Loading...
Loading stories...
tragedy
By Elizabeth Stein for Mythos Atlas. About the author. Editorial notes are grounded in the site's cited sources and can be challenged through the contact page.
In the legendary city of Tollan, there ruled a priest-king named Ce Acatl Topiltzin Quetzalcoatl. He was the earthly embodiment of the Feathered Serpent, and under his rule Tollan became a paradise. The maize grew so large that men could barely carry a single ear. Cotton grew in every color. The Toltecs wanted for nothing.
Quetzalcoatl practiced strict penance and celibacy. He opposed human sacrifice, offering only jade, butterflies, and snakes to the gods. He was beloved by his people and despised by his rival Tezcatlipoca, the Smoking Mirror, who ruled through blood and chaos.
Tezcatlipoca descended to Tollan in disguise, determined to destroy Quetzalcoatl. First, he appeared before the priest-king with a mirror wrapped in cloth. "My lord, I have come to show you your body," he said.
When Quetzalcoatl looked into the obsidian mirror, he saw himself as old and decrepit, his face covered with wrinkles and sores. He had never seen his own reflection before. He was horrified and hid himself away, believing he could no longer appear before his people.
Tezcatlipoca then sent sorcerers with octli, the fermented drink of the maguey plant. They convinced the distraught Quetzalcoatl to drink, claiming it would cure his distress. One cup led to another. Drunk for the first time in his life, the righteous king called for his sister Quetzalpetlatl and lay with her, breaking his sacred vows of celibacy.
When Quetzalcoatl awoke, he understood what he had done. His penance had been broken. His celibacy destroyed. The sorcerer Tezcatlipoca had defeated him without lifting a weapon. The priest-king wept and ordered his servants to prepare a stone casket.
He lay in the casket for four days as a symbolic death. Then he rose and traveled east toward the sea, accompanied by his followers. Along the way, he established rituals and named places. Everything he touched was marked by his passage.
When Quetzalcoatl reached the shore of the divine sea, he dressed himself in his finest regalia: the feathered headdress, the turquoise mask, the jade ornaments. He set himself ablaze on a great pyre. His ashes rose into the sky, and his heart ascended to become the morning star, Tlahuizcalpantecuhtli.
Before his death, Quetzalcoatl made a prophecy: he would return in a One Reed year to reclaim his kingdom. When Cortes arrived in 1519, a One Reed year, the Aztec emperor Moctezuma feared the prophecy had come true. Some sources suggest this fear contributed to the Aztec hesitation that enabled the Spanish conquest, though modern scholars debate how much this tradition was shaped after the fact.
Tezcatlipoca tricks Quetzalcoatl with a mirror showing his aged reflection. Sorcerers bring him octli and he breaks his vows. He departs Tollan in shame. He immolates himself and becomes the morning star. He prophesies his return.
This myth served multiple functions: it explained the fall of Tollan, established Venus as associated with Quetzalcoatl, and contained the prophecy of return that may have influenced Aztec response to Spanish contact. The rivalry between Quetzalcoatl and Tezcatlipoca represents the eternal conflict between order and chaos.