In Aztec mythology, Tlahzolteà Âtl (or , ) is a deity of sex, sexuality, lust, carnality, sin, vice, impurity, temptation, fertility, purification, absolution, steam baths, and a patroness of adulterers. She is known by three names, ("she who eats or filthy excrescence [sin]") and ("the death caused by lust"), and or (, Deity of Cotton), the latter of which refers to a quadripartite association of four sister deities.
is the deity for the 13th of the sacred 260-day calendar Tà Ânalpà Âhualli, the one beginning with the day , or First Movement. She is associated with the day sign of the jaguar.
Tlazolteà Âtl played an important role in the confession of wrongdoing through her priests.
There was a Huastec mother goddess from the Gulf Coast who was assimilated into Aztec views of Tlazà Âlteà Âtl.
Under the name of she was thought to be , composed of four sisters of different ages known by the names (the first born), (the younger sister, also ), (the middle sister, also ) and (the youngest sister). When conceived of as four individual deities, they were called or ; individually, they were deities of luxury.
According to Aztec belief, it was Tlazolteà Âtl who inspired vicious desires and who likewise forgave and cleaned away sin. She was also thought to cause disease, in particular sexually transmitted infections. It was said that Tlazolteà Âtl and her companions would afflict people with disease if they indulged in forbidden love. The uncleanliness was considered both on a physical and moral level. It could be cured by a steam bath, a rite of purification, or calling upon the TlazoltÃÂteoh, the deities of love and desires.
For the Aztecs, there were two main deities thought to preside over purification: Tezcatlipoca, because he was thought to be invisible and omnipresent, therefore seeing everything; and Tlazolteà Âtl, the deity of lechery and unlawful love. It is said that when a man confessed before Tlazolteà Âtl everything was revealed. Purification with Tlazolteà Âtl would be done through a priest. One could only receive the "mercy" once in their life, which is why the practice was most common among the elderly.
The priest (tlapouhqui) would be consulted by the penitent and would consult the 260-day ritual calendar (tà Ânalpà Âhualli) to determine the best day and time for the purification to take place. On that day, he would listen to the sins confessed and then render judgment and penance, ranging from fasts to presentation of offerings and ritual song and dance, depending on the nature and the severity of the sin.
was called "Deity of Dirt" () and "Eater of Ordure" (, 'she who eats dirt [sin]') with her dual nature of deity of dirt and also of purification. Sins were symbolized by dirt. Her dirt-eating symbolized the ingestion of the sin and in doing so purified it. She was depicted with ochre-colored symbols of divine excrement around her mouth and nose. In the Aztec language the word for sacred, , comes from , the buttocks, and religious rituals include offerings of "liquid gold" (urine) and gold (Nahuatl teocuitlatl "divine excrement", which Klein jocularly translated to English as "holy shit"). Through this process, she helped create harmony in communities.
was one of the primary Aztec deities celebrated in the festival of (meaning "sweeping") that was held September 2âÂÂ21 to recognize the harvest season. The ceremonies conducted during this timeframe included ritual cleaning, sweeping, and repairing, as well as the casting of corn seed, dances, and military ceremonies.
In the film Raiders of the Lost Ark, the fictitious artifact, the Golden Idol is based on the actual Aztec Dumbarton Oaks birthing figure. The artifact is presumed to depict Tlazà Âlteà Âtl.