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52 22 MA FA 57PJ 1523 Ceremonial foot-shaped cups Collection Culture Ancient Mexico. Pre-Columbian Art Galleries Zapotec Style - Region Oaxaca Year 200-900 A.D. Period Classic Technique Modeled, sgraffito, and painted clay Measures 14.1 x 7.5 x 18.3 cm | 10.5 x 10.2 x 16.4 cm Location Artists Gallery 4. Society and Customs - Researchers Emilie Carreón Blaine Description Page 1 / 2 www.museoamparo.com | REP.AUT.INAH 52 22 MA FA 57PJ 1523 Clay cups were manufactured in a variety of sizes, shapes and heights, and in this case we see vessels modeled in the shape of a foot and dressed with a sandal. At first glance it might seem like a couple of feet but upon careful observation it is evident that the vessels are not modeled in the same way and the sandal, cactli in Nahuatl, is different. Both cactle are leather soles without heels, but one is more elaborate. The foot wears a cactle that covers the heel with two strips that pass between the instep and the second toe, ties that rise up to the ankle, and is carefully painted with fine lines that simulate tissues. Archaeology, painting and sculpture, the findings in various caves as well as the testimonies of the conquistadors and missionaries are proof of the extent of the manufacture and use of footwear in Mesoamerica over time. Early images carved in stone of the Olmec of La Venta or those made by the inhabitants of the Pacific coast in Izapa show that the rulers and priests wore shoes while Bernardino de Sahagun recorded different types of footwear when describing the gods of the Mexica's largest Tenochtitan Temple. They were made of wound, woven and sewed sisal fiber, or with soles made of deer hide and jaguar hide or fox and ocelot fur. Other types of shoes were painted, decorated with feathers, or with gold leaf; also deserving individual mention are the sandals with rubber soles called olcactli. The varied of types of footwear are confirmed by the fact that you could get different types of footwear in the market of Tlatelolco. Sahagun himself indicates that the seller had them dyed different colors and that they there were some beautiful works. These cups modeled in clay provide insight into footwear in Pre-Hispanic times, they are mainly containers for drinking, and archaeologists, from examples of cups like these which have been located in the archeology of Teotihuacan and among the Zapotec, propose that sacred liquids such as pulque or blood were drank from them. In order to understand the foregoing it is necessary to consider the role of the representation of human body parts in Pre-Hispanic art and remember that in ancient Mexico images of body fragments, including the Olmec, Teotihuacan, Toltec, Zapotec, Maya and Aztecs, were linked to the display of fragments of slaughtered human bodies. These two vessels therefore do not refer to human sacrifice, and possibly were part of rituals that began with self-sacrifice and fasts; rituals and ceremonies continued with death and the processing of the sacrificial victim by way of dismemberment, presentation of the parts and finally its representation. In other words, figuring parts of the body, in this case disjointed feet, was the continuation of an elaborate culminating ritual process of the immolation of the victim that was carried out to strengthen the power of the gods and the lords. Page 2 / 2 www.museoamparo.com | REP.AUT.INAH