Aubin Tonalamatl edit

 
Image of the Aubin Tonalamatl.

The Aubin Tonalamatl is a Nahuatl codex that is screen folded on maguey bark. The word "tonalamatl" is made up of two Nahuatl words, "tonalli" meaning day, and "amatl" referring to the type of paper that this codex is written on. While it originally consisted of 20 pages, only 18 remain today as 2 have gone missing. The physical document itself has had an interesting history as it has been ripped from the hands of its original owners in Mexico and since, stolen back from the French. Today, the Aubin Tonalamatl is entrusted in the hands of the National Institute of Anthropology and History (INAH) and they refuse to give it back to France. The content held within this codex has been extremely significant to our understanding of Aztec culture and time keeping systems.

History of the Aubin Tonalamatl edit

According to the Library of Congress[1], the Aubin Tonalamatl was part of a collection owned by Lorenzo Boturini Benaducci (1702-51) that was confiscated on his expulsion from New Spain in the mid-1740s. The codex had changed ownership multiple times before it was eventually sold to Alexis Aubin, for 2,000 francs on October 24, 1841. In 1889, Eugène Goupil, who was of Mexican and French origin, acquired Aubin's extensive collection of Mesoamerican manuscripts, including the codex. Following Goupil's death, his widow donated the manuscript to the National Library of France in 1898. In 1982, the Aubin Tonalamatl was stolen by a Mexican nationalist who wanted to return all of the codices back to Mexico. Today the codex remains in the hands of the National Institute of Anthropology and History in Mexico.

Relation to the Codex Borbonicus edit

 
This is an annotated image of folio 13 from the Codex Borbonicus and the Aubin Tonalamatl side by side. The comparison helps to show the differences and similarities between the stylistic choices and form of the two codices even though they are depicting the same trecena. There is a key in the top left of the image that helps break down the image and make it easier to comprehend how to read the calendars.

The Codex Borbonicus closely mirrors the form and content of another Aztec codex, the Aubin Tonalamatl. Both containing a 20 page calendrical system, they display the 20 trecena or 13 day periods that make up the tonalpohualli or 260-day year. While both calendars display the same dates by using the same symbols, they are read differently. On the Codex Borbonicus, one reads the calendar from left to right from bottom to top. The Aubin Tonalamatl reads right to left from top to bottom. An interesting distinction between these two codices is their stylistic difference in depicting the same scenes. The Codex Borbonicus tends to include drawings that depict the dietes as being humans dressed up as the dieties, becoming one with the diety. The Aubin Tonalamatl differs here as the divinatory scenes in the top left depict the dieties as assuming their own identity.

Relation to Cosmovision edit

 
Imagine of folio 3 of the Aubin Tonalamatl.

The similarities between the two codices' depictions of the calendar prove how streamlined and widely understood this time telling system was to Aztec society. This thorough system relates to the Aztec views on cosmovision as certain days and events are linked to the cosmos. Both of these codices function as divinatory almanacs. The trecenas depicted on each folio of the codex were used to make predictions about people born on specific days. The gods who were associated with and influenced each trecena were shown in an illustrated image at the top left of the page. The smaller squares on the page contain the dates of the 13 days in the trecena, along with more information about the dieties who influence each day. This association was determined by skilled diviners. The dates each contain a night lord, day lord, and associated flying creatures.

  1. ^ "Aubin Tonalamatl". Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. 20540 USA. Retrieved 2023-04-27.