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Aztec Death Whistles Sound like Human Screams and May Have Been Used as Psychological Warfare
Ancient Origins ^ | Updated on 11/17/2020 | Liz Leafloor

Posted on 11/18/2020 3:56:49 AM PST by LibWhacker

Aztec death whistle experimental replicas

17 November, 2020 - 19:43 lizleafloor

Aztec Death Whistles Sound like Human Screams and May Have Been Used as Psychological Warfare

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When odd, skull-shaped grave items were found by archaeologists decades ago at an Aztec temple in Mexico, they were assumed to be mere toys or ornaments, and were catalogued and stored in warehouses. However, years later, experts discovered they were creepy ‘death whistles’ that made piercing noises resembling a human scream, which the ancient Aztecs may have used during ceremonies, sacrifices, or during battles to strike fear into their enemies.

The Aztec Death Whistles were Not Common Instruments

Two skull-shaped, hollow whistles were found 20 years ago at the temple of the wind god Ehecatl, in the hands of a sacrificed male skeleton. When the whistles were finally blown, the sounds created were described as terrifying. The whistles make the sounds of “humans howling in pain, spooky gusts of whistling wind or the ‘scream of a thousand corpses” writes MailOnline.

Skeleton of a man buried at the wind god temple, Tlatelolco, with an Aztec death whistle (indicated). ( Roberto Velázquez )

Roberto Velázquez Cabrera, a mechanical engineer and founder of the Mexico-based Instituto Virtual de Investigación Tlapitzcalzin, has spent years recreating the instruments of the pre-Columbians to examine the sounds they make. He writes in MexicoLore that the death whistle in particular was not a common instrument, and was possibly reserved for sacrifices – blown just before a victim was killed in order to guide souls to the afterlife- or for use in battle.

Aztec ritual human sacrifice portrayed in the Codex Magliabechiano. ( Public Domain )

Why Did the Aztecs Use the Death Whistles?

“Some historians believe that the Aztecs used to sound the death whistle in order to help the deceased journey into the underworld. Tribes are said to have used the terrifying sounds as psychological warfare , to frighten enemies at the start of battle,” explains Oddity Central . If the whistles were worn around the necks of Aztec warriors and then used to shock their enemies at the beginning of battles, the psychological effect on an enemy of a hundred death whistles screaming in unison might have been great, unhinging and undermining their resolve.

Illustration of Aztec Warriors as found in the Codex Mendoza

Illustration of Aztec Warriors as found in the Codex Mendoza. ( Public Domain )

Another hypothesis proposes that the sacrificed man was given the whistles so he could blow into them after he died and use the spirit of the wind to guide him safely through the Underworld.

Los Angeles Times reports that some experts think the ancients used the different tones to send the brain into certain states of consciousness, or even to manage or treat illnesses . Some of the replica whistles created by Cabrera make sounds and tones reaching the top range of human hearing, almost inaudible to us.

Photos of a cremated Aztec death whistle, by Jorge Cervantes Martínez. ( Mexicolore)

An expert in pre-Hispanic music archaeology, Arnd Adje Both told Los Angeles Times "My experience is that at least some pre-Hispanic sounds are more destructive than positive, others are highly trance-evocative. Surely, sounds were used in all kind of cults, such as sacrificial ones, but also in healing ceremonies.”

Other types of ancient noisemakers have been found made from different materials, such as feathers, sugar cane, clay, and frog skin.

Roberto Velázquez Cabrera notes that although pre-Columbian music has been lost to us in modern times, the sounds of recreated whistles can be used to give us a better understanding of the ancients. He said, “We've been looking at our ancient culture as if they were deaf and mute. But I think all of this is tied closely to what they did, how they thought.”

Top Image: Experimental models of Aztec death whistles.



TOPICS: History; Science
KEYWORDS: aztec; death; diversity; godsgravesglyphs; screams; whistles
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To: dsc

Cortez had a reputation for being over the top cruel as a commander before he went to the New World-he was said to have been overzealous with anyone unfortunate enough to be a prisoner of his-he captured the daughter of a chief who was a rival of the Aztec leader Moctezuma-he kept her as a mistress to coerce her father into helping him defeat the Aztecs-then he turned on her father and wouldn’t give the daughter back-Cortez also impregnated the girl-their son was the 1st documented Spanish/Native American born in New Spain. When Cortez went back to Spain a few years later, he married the mistress off to one of his favorite generals, took his son away from her and to Spain-not exactly what a gentleman does-I think he was a digusting person...


41 posted on 11/18/2020 6:00:35 PM PST by Texan5 ("You've got to saddle up your boys, you've got to draw a hard line"...)
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To: Tijeras_Slim

That’s true-but it didn’t stop them from making war on someone in a country that wasn’t theirs-namely the Native Americans-I’m always amazed that it took the Spaniards so long to get the Muslims out of Spain/Al Andalus-even before the Romans came marching in, Celts had settled there-not a peaceful bunch-then you add Roman DNA over a few centuries and you’ve got a country full of mean sonsofbitches-it was an accident of nature that the Muslims didn’t get thrown out years before El Cid came along,,,


42 posted on 11/18/2020 6:12:43 PM PST by Texan5 ("You've got to saddle up your boys, you've got to draw a hard line"...)
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To: Texan5

“I think he was a digusting person”

It’s a full step from disgusting to brutal.


43 posted on 11/18/2020 6:21:56 PM PST by dsc (Do not pray for easy lives; pray to be stronger men.)
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To: dsc

He was brutal, too-supposedly even in Spain-fond of hanging captured enemy prisoners from trees and gallows on the field-tied so that they suffocated very slowly-he executed Cuatemoc, the last Aztec emperor that way, too-hanged him from a tree after he was captured. rather than take him back to the capital city and have a formal execution-bad practice by most standards...


44 posted on 11/18/2020 6:36:40 PM PST by Texan5 ("You've got to saddle up your boys, you've got to draw a hard line"...)
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To: Texan5

His was a brutal age. We do historical figures a disservice when we judge them by our own standards.


45 posted on 11/18/2020 6:43:57 PM PST by dsc (Do not pray for easy lives; pray to be stronger men.)
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To: dsc

True-which is why I point out the brutality of both sides in historical conflicts-it doesn’t make me think my Hispanic ancestors were nicer-but it does serve to show they were pretty much in the same class as Heart-ripping Native Americans, Spanish torturing/burning heretics, Italians-Borgias, anyone?-Brits with the persecution of the Scots, etc-you weren’t going to get anywhere back then by being nice-which is also why all the history-hating/denying statue smashing snowflakes are so ignorant and full of s***-they choose to ignore how far we have come and how we didn’t ride in on a unicorn...


46 posted on 11/18/2020 7:03:40 PM PST by Texan5 ("You've got to saddle up your boys, you've got to draw a hard line"...)
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To: Texan5

“which is why I point out the brutality of both sides in historical conflicts”

I prefer to focus on the heroic, the greatness of historical figures, the ways in which these world historical figures can teach us lessons.

Robert E. Lee takes a lot of flak these days because he was loyal to his state instead of the Union, but the fact remains that he was a magnificent soldier and a great man.

He has lessons to teach anyone who cares to look. However, it seems to me that when we become tendentiously even-handed, and concentrate too much on whatever transgressions are alleged, those lessons seem to be lost.


47 posted on 11/18/2020 7:24:56 PM PST by dsc (Do not pray for easy lives; pray to be stronger men.)
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To: dsc

There is no way that any historical figure who was a military leader is going to be a saint-Julius Caesar was a good example-he was certainly a brutal conqueror-one who captured and executed the leaders of kingdoms all over Europe and farther-as well as being a notorious womanizer, etc-but he was one of history’s great generals and military minds. Texas own Sam Houston was a great fighter and leader, the person who won independence for Texas(and we maybe should have stayed that way, in my opinion)-but he was also said to have been intolerant of dissenting opinions, a harsh man, a womanizer and a hard drinker.

Gengis Khan, Attila the Hun, Alaric, etc-they were all great soldiers and leaders, but no one would ever say they were not also brutal or accuse them of being nice-even General George Patton was supposedly a cruel, explosive and harsh man...


48 posted on 11/18/2020 8:28:58 PM PST by Texan5 ("You've got to saddle up your boys, you've got to draw a hard line"...)
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To: Texan5

“Texas own Sam Houston...was also said to have been intolerant of dissenting opinions, a harsh man, a womanizer and a hard drinker.”

As a Texan-in-exile, perhaps I am too forgiving of Sam Houston, but those things seem more like a recommendation than an indictment.

Years ago, on the sunny slopes of long ago, I was myself intolerant of dissenting opinions, a harsh man, a womanizer and a hard drinker.

Never founded a country, though.


49 posted on 11/18/2020 9:04:04 PM PST by dsc (Do not pray for easy lives; pray to be stronger men.)
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To: Red Badger

The first thing that came to my mind was the image of a “Planned Parenthood” building filled with bloody babies recently sacrificed.

The second thing was that gif of that lady(?) screaming.


50 posted on 11/18/2020 10:26:18 PM PST by 21twelve (Ever Vigilant. Never Fearful!)
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To: 21twelve
If you go to the video and listen, the sound is exactly like a person screaming! That took some really advanced engineering to come up with that! Aliens?.................
51 posted on 11/19/2020 5:16:57 AM PST by Red Badger (Democrats cheat. ... It's what they do. ... GUARANTEED! ... Even if it's not necessary!....)
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To: Monkey Face

Ya could have wound up in the corncrib.


52 posted on 11/22/2020 5:48:13 PM PST by SunkenCiv (Imagine an imaginary menagerie manager imagining managing an imaginary menagerie.)
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To: LibWhacker

Today Aztecs would torture victims with 23 hours of Barack 0bama’s latest audiobook.


53 posted on 11/22/2020 5:51:39 PM PST by windsorknot
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To: SunkenCiv

Yeah...um...it would have been less comfortable, for sure...;o])

‘Face

;o]


54 posted on 11/23/2020 1:29:46 AM PST by Monkey Face (You've never once washed your hands. They wash each other while you stand there staring at them.)
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