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Mayáhuel : ウィキペディア英語版
Mayahuel

Mayahuel () is the female divinity associated with the maguey plant among cultures of central Mexico in the Postclassic era of pre-Columbian Mesoamerican chronology, and in particular of the Aztec cultures. As the personification of the maguey plant, Mayahuel was also part of a complex of interrelated maternal and fertility goddesses in Aztec mythology and is also connected with notions of fecundity and nourishment.〔Miller & Taube (1993, p.111); see also ''n.'' 87 to folio 265r of ''Primeros memoriales'' (Sahagún 1997, p.110).〕
==Description==
Products extracted from the maguey plant (''Agave'' spp.) were used extensively across highlands and southeastern Mesoamerica, with the thorns used in ritual bloodletting ceremonies and fibers extracted from the leaves worked into ropes and cloth.〔Miller & Taube (1993, p.108)〕 Perhaps the most important maguey product is the alcoholic beverage known as pulque,〔In . Pulque is derived from a fermentation of the sweet liquid sap extracted from the plant (in (スペイン語:aguamiel), "honey-water"). See Miller & Taube (1993, p.108).〕 used prominently in many public ceremonies and on other ritual occasions. By extension, Mayahuel is often shown in contexts associated with pulque. Although some secondary sources describe her as a "pulque goddess", she remains most strongly associated with the plant as the source, rather than pulque as the end product.〔Miller & Taube (1993, pp.108,138)〕
Mayahuel has many breasts to feed her many children, the Centzon Totochtin (the 400 Rabbits). These are thought to be responsible for causing drunkenness.

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