If the Aztecs had hot air balloons, they may well have greeted the new year like this—floating above the massive Pyramid of the Sun at sunrise today, the first day of the year according to the Aztec calendar. Also known as Yancuic Xihuitl, the Aztec New Year is still celebrated by some Indigenous Nahua communities here in central Mexico with songs, dances, and the flames of "ocote" (pitch pine) candles. Dancers wear colorful traditional costumes topped by quetzal feather headdresses, and celebrants greet the new year by making loud noises with seashells, just as Aztecs did centuries ago. It"s one of the many expressions of pre-Columbian tradition that managed to survive the Spanish conquest and modern erosion of Indigenous customs.
Ringing in the new year at Teotihuacan
Today in History
More Desktop Wallpapers:
-
World Book Day
-
National Park Week: Wind Cave National Park
-
Blackbird in Essex, England
-
Dancing waters of Dubai
-
Anshun Bridge, Chengdu, China
-
A rock in a wild place
-
Terraced fields of green
-
National Take a Hike Day
-
Gifford Pinchot National Forest
-
Instant romance
-
Guilin and Lijiang River National Park, China
-
Sandhill cranes, Bosque del Apache National Wildlife Refuge
-
American goldfinch
-
In Apia Harbor for Samoan Independence Day
-
How Quảng Ngãi got its grove back
-
Ministry of Fun Santa School
-
World Wildlife Day
-
Independence Day
-
Atop the roof of Africa
-
A lunar lantern celebration
-
Vermilion Cliffs National Monument
-
Lake Pehoé, Torres del Paine National Park, Chile
-
Marshland, Gloucester, MA
-
World Migratory Bird Day
-
Buddha in the roots of a tree, Ayutthaya, Thailand
-
Presidents Day
-
A river on the tundra
-
Glacier cave in Iceland
-
Fall color sweeps across the West
-
Pont Rouge
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

