Maya death gods
The Maya death gods known by a variety of names, are two basic types of death gods who are respectively represented by the 16th-century Yucatec deities Hunhau and Uacmitun Ahau mentioned by Spanish Bishop Diego de Landa. Hunhau is the lord of the Underworld. Iconographically, Hunhau and Uacmitun Ahau correspond to the Gods A and A'.
In recent narratives, particularly in the oral tradition of the Lacandon people, there is only one death god, who acts as the antipode of the Upper God in the creation of the world and of the human body and soul. This death god inhabits an Underworld that is also the world of the dead. As a ruler over the world of the dead, the principal death god corresponds to the Aztec deity Mictlāntēcutli. The Popol Vuh has two leading death gods, but these two are really one: Both are called "Death," but while one is known as "One Death," the other is called "Seven Death." They were vanquished by the Hero Twins.
The two principal death gods count among the many were-animals and spooks inhabiting the Underworld, with the God A way in particular manifesting himself as a head hunter and a deer hunter. Ah Puch was banished after he broke his promise with the Maya king and was sent to the storm that would bring him to earth forever.
Post-Classic names
Kisin is the name of the death god among the Lacandons as well as the early colonial Choles, kis being a root with meanings like "flatulence" and "stench." Landa uses another name and calls the lord of the Underworld and "prince of the devils" Hunhau, a name that, recurring in early Yucatec dictionaries as Humhau and Cumhau, is not to be confused with Hun-Ahau; hau, or haw, means 'to end' and 'to lay on its back '. Other names include Yum Kimil, "Lord of Death" in Yucatán and Pukuh in Chiapas. The name Hun Ahau appears frequently in the Ritual of the Bacabs, but is never specified as a death god.Ah Puch, though often mentioned in books about the Mayas, does not appear to be an authentic Maya name for the death god.
Mythology
Kʼicheʼ
In the Popol Vuh, the Hero Twins descend to the "Place of Fright", where a pair of Death Gods, Hun-Came and Vucub-Came, rule over a series of disease-bringing deities. They defeat the Death Gods and put restrictions on their cult.Yucatec
According to one of the earliest sources on Maya religion, Eopuco mistreated and killed the Bacab, who was resurrected three days later.Lacandon
The skeletal death god Kisin plays a prominent role in Lacandon mythology, chiefly in the following tales:- The creation of the underworld by the upper god, involving the upper god's death at the hands of Kisin, his resurrection, and Kisin's confinement to the underworld; in his anger, Kisin sometimes kicks the pillars of the earth, thus causing earthquakes;
- A failed attempt at the creation of human beings in emulation of the upper god, leading to the creation of the "totemic" animals of certain kin groups ;
- The descent of the ancestor Nuxiʼ into the underworld to woo Kisin's daughter;
- The description of the destiny of the souls in the underworld, where Kisin burns the souls of evildoers, transforms the souls of certain evildoers into his "domestic animals," hunts for the spider monkey doubles of men destined to die.
Classic Period: God A
Ritual
Both God A and God A' figure prominently in the New Year rites depicted in the Dresden Codex. God A' probably corresponds to the death god Uacmitun Ahau in Landa's description of the New year rites. He presides over a year of great mortality. To ward off evil during this year, men would walk over a bed of glowing embers that possibly represented the fires of the Underworld. Temple priests would get in costumes of God A' and performed rites of bloodletting and human sacrifice. Those who impersonated this deity would dance out the steps of ritual sacrifice, putting terror in the soul of ritual participants and the spectators who witnessed these sacred events.Image:AhPuch.jpg|right|frame|God A in the lunar eclipse tables of the Dresden CodexMan Hunt and Deer hunt
With varying hieroglyphic names and attributes, God A figures in processions and random arrays of were-animals and spooks. In connection with these apparitions, he tends to be depicted either as a headhunter or as deer hunter. On the grandiose Tonina stucco wall, the severed head is that of an enemy king. The death god's deer hunt has two sides. On the one hand, this deer hunt may metaphorically refer to a hunt for human victims. On the other hand, there also seems to be a connection with certain wayob shaped like deer but with the tail of a spider monkey. On the famous peccary skull from Copan, for example, such a deer way appears to be welcoming the death god returning from a hunt.Jaguar baby transformation
Together with the Rain Deity Chaac, God A is present at the jaguar transformation of a man who is usually shown as a baby, and who seems to disappear into the underworld.--Apart from these contexts, on a Copan bench, the earth-carrying Bacabs are paired off with death gods A. This may relate to the fact that in Yucatán, one of the four Bacabs was called "White Death".