Abstract

In the sixteenth century, Fray Diego Durán gave rise to a scholarly myth that the primary purpose of Nahua ritual baths was “purification.” This article deconstructs his interpretation, focusing on baths performed on deities’ impersonators (ixiptla), and particularly the so-called tlaaltiltin, “bathed ones.” It argues that “baths,” which often consisted of merely sprinkling one’s face with water, had, above all, a transformative power. In the case of deities’ impersonators, they helped them change their ontological status, converting humans into gods and, sometimes, the other way around. The article concludes that the fabrication of a deity’s ixiptla necessarily involved applying a special kind of liquid, different for every god. Like godly attires, these “waters” contained the god’s traits or essence that enabled the transformation.

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