Ahuiateteo

Ahuiateteo

Ahuiateteo :Lords of Excess

The Ahuiateteo embody the dangers and consequences of overindulgence, including excessive drinking, gambling, and sex. Each of the five spirits bears a calendar name incorporating the number five:

• 5 Flower (Macuilxochitl)

• 5 Lizard (Macuilcuetzpalin)

• 5 Vulture (Macuilcozcacuahtli)

• 5 Rabbit (Macuiltochtli)

• 5 Grass (Macuilmalinalli)

Macuilxochitl (5 Flower), another name for Xochipilli, Prince of Flowers, is the chief Ahuiateteo, Lord of the Lords.

For the Aztecs, the number five symbolized excess: one too many. When you’ve had five, you’ve had too much (the fifth cigarette; the fifth drink; the fifth cup of coffee; the fifth hand of cards …). Punishment for excess was perceived in Aztec cosmology as a natural consequence. The Ahuiateteo were in charge of making sure punishment was administered, usually in the form of illness. The Ahuiateteo are also invoked by fortune-tellers and diviners to help read the writing on the wall.

PRONOUNCED:

Ah-wee-ah-teh-tay-o

ALSO KNOWN AS:

The Macuiltonaleque

ORIGIN:

Aztec

Number:

5

Direction:

South

SEE ALSO:

SOURCE:

Encyclopedia of Spirits: The Ultimate Guide to the Magic of Fairies, Genies, Demons, Ghosts, Gods & Goddesses– Written by Judika Illes