The Mythology Book

(Chris Devlin) #1

THE AMERICAS 247


beneath an overhanging mountain.
Zipacana crawled into the crevice.
When he tried to grab it, the Twins
brought the mountain down on
him, turning him into stone.
Zipacna’s brother Cabrakan,
the earthquake god, prided himself
on bringing down mountains. The
Hero Twins told him that they knew
of a perpetually growing mountain.
Cabrakan demanded to be shown
it so he could destroy it. As he
followed the Hero Twins, he grew
hungry. They fed him a roasted
bird they had enchanted. When he
ate it, he grew weak, and the Hero
Twins tied him up and buried him.
Now he held up mountains rather
than destroying them.

Final match
One day, as the Hero Twins
played ball, their noisy playing
once again disturbed the lords of
the Underworld, who summoned
Hunahpu and Xbalanque to
another game in the Underworld.
The lords of the Underworld
won the first match, and the Hero
Twins had to spend a night in
Razor House, which was full of
sharp stone knives that moved of
their own accord. The Hero Twins
survived by persuading the blades
to stop moving. They survived the
drafts and hail of the Cold House,
the beasts of Jaguar House, and
the flames of Fire House. Their final
trial was Bat House. Disaster struck
when a bat swooped down and
beheaded Hunahpu. Xbalanque
made a new head for his brother
using a squash, or gourd, and the
Hero Twins resumed playing, using
Hunahpu’s head as a ball. The Hero
Twins distracted their opponents,
reattached Hunahpu’s head, and
won the match.
Furious at their defeat, the
lords of the Underworld plotted to
kill Hunahpu and Xbalanque by

burning them in a stone pit. The
Hero Twins had been informed
of this plan, and willingly jumped
into the flames. Their bones were
ground down into powder and
dumped into a river. After five days,
they were reborn as catfish and
then took human form. The Hero
Twins wandered the Underworld
as anonymous vagabonds and won
great fame as wizards. The lords of
the Underworld summoned them to
perform, not knowing they were
the Hero Twins.
In their show, Xbalanque
seemed to sacrifice Hunahpu,
rolling his decapitated head along
the floor, removing his heart, and
then bringing him back to life.
When Hun-Came and Vucub-Came
demanded the trick be done on
them, Xbalanque and Hunahpu
promptly sacrificed them. Revealing
their true identity as the Hero
Twins, they refused to resurrect
their victims. From then on, they
declared, there would be no more
human sacrifices to the lords of
the Underworld. The Hero Twins
then ascended into the heavens;
Xbalanque became the sun and
Hunahpu the moon. This brought
the cosmos to its present order. ■

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Goals

The Mesoamerican ballgame was a
ritual sport dating back to the 2nd
millennium bce. Sculptural reliefs at
ballcourts after ca. 800 ce indicate the
sport may have included
human sacrifice. The
courts, which were
around 197 feet (60 m)
long, included two goal
rings through which
players tried to get a
heavy rubber ball.

Interpreting the Hero Twins


Some scholars have challenged
the interpretation of Hunahpu
becoming the moon. This is
because the Maya generally
view the moon as feminine.
As such, it is suggested that
Hunahpu actually became
Venus, the morning star.
Another tradition sees the
Hero Twins as representing
different phases of the sun, with
Hunahpu symbolizing the day
and Xbalanque the night. There
is even a theory that proposes
that Hunahpu only represents

the full moon, and that
his mother Xquic accounts
for its other phases. Other
interpretations paint the
myth as an exploration of the
possibility of rebirth through
the rite of sacrifice.
Many of these uncertainties
stem from the Popol Vuh itself.
Even though it draws on an
ancient myth, the original
Mayan text was composed
decades after the arrival of the
Spanish, which may have led to
inconsistencies in its content.

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