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pepoRts
COSTUME ANALYSIS AND THE PROVENIENCE
OF THE BORGIA GROUP CODICES
Patricia Anawalt
There are indications that future archaeological investigations of the Late Postclassic horizon of the central
and eastern Gulf Coast will reveal the existence of several regional artistic subtraditions of the prevailing
Mixteca-Puebla horizon style. This would discourage the current pan-"Mixtec" approach to the interpretation
of Postclassic Mesoamerican culture. A consequence of this presently confusing practice is the provenience
debate concerning the religious Borgia Group codices. An abstract method of costume analysis indicates that
these pictorial manuscripts did not originate in the Mixteca because they do not display Mixtec ritual clothing
patterns. Data from the costume analysis, together with internal clues from the codices and archaeological
and ethnohistorical evidence, demonstrate that the Borgia Group codices had diverse origins. The general
Puebla-Tlaxcala region is suggested as the probable homeland for codices Borgia, Cospi, and Vaticanus B. The
stylistic twins, Fej6rvary-Mayer and Laud, are assigned to the eastern Gulf Coast.
Recent collaboration between archaeological and ethnohistorical-costume analysis methodology has provided new insight into the artistic-cultural tradition of Late Postclassic central Mexican art. As a consequence, the pervasive myth of a monolithic pan-'"'Mixtec" artistic dominance
for that time period now needs reassessment.
Vaillant (1938) coined the term "Mixteca-Puebla" to designate the two geographic areas within
which the predominant horizon style of the Late Postclassic probably originated. Unfortunately,
employment of the linguistic term "Mixtec" for this artistic tradition leads to a false generalization about the nature of "Mixtec" artistic dominance during this period. The result has been the
facile misattribution of items and subjects to the "Mixtec School," a term which has been interpreted too literally.
This problem can be solved by combining information from four major data bases. First, archaeology provides material evidence of distinctive regional variants of the Mixteca-Puebla style.
Second, ethnohistorical sources-both sixteenth-century conquistadors' eyewitness accounts and
to multiple areas of artistic production
subsequent chronicles of the ethnographer-friars-testify
in Late Postclassic Mesoamerica. Third, modern ethnography records the survival of certain PreHispanic cultural traditions, which substantiate the findings of archaeology and ethnohistory.
Finally, a fourth source for further understanding of the Mixtec problem is costume analysis, an
innovative method for analyzing depictions of Pre-Hispanic clothing.
Costume analysis methodology concentrates on the basic cut of a garment. Adequate clothing
Patricia Anawalt, Museum of Cultural History, University of California-Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA 90024
Copyright ? 1981 by the Society for American Archaeology
0002-7316/81/040837-16$2.10/1
837
838
Figure
(page 50).
AMERICAN ANTIQUITY
1.
MIXTEC.
Codex
Zouche-Nuttal
Figure 2.
(page 52).
data are not available in extant Pre-Hispanic sculptures, ceramics, or wall paintings but do exist
in the indigenous pictorial books of Mesoamerica. By focusing on the attribute level, it is possible
to hold in abeyance the social and religious implications of garments and successfully render data
from diverse geographic, contextual, and chronological sources into comparable units for crosscultural analysis. Multiple garment examples are necessary for such analysis, in order to adjust
for possible idiosyncrasies of individual artists or aberrant costume depictions.
While the general geographic origin of most Pre-Hispanic codices is established the proveniences of five of these pictorials, known collectively as the Borgia Group codices, are unknown.
This uncertainty has implicated the Borgia Group with the pan-Mixtec attribution problem.
Analysis of the clothing depicted in these native documents has shed light on both the Borgia
Group provenience debate and the Mixtec muddle. This study, then, provides an analysis of
material culture distribution in order to demonstrate the existence of several distinct-although
related-artistic cultural traditions, the separate nature of which has received insufficient attention from scholars to date. The study should therefore be of interest to students of archaeology as
well as of ethnohistory and art history.
Figure 3. MIXTEC.
obverse (page 1).
Codex
Vindobonensis
REPORTS
Figure 5.
The distinctive
collection
of Pre-Hispanic
839
6.
Figure
(page 3D).
religious
BORGIA
documents
GROUP.
known
Codex
Laud
codices is comprised of five core pictorial manuscripts: Borgia, Vaticanus B, Cospi, FejervaryMayer, and Laud. Treated as a single entity because of similarities in style and content (Glass and
Robertson 1975:99-100), they probably served as manuals for priests and diviners. Yet the Borgia
Group pictorials offer few standard clues to their origin.
Over the years four possible homelands have been suggested
(1)
the Puebla-Oaxaca border area (Seler 1963); (2) The Tlaxcala-Puebla region (Caso 1927;
Nicholson 1966:153-154); (3) the Gulf Coast (Seler 1904:324; Nicholson 1966:152-153); (4) the
Mixteca, heartland of the Mixtec Indians in Oaxaca (Toscano 1952; Robertson 1963; Furst 1978).
Of the four only the Mixteca contains a corpus of pictorial data comparable to that of the Borgia
Group codices, a fact stressed by supporters of a Mixtec origin. Those who hold this view claim
that the Borgia Group pictorials are the religious counterparts to the Mixtec historicalcodices.
genealogical
In analyzing the costumes
I compared
from five Mixtec historical-genealogical codices: Becker I, Bodley, Colombino, Selden (compiled
in the mid-sixteenth century but nonetheless depicting only Pre-Hispanic clothing), Zouche-
Figure 7. MIXTEC.
obverse (page 26).
Codex
Vindobonensis
Table 1.
Garment
Mixtec Codices
Maxtiati
Examples of decorated m
CODEX BORGIA: 55%
CODEX VATICANUS
CODEX COSPI: 11%
CODEX FEJERVARY
CODEX LAUD: 18%
Hip-cloth
Male Capes
CODEX BORGIA: 2
CODEX VATICANUS B:
CODEX COSPI: 5
CODEX FEJERVARY-M
CODEX LAUD: 9 (2 are
Group)
Kilt
CODEX BORGIA: 0
CODEX VATICANUS B:
CODEX COSPI: 0
CODEX FEJERVARY-M
CODEX LAUD: 6
Xicolli
Armor
Robe
Huipil
Limb-encasing, ceremonial
costumes
842
AMERICAN ANTIQUITY
IV
Figure 9.
(page 12).
MIXTEC.
Codex
Zouche-Nuttall
Figure 10.
(page 15D).
Laud
Nuttal, and Codex Vindobonensis obverse. The latter pictorial is emphasized in the costume
analysis because it is the only complete Mixtec religious pictorial extant, and hence it is the Mixtec
document most analogous to the Borgia Group. It apparently tells the Mixtec creation myth and includes a range of deities, or their impersonators, all clad in appropriate attire. Deity clothing also
appears in the Borgia Group codices which depict rituals, divinatory calendars, patheons, and
general religious ideologies.
The costume analysis (Anawalt 1975, 1981) initially involved selecting 102 typical examples of
12 different garment types. They were then organized into a series of comparative charts
(Anawalt 1975:186, 205, 235, 248, 259, 266) according to five basic principles of garment construction.
COSTUME ANALYSIS
A summation of the costume analysis appears on Table 1, which compares the 12 types of
clothing which occur in the Mixtec and Borgia Group codices. The initial category is the loincloth
or maxtlatl. (This Nahuatl word regularly appears in the colonial sources throughout Mesoamerica, in keeping with the Spanish practice of applying Nahuatl terms in non-Nahuatl speaking
areas.) The loincloth was a single piece of long narrow material that was wrapped around the
waist several times, passed between the legs, and then tied at the back in such a manner that the
ends of the cloth hung down in front and back (Figures 1, 2). Three of the five Borgia Group
codices have more decorated loincloths (anything but unadorned pure white) than does Vindobonensis obverse.
The hip cloth is also found in both groups and is similar in both (Figures 3, 4). The indigenous
term for this costume is unknown. Analogous modern garments (Anawalt 1975:71-76) suggest
that it consisted of a square of material folded diagonally and then tied around the hips.
A third category of Table 1 is male capes, single webs of material that tied at the neck and were
worn either over the chest or back (Figures 5, 6). Seler (1901-1902:122) referred to the chest cape
as quemitl, an apronlike garment which was fastened around the neck of idols.
Male kilts, short skirtlike garments composed of closely spaced vertical panels, appear in both
REPORTS
Figure 11.
(page 30).
MIXTEC. Codex
Zouche-Nuttall
843
groups, particularly on depictions of Tialoc representations and skeletal deities (Figures 7, 8). It is
probable that the kilt was utilized mainly as a special-purpose ritual costume. There is no
reference to it in the colonial sources, hence the mystery about its indigenous name.
The fifth and sixth categories, female capes and skirts, point up the first marked contrast between the two costume groups. The Mixtec codices display no females wearing quemitl, the chest
cape, but such depictions do occur in the Borgia Group pictorials (Figures 9, 10).
Females undressed above the waist-wearing
only a wraparound skirt-are a common occurrence in the Borgia Group (Figure 12) but almost nonexistent in the Mixtec pictorials. The sole example is a depiction of a child (Figure 11). This marked contrast indicates a significant variation
in cultural practices.
Codex
Vindobonensis
844
AMERICAN ANTIQUITY
Figure 15.
Figure 16.
(page 59).
The seventh category is that of rounded (Figures 13, 14) and triangular (Figures 15, 16) quechquemiti, a female slip-on garment that covered only the upper torso. In regard to the Mixtec
quechquemitl, Heyden (1977:8) suggested that the smaller "triangular" garment was a political
status marker, whereas the larger "rounded" type probably was used for warmth. The occurrence of both styles in the religious Borgia Group codices, however, calls into question Heyden's
hypothesis that the rounded style was strictly utilitarian. The Borgia Group has a number of very
short "rounded" quechquemitl (see Figure 14), whereas the Mixtec pictorials have none. The implication is that "rounded" quechquemitl also carried a particular meaning.
The second marked contrast between the two costume groups is the occurrence in the Borgia
Group codices of androgynous figures who wear female clothing together with the loincloth, the
Figure 17.
(page 20).
BORGIA GROUP.
Codex
Laud
Figure 18.
(page 89).
845
REPORTS
Figure 19.
Figure 20.
quintessential male garment (Figures 17, 18). Such bisexual figures do not occur in any of the Mixtec codices, an omission suggestive of different cultural milieux.
The third marked contrast between the Mixtec and Borgia Group costume depictions occurs in
the eighth category of Table 1, that of the xicolli, a short jacket with a diagnostic fringe or otherwise delineated hem area. This garment occurs repeatedly in the Mixtec codices: in red as the
nobles' standard apparel (Figure 19) and in the priests' diagnostic white-with-black-designs style
(Figure 20). The xicolli appears 30 times in the 52 pages of the Mixtec ritual pictorial Vindobonensis obverse. In contrast, in the entire Borgia Group only two xicolli are found (Figures 21,
Figure
(page 8).
21.
BORGIA
GROUP.
Codex
Laud
Figure 23.
(page 40).
AMERICAN ANTIQUITY
846
MIXTEC. Codex
Zouche-Nuttall
Figure 24.
(page 15D).
BORGIA GROUP.
Codex
Laud
22). Both are on priests. However, neither bears the white-with-black designs of the typical Mixtec priestly xicolli.
Armor comprises a ninth category. Whereas the Mixtec historical genealogical codices contain
few examples, neither Vindobonensis obverse nor the Borgia Group contain any.
Both repertories depict the "robe," a long, body-hugging garment that appears to have been a
special-purpose ritual costume (Figure 23, 24). The robe is more prevalent in the Borgia Group
than in the Mixtec, but never in the white-with-black-designs style that appears on the Mixtec
robe-clad priests (Figure 23).
Both the Mixtec and Borgia Group contain a few depictions of the female huipil, a simple blouse
(Figures 25, 26).
Vindobonensis
Figure 26.
(page 1).
REPORTS
Codex
Vindobonensis
Figure 28.
(page 45).
847
MIXTEC. Codex
Zouche-Nuttall
The final category of Table 1 is that of limb-encasing ceremonial costumes, which represent the
fourth marked difference between the two costume traditions. The Mixtec codices display three
styles of these garments: jaguar, puma, and eagle. Since the costumes encase the entire body, I
assume that at least portions of the garments were woven, man-made facsimiles of the actual
skins. These ceremonial costumes occur repeatedly throughout the Mixtec codices (Figures 27,
28). Codex Vindobonensis obverse contains 19 such costumes (11 eagle suits, 1 puma, 7 jaguar). In
marked contrast, the entire Borgia Group contains only two such garments, both jaguar suits
(Figures 29, 30).
To sum up, as Table 1 indicates, while there are many similarities between the two costume
traditions there are four significant differences:
(1) Bare-chested females. In the entire Mixtec corpus there is only one depiction of a barechested female, a child. In contrast, such depictions appear repeatedly throughout the Borgia
Group codices.
(2) Androgynous figures. The Mixtec corpus contains no figures who wear the male loincloth
together with traditional female clothing. In contrast, such depictions appear a number of times in
the Borgia Group codices.
(3) Xicolli distribution. In the Mixtec codices both the aristocratic red xicolli and the priestly
black-and-white style appear repeatedly. In contrast, the five core members of the Borgia Group
contain only two xicolli, both worn by priests but in neither case is the garment the Mixtec ritual
black-with-white style.
(4) Limb-encasing ceremonial costume distribution. In the Mixtec corpus there are at least 123
jaguar, puma, and eagle costumes. In contrast, two jaguar suits are the only such costumes in the
entire Borgia Group, indicating contrasting ceremonial accoutrements.
It is clear that the differences between the two costume traditions here described are significant enough to suggest that they are reflections of different cultural milieux. The costume
evidence indicates that the Borgia Group codices cannot be of Mixtec origin because they do not
depict what we know to have been Mixtec ceremonial clothing patterns. Therefore, in order to
determine the homeland of these books, a combination of internal clues from the codices and
ethnohistorical as well as archaeological evidence must be added to the picture. The data from
these sources suggest that the five Borgia Group codices originated in diverse areas.
848
Figure 29.
(page 13D).
AMERICAN ANTIQUITY
Laud
Figure 30.
(page 60).
REPORTS
849
It is only with the two remaining Borgia Group pictorials, the stylistic twins Fejervary-Mayer
and Laud, that primary emphasis shifts to the central-eastern Gulf Coast. For the Late Postclassic,
this area is archaeologically poorly known. While it is understandable that emphasis has hitherto
been on Preclassic Olmec sites and subsequent Classic period Maya connections, enough work
has now been done to demonstrate that the region was a center for an elaborate polychrome
ceramic tradition of the Postclassic-a
tradition which produced vessels that occasionally
display "tipo codice" representations. Such pieces resemble the distinctive polychrome ware of
the great central Mexican religious and manufacturing center of Cholula. This is supported by
both Drucker's (1943) work at Cerro de las Mesas-which revealed a late ceramic phase almost
identical to Cholula polychrome-and Medellin Zenil's (1952, 1955, 1960) archaeological surveys
of that region. The influence of the polychrome ceramic tradition of Cholula on the local assemblage of Cempoallan, Veracruz, was so great that Garcia Payon (1949:471) dubbed this center "un
vastago de Cholula" (cf. Noguera 1954:295). Cempoallan also sent pilgrims to Cholula for rituals.
Obviously, the stylistic-iconographic tradition of central Mexico influenced this section of the Gulf
Coast.
Prior to the Spanish conquest the central-eastern Veracruz area was thriving. The natives of
the region were famous for their skill in painting cotton mantles (Alvarado Tezozomoc
1944:308-309) and also had the reputation of being particularly knowledgeable in ritual and
divinatory lore. They were descendants of the Tlamatinime, the wise men of legendary Tamoanchan, who were supposed to have migrated to this eastern coastal region, taking with them the
sacred ritual books (Anderson and Dibble 1950-1969, Bk. 10:187-188, 190-192). Among other
names the area was known as Tlillan Tlapallan, place of writings.
This region of the Gulf Coast, reknowned for craftsmen skilled in painting and priests steeped in
esoteric religious lore, well may be the homeland of the beautifully drawn and intellectually
abstract Fejervary-Mayer and Laud codices. As we have seen, these codices contain recurring
Gulf Coast features: emphasis on the area's mother goddess Tlazolteotl-Ixcuinan; arm bands and
axes; resemblances in a universe diagram between Fejervary-Mayer and Lowland Maya Codex
Madrid; and the frequency of bare-chested females.
Bare-chested females were typical of the central-eastern Veracruz tropical zone. While admittedly there is no necessary correlation between seminudity and warm climate (recall the nudity
practiced in the harsh environment of Tierra del Fuego), the repeated occurrence of bare-chested
females in the Borgia Group codices may well be a provenience indicator. With only one exception-a child-bareness
occurs neither in the Mixtec codices nor in the Aztec pictorials (depictions of bare-chested Aztec females are almost always stone sculptures, mother goddesses, whose
exposed breasts emphasize their maternal aspect). In the central-eastern Gulf Coast, however,
bare-chested women were typical of the area well into the twentieth century (Covarrubias
1947:43-47).
A further argument in support of a Gulf Coast provenience for Fejervary-Mayer and Laud involves the propensity of the Spanish for collecting native books in that region. It is understandable
that the Europeans should be fascinated with these exotic pictorials at that particular time and
place. Central Veracruz was the first area where the conquistadors landed and remained reconnoitering for 5 months; Cempoallan was the first large Mesoamerican city they visited. We have
proof that the Spaniards acquired indigenous documents during this period. In the July 6,1519, inventory of gifts sent back by Cortes are listed two native books (Pagden 1971:40-46) for which
honor there are presently a number of pictorial contenders (Nicholson 1966:148-149), FejervaryMayer and Laud among them. However, the sixteenth-century chronicler Peter Martyr tells us
that a number of books arrived back in Spain. He also describes these pictorials as being made of
paper rather than animal skin, the material used for all the Borgia Group codices (MacNutt
1912:11:40-41). It is just possible that Martyr could have had such a strong impression of the exotic native paper that he failed to note the true composition of the two deerskin codices. It is more
probable, however, that Fejervary-Mayer and Laud originated to the east of Cempoallan and were
collected later.
850
AMERICAN
ANTIQUITY
These stylistic twins among the Borgia Group contain internal clues-the combining of a
"streamlined Mixtec style" (Nicholson 1966:155) with Gulf Coast iconography-which point to
origins in an area touched by both traditions. Ethnohistorical evidence substantiates this. In eastern Veracruz, lying in the drainage of the Papaloapan-Coatzacoalcos rivers, is the Chinantla
region. In Pre-Hispanic times this area was a key geographic and cultural transition zone between
the Mixteca and Gulf Coast. It was also a profitable gold-producing region, and hence provided a
raison d'etre for the first Spaniard's visit to the area. In the winter of 1519-1520 Diego de Ordaz
was sent by Cort6s to evaluate the Chinantla region (Wagner 1969:242-244, 386). In addition to
his usual Spanish obsession with gold, Ordaz was also an enthusiastic souvenir collector. There is
a record of a "giant's bone" he took from a native temple (MacNutt 1912:11:189)and he is claimed
to have been fascinated by seeing paintings of "devils." Ordaz returned to Spain as a procurador
for Cortes in late 1521 or early 1522. This trip is also associated with a usually neglected second
small shipment of Cortesian gifts to the Crown (Wagner 1969:326).
It is quite possible, of course, that there was never any documentation of the Borgia Group
twin's exodus from Mexico, and hence the above speculations are spurious. The first records of
Fejervary-Meyer and Laud in Europe are late and of no help with the provenience problem. Nevertheless, the content, style, and iconography of these two unique pictorials definitely point toward
the eastern Gulf Coast origin. It is therefore not illogical to suggest that the inveterate souvenir
hunter Ordaz also may have carried back to Spain, along with his famous "giant's bone," these
two magnificently executed codices.
SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS
The five core members of the Borgia Group codices have come to be regarded as a single corpus
because, when compared with other Mesoamerican ritual manuscripts, they are more like each
other than any other pictorials. Because the Borgia codices lack standard provenience clues, their
homeland has been a matter of debate. Some scholars, drawing on stylistic similarities, have assigned these pictorials to the Mixtec. This attribution has been shown to be faulty through an innovative method of costume analysis. Data garnered from the costume analysis, internal clues
from the pictorials, and ethnohistorical and archaeological evidence demonstrate that the Borgia
Group codices actually have diverse origins separated in space but nevertheless reflecting a
Mixteca-Puebla art tradition. The Mixtec codices also reflect this pervasive Late Postclassic
horizon style, and it is at this level of shared influence that they resemble the five core pictorials
of the Borgia Group.
The general Puebla-Tlaxcala region is suggested as the probable homeland for codices Borgia,
Cospi, and Vaticanus B. The stylistic twins Fejervary-Mayer and Laud are consigned to the Gulf
Coast. The determination of diverse origins for the Borgia Group codices indicates that several
distinctive-although related-regional artistic subtraditions of the Mixteca-Puebla style were in
existence in the Late Postclassic.
The results of the ethnohistorical-costume analysis study point to central-eastern Veracruz as a
particularly auspicious region for future archaeological research into this question. My work indicates that the most promising areas are those suggested by Nicholson (1963:55-64): the regions
somewhat north of Cempoallan to at least the Tabasco border in the south, with special emphasis
on the Tuxtepec and lower Papaloapan, Playa Vicente, Los Tuxtlas, and Coatzacoalcos zones.
Certainly, the explicitly detailed pictorials Fejervary-Mayer and Laud contain representations of
a variety of ritual objects and structures of originally imperishable materials which are potentially available for archaeological discovery. Another find on the order of the Tizatlan altar might
prove a major turning point in our understanding of the artistic-cultural tradition of Late Postclassic Mesoamerica.
Acknowledgments. I wish to thank H. B. Nicholson for his help with this article. A number of other people
have also contributed to early drafts of the paper: Frances Berdan, Christopher Donnan, Doris Heyden, P. A.
REPORTS
851
Parsons, and anonymous reviewers. Jean Sells did the fine-line tracings of the figures from photographs taken
by Susan Einstein.
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852
AMERICAN ANTIQUITY