‘Tribe in Mexico ate each other’

Miss Universe Leila Lopes of Angola at a spa in Jakarta on Monday. 	— AP

Miss Universe Leila Lopes of Angola at a spa in Jakarta on Monday. — AP

Archaeologists have discovered a cache of human bones in Mexico, which they claim adds credence to rumours that an ancient tribe in that country practised cannibalism in the belief that it would help improve harvest.
A team at the Mexican National Institute of Anthropology and History says the bones were found in Durango State, in the northern part of the country, inside a cave hamlet built into a cliff, the Daily Mail reported.
The site — called Cueva del Maguey — dates back to around 1425 and was formerly home to the Xiximes tribe.
And, the archaeological trove included more than three human dozen bones which showed evidence of having been defleshed, cooked and then ritualistically marked with stone blades.
Rumours of cannibalism among the 5,000-strong Xiximes have long existed due to the historical accounts of Jesuit missionaries, which labelled the tribe “the wildest and most barbarian people of the New World”.
The Xiximes apparently believed they could guarantee a good harvest if they consumed the souls of their enemies, ate their bodies and hung their bones from trees as offerings to the spirits.
There had previously been no scientific evidence to back up those early accounts, but the team behind the discovery and subsequent research says the bones, which have laid virtually undisturbed for centuries, offer concrete proof.
“Cannibalism was a crucial aspect of their worldview, their identity. Through their rituals, cannibalism, and bone-hoarding, they marked a clear boundary between an ‘us’ and ‘them’,” said José Luis Punzo, an archaeologist with the Mexican National Institute of Anthropology and History.
The rituals were tied to the agricultural cycle of planting and sowing corn, according to the research reported in the National Geographic. After each harvest the warriors of the Xiximes were sent to hunt for flesh, preying often on lone men working in isolated conditions in the pine forest region, some 8,530 feet above sea level.
While there were battles with other tribes, and a ready menu of Spanish colonials too, only the bodies the Xiximes people had value for the rituals.

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