five Alligator Sun Rain, High Priest ofTilantongo
MotherLady Eleven Water Bird Jewel
ReligionMixtec religion

Eight Deer Jaguar Claw (Mixtec:Iya Nacuaa Teyusi Ñaña[3]), orEight Deer for brevity,[4] was a powerfulMixtec ruler in 11th-centuryOaxaca referred to in the 15th-century deerskinmanuscriptCodex Zouche-Nuttall, and otherMixtec manuscripts. His surname is alternatively translatedTiger-Claw andOcelot-Claw. John Pohl has dated his life spanning from 1063 until his assassination in 1115.[5]

Biography

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Born on the Mixtec Calendar date from which he got his name, Eight Deer was the son of the high priest ofTilantongoLord Five Alligator Sun Rain. His mother wasLady Eleven Water Bird Jewel. Two of his brothers, Twelve Earthquake Bloody Jaguar and Nine Flower Copal Ball with Arrow, were his faithful war companions.

He also had a half-sister, Six Lizard Jade Fan. First the fiancée and lover of Eight Deer himself, she was ultimately married to Eight Deer's archenemy Eleven Wind Bloody Jaguar, the king of the cityXipe's Bundle, also known asRed and White Bundle. The lords of Xipe's Bundle had rights to the throne of Tilantongo and were therefore the most important rivals to Eight Deer's power.

Codex Zouche-Nuttall, Mixtec pictorial codex, which is the main source of knowledge about Eight Deer Jaguar Claw

Lord Eight Deer is remembered for his military expansion. The Codex Zouche-Nuttall counts 94 cities conquered during his reign. Almost always pictured wearing ajaguar helmet, he supported the powerfulToltec ruler ofCholula, Lord Four Jaguar Face of the Night, in his attempts at expansionism, and was thus awarded aturquoise nose ornament, a symbol of Toltec royal authority.[6]

The codices also tell of his several marriages which seem to have been part of a political strategy to achieve dominance by marrying into different Mixtec royal lineages. He married Thirteen Serpent, daughter of his own stepsister and former fiancée Six Lizard.

In 1101 Eight Deer conquered Xipe's Bundle and killed his wife's father and his stepsister's husband Eleven Wind. He also tortured and killed his brothers-in-law, sparing only the youngest, Four Wind. Eight Deer's own death is described differently by modern authors. Charles C. Mann's book1491 states that when Eight Deer was 55 years of age, Four Wind led an alliance between different Toltec and Zapotec kingdoms against Eight Deer, who was taken prisoner and sacrificed by Four Wind, his own nephew and brother-in-law. Pohl instead states that Four Wind was trusted by Eight Deer and raised as his own child, until at the age of 23 he had Eight Deer assassinated during a hunting trip.[5]

Legacy

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Eight Deer was the only Mixtec king to unite kingdoms of the three Mixtec areas:Tilantongo in theMixteca Alta area,Teozacualco of theMixteca Baja area, andTututepec of thecoastal Mixteca area.

His reputation as a great ruler has given him a legendary status among the Mixtecs; some aspects of his life story as told in the pictographic codices seem to merge with myth. Furthermore, actual knowledge of his life is hindered by the lack of complete understanding of the Mixtec codices, and although the study of the codices has advanced much over the past 20 years, it is still difficult to achieve a definitive interpretation of their narrative. The narrative, as it is currently understood, is a tragic story of a man who achieves greatness but falls victim to his own hunger for power. The above biography of Eight Deer is based on the codex's interpretation by Mixtec specialist John Pohl.[7]

Notes

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  1. ^Jansen & Jiménez (2011)
  2. ^Jansen & Jiménez (2011)
  3. ^Jansen and Pérez Jiménez (2004)
  4. ^Consonant with standard Mesoamerican practice, the "Eight Deer" component of his name refers to his day of birth within the 260-day Mesoamerican cycle, which cycles through 13 numbers and 20 various signs (e.g., animals, plants, natural phenomena).
  5. ^abPohl (2002), pp. 54–55.
  6. ^Pohl (2002), pp. 32–33.
  7. ^See Pohl (2002); Byland and Pohl (1994)

References

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