Archaeologists discover Aztec ball court
in heart of Mexico City
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[June 09, 2017]
By David Alire Garcia
MEXICO CITY (Reuters) - The remains of a
major Aztec temple and a ceremonial ball court have been discovered in
downtown Mexico City, shedding new light on the sacred spaces of the
metropolis that Spanish conquerors overran five centuries ago,
archaeologists said on Wednesday.
The discoveries were made on a nondescript side street just behind the
city's colonial-era Roman Catholic cathedral off the main Zocalo plaza
on the grounds of a 1950s-era hotel.
The underground excavations reveal a section of what was the foundation
of a massive, circular-shaped temple dedicated to the Aztec wind god
Ehecatl and a smaller part of a ritual ball court, confirming accounts
of the first Spanish chroniclers to visit the Aztec imperial capital,
Tenochtitlan.
"Due to finds like these, we can show actual locations, the positioning
and dimensions of each one of the structures first described in the
chronicles," said Diego Prieto, head of Mexico's main anthropology and
history institute.
Archaeologists also detailed a grisly offering of 32 severed male neck
vertebrae discovered in a pile just off the court.
"It was an offering associated with the ball game, just off the
stairway," said archaeologist Raul Barrera. "The vertebrae, or necks,
surely came from victims who were sacrificed or decapitated."
Some of the original white stucco remains visible on parts of the
temple, built during the 1486-1502 reign of Aztec Emperor Ahuizotl,
predecessor of Moctezuma, who conquistador Hernan Cortes toppled during
the Spanish conquest of Mexico.
Early Spanish accounts relate how a young Moctezuma played against an
elderly allied king on the court and lost, which was taken as sign that
the Aztec Empire's days were numbered.
The building would have stood out because of its round shape among the
several dozen other square temples that dominated the Aztecs' most
sacred ceremonial space before the 1521 conquest.
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Raul Barrera, an archaeologist from the National Institute of
Anthropology and History (INAH) shows to the media a new Aztec
discovery a ritual ball court, during a tour of the area, located
just off the Zocalo plaza in the heart of downtown Mexico City,
Mexico June 7, 2017. REUTERS/Henry Romero
Aztec archaeologist Eduardo Matos said the top of the temple was
likely built to resemble a coiled snake, with priests entering
though a doorway made to look like a serpent's nose.
Once excavations finish, a museum will be built on the site, rubbing
shoulders with modern buildings in the capital.
Mexico City, including its many colonial-era structures with their
own protections, was built above the razed ruins of the Aztec
capital, and more discoveries are likely, Matos said.
"We've been working this area for nearly 40 years, and there's
always construction of some kind ... and so we take advantage of
that and get involved," he said.
(Editing by Dave Graham and Leslie Adler)
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