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Xibalba

 

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Xibalba


 
 

In Maya mythology Xibalba , roughly translated as "Place of fear", is the name of the underworldUnderworld Summary

In the study of mythology and religion, the underworld is a generic term approximately equivalent to the lay term afterlife,...
, ruled by Mayan spiritsFacts About Spirit

The English word "spirit" comes from the Latin spiritus, meaning breath. ...
 of diseaseDisease

Contagious redirects here. For the Isley Brothers song of that name, see Contagious ....
 and deathDeath

Death is the full cessation of vital functions in the biological life....
. In the 16th-century Verapaz, the entrance to Xibalba was traditionally held to be a cave in the vicinity of CobánCobán

The city of Cobn is the capital of the department of Alta Verapaz in Guatemala....
, GuatemalaGuatemala

Guatemala, officially the Republic of Guatemala , is a country in Central America, in the south part of North America,...
. To some of the QuichéQuiche

In cooking, a quiche [IPA: ki:?] is a pie that is made primarily of eggs and cream in a pastry crust....
 descendants of the Maya people living in the vicinity, the area is still associated with death. Cave systems in nearby BelizeBelize

Belize is a small nation on the eastern coast of Central America on the Caribbean Sea bordered by Mexico to the northwest a...
 have also been referred to as the entrance to Xibalba. Another physical incarnation of the road to Xibalba as viewed by the Quiché peoples is the dark rift which is visible in the Milky WayMilky Way

The Milky Way , is a barred spiral galaxy which forms part of the Local Group....
.

Inhabitants

Xibalba is described in the Popol VuhPopol Vuh

The Popol Vuh is the book of scripture of the Quich, a kingdom of the post classic Maya civilization in highland Guatemala....
 as a court below the surface of the EarthFacts About Earth

Earth is the third planet in the solar system in terms of distance from the Sun, and the fifth largest....
. It is unclear if the inhabitants of Xibalba are the souls of the deceased or a separate race of beings worshipping deathDeath

Death is the full cessation of vital functions in the biological life....
, but they are often depicted as being human-like in form. The place Xibalba was associated with death and was ruled by twelve gods or powerful rulers known as the Lords of Xibalba. The first among the Lords of Xibalba were One Death and Seven Death. The remaining ten Lords are often referred to as demons and are given commission and domain over various forms of human suffering: to cause sickness, starvation, fear, destitution, pain, and ultimately death. The remaining residents of Xibalba are thought to have fallen under the dominion of one of these Lords, going about the face of the Earth to carry out their listed duties.

Structure

Xibalba was a large place and a number of individual structures or locations within Xibalba are described or mentioned in the Popol Vuh. Chief among these was the council place of the Lords, the five or six houses that served as the first tests of Xibalba, and the Xibalban ballcourtMesoamerican ballgame

The Mesoamerican ballgame, known in Spanish as juego de pelota, was a sport with ritual associations played for over 300...
. Also mentioned are the homes of the Lords, gardens, and other structures indicating that Xibalba was at least a great city.

Xibalba seemed to be rife with tests, trials and traps for anyone who came into the city. Even the Road to Xibalba was filled with obstacles: first a river filled with scorpionScorpion

A scorpion is an invertebrate animal with eight legs, belonging to the order Scorpiones in the class Arachnida....
s, a river filled with blood, and then a river filled with pus. Beyond these was a crossroads where travellers had to choose from between four roads that spoke in an attempt to confuse and beguile. Upon passing these obstacles one would come upon the Xibalban council place, where it was expected visitors would greet the seated Lords. Realistic mannequinMannequin

Mannequin. The word comes from the Dutch word manneken, literally meaning 'little man'....
s were seated near the Lords to confuse and humiliate people who greeted them, and the confused would then be invited to sit upon a bench, which was actually a hot cooking surface. The Lords of Xibalba would entertain themselves by humiliating people in this fashion before sending them into one of Xibalba's deadly tests.

The city was home to at least six deadly houses filled with trials for visitors. The first was Dark House, a house that was completely dark inside. The second was Rattling House or Cold House, full of bone-chilling cold and rattling hail. The third was Jaguar House, filled with hungry jaguars. The fourth was Bat House, filled with dangerous shrieking bats, and the fifth was Razor House, filled with blades and razors that moved about of their own accord. In another part of the Popol Vuh, a sixth test, Hot House, filled with fires and heat, is identified. The purpose of these tests was to either kill or humiliate people placed into them if they could not outwit the test.

Downfall of Xibalba

Xibalba was home of a famous ballcourt in which the heroes of the Popol Vuh succumbed to the trickery of the Xibalbans in the form of a deadly, bladed ball, as well as the site in which the Maya Hero Twins outwitted the Xibalbans and brought about their downfall.

According to the Popol Vuh, the Xibalbans at one point enjoyed the worship of the people on the surface of the Earth, who offered human sacrifice to the gods of death. Over the span of time covered in the Popol Vuh, the Xibalbans are tricked into accepting counterfeit sacrifices, and then finally humiliated into accepting lesser offerings from above. Anthropologist Dennis Tedlock has speculated that this version of history may be a Quichean slander on earlier Mayan forms of worship.

The role of Xibalba and the Xibalbans after their great defeat at the hands of the hero twins is unclear, although it seems to have continued its existence as a dark place of the underworld long after.

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