clipped from: bibliodyssey.blogspot.com   
Codex Fejervary Mayer (famsi) cosmos

Codex Fejérváry-Mayer is a 15th or early 16th Aztec (or Mixtec) manuscript on deer skin from Veracruz in central Mexico. Named for a Hungarian collector and British patron, this pre-Columbian accordion-style document outlines the cosmological and calendrical orientations of the Mayan people. As a typical calendar codex tonalamatl dealing with the sacred Aztec calendar -- the tonalpohualli -- it is grouped in the Codex Borgia group.

The painted manuscript divides the world into five parts. T-shaped trees delineate compass points: east at the top, west on the bottom, north on the left, and south on the right. The four directions are distributed around a sacred center, shown here as Xiuhtecuhlti, the god of fire

Mesoamerican cosmology map legend

Codex Fejervary Mayer (famsi) e

Codex Fejervary Mayer (famsi)

Codex Fejervary Mayer (famsi) a

Codex Fejervary Mayer (famsi) b

Codex Fejervary Mayer (famsi) c

Codex Fejervary Mayer (famsi) d

Codex Fejervary Mayer (famsi) f

Codex Fejervary Mayer (famsi) h

Codex Fejervary Mayer (famsi) j

Tezcatlipoca tempted Cipactli the Earth Monster to the surface of the great waters by using his foot as bait. In swallowing his foot (s)he lost her lower jaw. Hideously crippled (s)he was unable to sink and thus the earth was created from her body."

Codex Fejervary Mayer (famsi) k

Codex Fejervary Mayer (famsi) i

Codex Fejervary Mayer (famsi) l

Codex Fejervary Mayer (famsi) m