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Aztec warfare
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== Death and burial == {{Unreferenced section|date=June 2024}} Death was an essential part of Aztec culture from sacrifice to burial. Warriors were especially a part of this cycle and cultural aspect. When a warrior died either from battle or sacrifice, a ceremony was involved. Captured warriors would be sacrificed to the sun god and in some cases, the warrior would do the sacrifice. If a warrior died in battle his corpse would be burned there on the battlefield rather than at his city-state. An arrow from the fallen warrior on the battlefield would be brought back, dressed in the Sun god insignia and burned, which is curious since arrows were little-used weapons in Mexica armies.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Carrasco |first=David |date=August 1995 |title=Give Me Some Skin: The Charisma of the Aztec Warrior |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/1063008 |journal=Mesoamerican Religions. A Special Issue on the Occasion of the Seventeenth International Congress of the History of Religions, Mexico City |volume=35 |issue=1 |pages=1β26 |jstor=1063008}}</ref> It was believed by the Aztecs that the same place for the afterlife of warriors was also the place for women who died during childbirth.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Smith |first=Michael |title=Chapter 9 The Aztecs: in Creation, Death, and the Gods |date=2011 |location=John Wiley & Sons, Incorporated}}</ref> Mourning for fallen warriors was a long and sacred process. The mourners would not bathe and groom themselves for eighty days, believing this allowed time for the fallen warrior's soul to reach the Sky of the Sun. Women had a unique role in the mourning of their dead husbands. These women would carry the cloaks of their dead husbands around with them wherever they would go. They would also let down their hair and dance in lament to the sound of beating drums.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Smith |first=Michael |title=Chapter 10 The Aztecs: in Temples and Ceremonies |date=2011}}</ref> Sons would also mourn for their dead fathers. They would carry around a small box which contained the jewelry and earplugs from his father. If an eagle warrior died their burial would be in the eagle warrior hall. They would be cremated and placed in the hall. In addition to their cremated bodies, they would be buried with jewelry, jaguar clays, and gold artifacts.
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