Maya jaguar gods


The pre-Columbian Maya religion knew various jaguar gods, in addition to jaguar demi-gods, protectors, and transformers. The main jaguar deities are discussed below. Their associated narratives are still largely to be reconstructed. Lacandon and Tzotzil-Tzeltal oral tradition are particularly rich in jaguar lore.
The Maya people saw the jaguar's attributes as a strong and powerful creature, as well as its easily recognizable coat, and incorporated it into their mythology. Many gods were portrayed as jaguars, or at least had characteristics not unlike jaguars, due to their powerful nature.

The Jaguar God of Terrestrial Fire and War ('Night Sun')

The Jaguar God of Terrestrial Fire is recognizable by a 'cruller' around the eyes, jaguar ears, and fangs. He personifies the number seven, which is associated with the day Akʼbʼal . Usually called 'Jaguar God of the Underworld', he has been assumed to be the 'Night Sun' - the shape supposedly taken by the sun during his nightly journey through the underworld - by reason of having the large eyes and filed incisors that also occur with the sun deity, and of sometimes evincing a k 'in infix. The deity's hypothetical aspect of a nocturnal sun should perhaps be connected to his proven association with terrestrial fire. He is often represented on incense burners and connected to fire rituals, while his 'cruller' may represent a cord used in making fire with a stick. Moreover, vases in codical style show him, captured, about to be burnt with torches. The nocturnal sun hypothesis is complicated by this very incident, and even more so by the fact that the fiery jaguar deity is identified with a star. The god's other sphere of influence is war, witness for example the stereotypical presence of his face on war shields.

God L

is one of the oldest Mayan deities, and associated with trade, riches, and black sorcery, and belongs to the jaguar deities: he has jaguar ears, a jaguar mantle and lives in a jaguar palace. Some take him to be the main ruler over the Underworld. In that sense, he would have to be considered the true "Jaguar God of the Underworld".

The Jaguar Goddess of Midwifery and War

The aged goddess of midwifery, curing, and war Ix Chel, belongs to the jaguar deities. She has jaguar ears and claws and can show the looped cruller element and the large eye of the Jaguar God of Terrestrial Fire, suggesting that she might be a spouse to this deity.

The Jaguar Patron of the War Month of Pax

The patron deity of the month of Pax has jaguar paws above his ears, a removed lower jaw, and vomits blood. In 16th-century Yucatán, rituals held in the month of Pax centered on the war leader and the puma deity, Cit Chac Coh. Particularly scenes on pottery show the Pax deity to be intimately associated with war and human sacrifice. He presides over the transformation of a child into a jaguar and performs a sacrificial dance around the captured Rain Deity. Personified as a tree, he witnesses the shooting of the Principal Bird Deity and equally of a Vulture King by Hun-Ahpu.

The Aged Jaguar Paddler

One of two aged deities associated with the base date of the Long Count and steering the canoe with the Tonsured Maize God has a jaguar headdress and is connected to Night, like the Jaguar God of Terrestrial Fire.

The Jaguar Twin Hero

The Jaguar Twin Hero, companion to Hun-Ahpu and thus corresponding to Xbalanque in the much later Popol Vuh Twin myth, has patches of jaguar skin stuck to his arms and body, in addition to jaguar pimples around his mouth. Fittingly, in the Popol Vuh, Xbalanque is the more violent Twin.

Jaguar Protectors and Jaguar Transformers

Less clearly classifiable as deities are jaguar protectors and jaguar transformers. The Water Lily Jaguar is both a giant jaguar protector, looming large above the king, and a transformer often shown amidst flames.

Jaguar Baby

A specific and as yet unexplained transformation into a jaguar involves a male child with jaguar ears and a jaguar tail shown in a transformational somersault. This Jaguar Baby can assume the features of the Jaguar God of Terrestrial Fire.