Itzcoatl

See also: Itzcóatl

English

Itzcoatl, the fourth ruler of Tenochtitlan, in the Codex Mendoza.

Alternative forms

  • Itzcóatl
  • Itzcohuatl
  • Izcoatl (obsolete)
  • Izcohuatl (obsolete)
  • Ytzcoatl (obsolete)
  • Ytzcohuatl (obsolete)
  • Yzcohuatl (obsolete)

Etymology

From Classical Nahuatl Ītzcōātl, from itztli (obsidian) + cōātl (snake).

Proper noun

Itzcoatl

  1. The fourth ruler of Tenochtitlan.
    • 1818, R. H. Bonnycastle, Spanish America:
      Huitzilihuitl reigned twenty years, and died in 1409, and was succeeded by his brother Chimalpopoca, who, dying by his own hands in prison, to which he was tracherously conveyed by the king of Acolhuacan, was succeeded by Itzcoatl, the son of Acamapitzin, by a slave.
    • 1859, Peter F. Stout, Nicaragua: Past, Present and Future:
      He took another wife, and had by her a son, Hiutzilihiutl [sic], and by his concubines several children, of whom Izcoatl was the most renowned.

Translations

Classical Nahuatl

Etymology

itztli (obsidian) + cōātl.

Proper noun

Ītzcōātl

  1. a male given name, borne by the 4th ruler of Tenochtitlan
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