Abstract
In the study of Mesoamerican iconography we need to distinguish between
icons that refer to the sensory perception of an object and those that
denote a conceptual apprehension of it. Among the second class of icons we
often find representations of the components of the cosmic apparatus, among
them the Sacred Mountain or the Flowering Tree. In the Mexica monoliths
known as the Tízoc Stone and the Stone from the old Archbishopric, there is
a group of place-name glyphs. One of them, seen on both monuments,
transcends this character, since it reproduces a mythic scene in which the
rupture of the Cosmic Axis is represented in the form of the breaking apart
of the Sacred Mountain. This article discusses the iconographic and
historical implications of this glyph
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