Aztec calendar
The Aztec calendar was the calendar of the Aztec people of Pre-Columbian Mexico. It is one of the Mesoamerican calendars, sharing the basic structure of calendars from throughout ancient Mesoamerica.
The calendar consisted of a 365 day calendar cycle and a 260 day ritual cycle. These two cycles together formed a 52 year "century", sometimes called the "Calendar Round".
365 day calendar
The solar calendar of 365 days, called the Vague Year (or Civil Year), was composed of 18 months of 20 days each, with a period of 5 or 6 days added at the end. The 360-day period was called "xÃÂhuitl" by Aztecs, . The final unlucky days were called "Nemontemi" in Nahuatl.
Each month had its own special name, and the days were numbered from zero to nineteen. The days of the last month, Nemontemi, were numbered from zero to four.
260 day cycle
This solar calendar was inseparable from the Sacred Round, or Sacred Almanac. The priests used this ritual calendar of 260 days called Tonalpohualli primarily for divinatory purposes.The method of naming the individual days consisted in the combination of twenty pictorial signs with the numbers one to thirteen.
Each of the day signs also association with one of the four cardinal directions.
The 20 day signs are:
- Cipactli (alligator, aquatic monster) (East)
- ÃÂhecatl (wind, wind god) (North)
- Calli (house) (West}
- Cuetzpalin (lizard){South}
- Cóatl (serpent, snake)(E)
- Miquiztli (death)(N)
- Mázatl (deer)(W)
- Tochtli (rabbit) (S)
- Atl (water)(E)
- Itzcuintli (dog)(N)
- Ozomatli (monkey)(W)
- Malinalli (dead grass) (S)
- ÃÂcatl (reed)(E)
- Océlotl (ocelot, jaguar)(N)
- Quauhtli ([eagle]])(W)
- Cozcaquauhtli (king buzzard, vulture) (South)
- Ollin (motion, earthquake)(East)
- Técpatl (flint, flint knife)(North)
- Quiáhuitl (rain)(West)
- Xóchitl (flower)(South)
See also: Maya calendar