中美洲的金星:雨、玉米、战争和牺牲

I. Šprajc
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引用次数: 1

摘要

在西班牙征服之前的最后三千年里,生活在现代墨西哥中部和南部以及中美洲北部的人们进化成复杂的社会,具有许多共同的特征,这些特征定义了被称为中美洲的文化区域,并在技术、生存形式、政府、建筑、宗教和智力成就(包括复杂的天文概念)方面表现出来。对于阿兹特克人、玛雅人和许多其他中美洲社会来说,金星是最重要的天体之一。他们不仅意识到黎明前天空中某些时段出现的最亮的“星星”与日落后夜晚其他时间出现的“星星”是一模一样的;他们还获得了关于行星表面运动规律的相当精确的知识。当人们孜孜不倦地观察和研究金星时,它也激发了各种各样的信仰,在这些信仰中,金星的早晨和晚上的表现具有不同的属性。相关信息由考古数据、前西班牙手稿、早期西班牙报告和民族志记录的神话提供,这些神话作为征服前传统的残余在现代社会中幸存下来。最著名的是晨星的邪恶一面,它在次合之后的第一次出现被认为会以多种方式对自然和人类造成伤害。然而,最近的研究结果表明,晨星的普遍意义是相对较晚和外来起源的。金星象征意义的最重要方面是它与雨和玉米的概念联系,其中晚星具有突出的作用。也有证据表明,这些信念一定是受到某些观测事实的启发,特别是受到晚星极端现象的季节性影响,后者大致划分了中美洲的雨季和农业周期。根据不同种类的证据,包括与这些现象的建筑排列,金星是负责及时降雨的天体代理人之一,这是一个成功的农业季节的条件。这颗行星在有关战争和牺牲的概念中也占有重要地位,但这种象征主义似乎是从中美洲宗教的其他特征中衍生出来的。人类祭祀被认为是确保雨水、农业肥沃和宇宙正常运转所必需的。由于在战斗中获得的俘虏是最常见的祭祀受害者,军事行动得到了宗教的认可,金星雨玉米协会成为了祭祀象征和战争仪式的一部分。这些思想成为政治意识形态的重要组成部分,被统治者利用来满足他们的个人野心和世俗目标。总而言之,围绕中美洲金星的整个概念复杂性可以根据观测事实和特定的社会政治背景来理解。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Venus in Mesoamerica: Rain, Maize, Warfare, and Sacrifice
During the last three millennia before the Spanish Conquest, the peoples living in the central and southern parts of modern Mexico and the northern part of Central America evolved into complex societies with a number of common characteristics that define the cultural area known as Mesoamerica and are expressed in technology, forms of subsistence, government, architecture, religion, and intellectual achievements, including sophisticated astronomical concepts. For the Aztecs, the Maya, and many other Mesoamerican societies, Venus was one of the most important celestial bodies. Not only were they aware that the brightest “star” appearing in certain periods in the pre-dawn sky was identical to the one that at other times was visible in the evening after sunset; they also acquired quite accurate knowledge about the regularities of the planet’s apparent motion. While Venus was assiduously observed and studied, it also inspired various beliefs, in which its morning and evening manifestations had different attributes. Relevant information is provided by archaeological data, prehispanic manuscripts, early Spanish reports, and ethnographically recorded myths that survive among modern communities as remnants of pre-Conquest tradition. The best-known is the malevolent aspect of the morning star, whose first appearances after inferior conjunction were believed to inflict harm on nature and humanity in a number of ways. However, the results of recent studies suggest that the prevalent significance of the morning star was of relatively late and foreign origin. The most important aspect of the symbolism of Venus was its conceptual association with rain and maize, in which the evening star had a prominent role. It has also been shown that these beliefs must have been motivated by some observational facts, particularly by the seasonality of evening star extremes, which approximately delimit the rainy season and the agricultural cycle in Mesoamerica. As revealed by different kinds of evidence, including architectural alignments to these phenomena, Venus was one of the celestial agents responsible for the timely arrival of rains, which conditioned a successful agricultural season. The planet also had an important place in the concepts concerning warfare and sacrifice, but this symbolism seems to have been derived from other ideas that characterize Mesoamerican religion. Human sacrifices were believed necessary for securing rain, agricultural fertility, and a proper functioning of the universe in general. Since the captives obtained in battles were the most common sacrificial victims, the military campaigns were religiously sanctioned, and the Venus-rain-maize associations became involved in sacrificial symbolism and warfare ritual. These ideas became a significant component of political ideology, fostered by rulers who exploited them to satisfy their personal ambitions and secular goals. In sum, the whole conceptual complex surrounding the planet Venus in Mesoamerica can be understood in the light of both observational facts and the specific socio-political context.
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