Nagaulism: A Study in Native American Folk-Lore and History:
Nagualism was a powerful and mysterious cult which united Mexican and Central American tribes, belonging to different linguistic stocks, into organized opposition against the government and religion of their conquerors. The members of this intertribal organization were bound together by strange faculties and an occult learning which placed them on a par with the famed thaumaturgists and theodidacts of the Old World, and which preserved even into our days the thoughts and forms of a long-suppressed ritual.

The terms "nagual, nagualism, nagualist" are not Nahuatl, but of southern origin. A nagual was a personal guardian spirit. a personal totem, chosen in accordance with fixed rules and by consultation of an elaborate calendar, which was used mainly in astrological divination.

The nagualists were powerful enchanters, whom the clergy believed to be in league with the devil and who were thought to be able to transform themselves into beasts. They used in their operations an intoxicant, peyotl, and the seeds of a plant called ololiuhqui. Intoxication was an essential part in many of these severe rites Under the old regime and before the coming of the Spaniards nagualists were especially devoted to the native cult; but it is Dr. Brinton's opinion, which he sustains with great research, that on the appearance of a foreign race and a new religion a new 'motif' was given to this old cult. Those most interested in it turned their sorceries and enchantments with organized, terrific, and often with successful energy against a common enemy.
1137374406
Nagaulism: A Study in Native American Folk-Lore and History:
Nagualism was a powerful and mysterious cult which united Mexican and Central American tribes, belonging to different linguistic stocks, into organized opposition against the government and religion of their conquerors. The members of this intertribal organization were bound together by strange faculties and an occult learning which placed them on a par with the famed thaumaturgists and theodidacts of the Old World, and which preserved even into our days the thoughts and forms of a long-suppressed ritual.

The terms "nagual, nagualism, nagualist" are not Nahuatl, but of southern origin. A nagual was a personal guardian spirit. a personal totem, chosen in accordance with fixed rules and by consultation of an elaborate calendar, which was used mainly in astrological divination.

The nagualists were powerful enchanters, whom the clergy believed to be in league with the devil and who were thought to be able to transform themselves into beasts. They used in their operations an intoxicant, peyotl, and the seeds of a plant called ololiuhqui. Intoxication was an essential part in many of these severe rites Under the old regime and before the coming of the Spaniards nagualists were especially devoted to the native cult; but it is Dr. Brinton's opinion, which he sustains with great research, that on the appearance of a foreign race and a new religion a new 'motif' was given to this old cult. Those most interested in it turned their sorceries and enchantments with organized, terrific, and often with successful energy against a common enemy.
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Nagaulism: A Study in Native American Folk-Lore and History:

Nagaulism: A Study in Native American Folk-Lore and History:

by Daniel G. Brinton
Nagaulism: A Study in Native American Folk-Lore and History:

Nagaulism: A Study in Native American Folk-Lore and History:

by Daniel G. Brinton

Paperback

$6.99 
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Overview

Nagualism was a powerful and mysterious cult which united Mexican and Central American tribes, belonging to different linguistic stocks, into organized opposition against the government and religion of their conquerors. The members of this intertribal organization were bound together by strange faculties and an occult learning which placed them on a par with the famed thaumaturgists and theodidacts of the Old World, and which preserved even into our days the thoughts and forms of a long-suppressed ritual.

The terms "nagual, nagualism, nagualist" are not Nahuatl, but of southern origin. A nagual was a personal guardian spirit. a personal totem, chosen in accordance with fixed rules and by consultation of an elaborate calendar, which was used mainly in astrological divination.

The nagualists were powerful enchanters, whom the clergy believed to be in league with the devil and who were thought to be able to transform themselves into beasts. They used in their operations an intoxicant, peyotl, and the seeds of a plant called ololiuhqui. Intoxication was an essential part in many of these severe rites Under the old regime and before the coming of the Spaniards nagualists were especially devoted to the native cult; but it is Dr. Brinton's opinion, which he sustains with great research, that on the appearance of a foreign race and a new religion a new 'motif' was given to this old cult. Those most interested in it turned their sorceries and enchantments with organized, terrific, and often with successful energy against a common enemy.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781663537829
Publisher: Barnes & Noble Press
Publication date: 07/21/2020
Pages: 66
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.16(d)

About the Author

Daniel G. Brinton (May 13, 1837 – July 31, 1899) was an American surgeon, historian, archaeologist and ethnologist. He was a member of numerous learned societies in the United States and in Europe and was president at different times of the Numismatic and Antiquarian Society of Philadelphia, of the American Folklore Society, the American Philosophical Society, and of the American Association for the Advancement of Science.
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