( (Nahuatl: Filth Deity), ) also called Ixcuina, or Tlaelquani, Aztec goddess who represented sexual impurity and sinful behaviour; she was probably introduced to the Aztecs from the gulf lowlands of Huaxteca. Tlazoltotl was an important and complex earth-mother goddess. She was known in four guises, associated with different stages of life. As a young woman, she was a carefree temptress. In her second form she was the destructive goddess of gambling and uncertainty. In her middle age she was the great goddess able to absorb human sin, and, in her final manifestation, she was a destructive and terrifying hag preying upon youths. Tlazoltotl was thought to provoke both carnal lust and illicit sexual activity, but she could also grant absolution to those who had so sinned. She became best known for her capacity to cleanse such sins during confessionals conducted by her priests. Thus, although she could, in one form, inspire debauched behaviour, she could also forgive sinners and remove corruption from the world. She was portrayed in an elaborate headdress of raw cotton and in some representations wearing the skin of a sacrificial victim, or in a costume that featured symbols of the moon.
TLAZOLTOTL
Meaning of TLAZOLTOTL in English
Britannica English vocabulary. Английский словарь Британика. 2012