The Aztec tower of tens of thousands of skulls first described by the Spanish has been nothing more than a legend, until now.
More than 650 skulls have been uncovered beneath a newly-excavated Aztec temple in the heart of Mexico City.
The tower of human heads is thought to have been part of the Huey
Tzompantli, a massive structure of skulls that supposedly terrified
Spanish soldiers when they followed Hernan Cortes to conquer the region
in the early 16th century.Until now, the tower was nothing more than a myth.
But as archaeologists keep digging, researchers have confirmed that
the tower — first described in the written accounts of Andres de Tapia, a
Spanish soldier, in 1521 — existed.
And though that in itself is intriguing enough, the discovery has
also debunked some myths about the historical tale — namely that the
tower was created using the severed heads of enemy warriors.In fact, researchers found that many of the skulls — which were
covered in lime and arranged in a rings, rising like the steps of an
amphitheater — were actually those of women and children.
“We were expecting just men, obviously young men, as warriors would
be, and the thing about the women and children is that you’d think they
wouldn’t be going to war,” Rodrigo Bolanos, a biological anthropologist,
told Reuters. “Something is happening that we have no record of, and this is really new, a first in the Huey Tzompantli.”
Just a few weeks ago, researchers found the severed necks of 32 children in the same area.They’ve also uncovered a nearby wooden rectangular platform that is
thought to have been the foundation for a sort of a palisade, which they
suspect extended 110 feet.
They have no doubt that these disturbing discoveries (the skull tower
along with the long wall) are what remains of the structure de Tapia
was referring too.
And if that’s the case, they’ll probably be digging up skulls for a
long time to come — Since de Tapia said there were more than 10,000. Luckily for the diggers, some think he was probably exaggerating.
“Odd thing about archeology,” Facebook commenter John Matel wrote
about the discovery. “After a couple centuries even the most dreadful
crimes are just artifacts.”
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