Telpcatli ''Calmecac''
The ''calmecac'' of the Aztec capital,Attendance
The ''calmecac'' was typically reserved for sons of Aztec noblemen, while the young commoner men, ''macehualtin,'' received military training in the '' Tēlpochcalli'' ( "house of youth"). The placement of noble youth in the ''telpochcalli'' might have been by lesser wives' or concubines' sons or younger sons, perhaps of commoner status so that the boys did not have to compete with noble youths in the ''calmecac''. However, although the ''calmecac'' has been characterized as for elites only, Sahagun's account says that at times the macehualtin were assigned to the ''calmecac'' as well and trained for the priesthood. Codex Mendoza's account of the ''calmecac'' emphasizes the possibilities of upward mobility for young commoner men, (''macehualtin''), educated in the ''telpochcalli''. Promising sons of nobles would be trained especially by the military orders of the Jaguar warriors (''ōcēlōmeh'' ) or Eagle warriors (''cuāuhtin'' ) in their quarters, the ''cuāuhcalli'' (). Codex Mendoza's account largely ignores class distinctions between the ''calmecac'' and the ''telpochcalli''. EmperorStudent life, education, and training
Students as young as five to seven years of age would enter the ''calmecac,'' which would be their home for the duration of their training. The parents brought their children to the ''calmecac'' to partake in a dedication ceremony in the presence of the ''calmecac'' and ''telpochcalli'' authorities. In a series of rituals that lasted hours, the new students were bathed, named, and marked upon the hip and chest to "designate their adult role." After the children's ears had been pierced and the ceremony was concluded, the Aztec temple held a celebratory feast. Instruction at the ''calmecac'' did not begin gradually. Four-year-olds were immediately introduced to adult ceremonies, with discipline and punishment beginning at the age of seven. The students received instruction in songs, rituals, reading and writing, theEtymology, symbolism, and social impact
The name ''calmecac'' is a combination of the words ''calli'', meaning "house," and the word ''mecatl'', meaning "cords, ropes, whips." Taken together, ''calmecac'' can be read as "the house of whips or penitence." It has also been directly translated as the Nahuatl word for school. The cords were sometimes made of malinall grass and used in acts of penance. Piercing parts of the body with sharp grass or other implements was done to connect with the cosmos and preserve eternal unity. This unity was visibly symbolised by spirals, or cutaway shell motifs. The spirals featured on the Tenochtitlan ''calmecac'' were designed to look like snails and symbolised the unity intrinsic to the Aztec religion. After Spanish invaders destroyed the capital's ''calmecac'', their artwork misrepresented the spirals as much smaller. When archaeologist Raúl Barrera uncovered seven of the rooftop spirals during the PAU excavation, the ornaments became "one of the most distinctive motifs of ancient Mexico." The ''calmecac'' tied together the military, political and sacred hierarchies of the community. Schools that qualified as ''calmecacs'' furthered the Aztec religion and forms of government and ensured continued stability by training the society's youth in academic, political, and military skills. In addition to the ''calmecac'' in Tenochtitlan, rural villages throughout the Aztec empire would have had ''calmecacs'' of their own, ensuring that all civilians had access to comprehensive instruction in religious practice.Notes
References
* * * Calnek, Edward. "The Calmecac and Telpochcalli in Pre-Conquest Tenochtitlan" in ''The Work of Bernardino de Sahagún: Pioneer Ethnographer of Sixteenth-Century Aztec Mexico'', J. Jorge Klor de Alva et al., eds. Albany: SUNY Albany Institute for Mesoamerican Studies 1988. * Carrasco, Pedro. "Calmecac". In Davíd Carrasco (ed). The Oxford Encyclopedia of Mesoamerican Cultures, vol 1. New York : Oxford University Press, 2001. * * * * {{refend Aztec society Aztec warfare History of schools Education in Mexico