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star Templo Mayor and Museo del Templo Mayor (Great Temple)
In 1978, workmen digging on the east side of the Metropolitan Cathedral, next to the Palacio Nacional, unearthed an exquisite Aztec stone of the moon goddess Coyolxauhqui. Mexican archaeologists followed up the discovery with major excavations, and what they uncovered were interior remains of the Pyramid of Huitzilopochtli, also called the Templo Mayor (Great Temple)--the most important religious structure in the Aztec capital. What you see are the remains of pyramids that were covered by the great pyramid the Spaniards saw upon their arrival in the 16th century.

At the time of the 1521 Conquest, the site was the center of religious life for the city of 300,000. No other museum displays the variety and splendor of the Aztec Empire the way this one does. All 6,000 pieces came from the relatively small plot of excavated ruins just in front of the museum. Strolling along the walkways built over the site, visitors pass a water-collection conduit constructed during the presidency of Porfirio Díaz (1877-1911), as well as far earlier constructions. Shelters cover the ruins to protect traces of original paint work and carving. Note especially the Tzompantli, or Altar of Skulls, a common Aztec and Maya design. Explanatory plaques with building dates are in Spanish.

The Museo del Templo Mayor (Museum of the Great Temple) opened in 1987. To enter it, take the walkway to the large building in the back portion of the site, which contains fabulous artifacts from on-site excavations. Inside the door, a model of Tenochtitlán gives a good idea of the scale of the vast city of the Aztecs. The rooms and exhibits are organized by subject on many levels around a central open space. You'll see some marvelous displays of masks, figurines, tools, jewelry, and other artifacts, including the huge stone wheel of the moon goddess Coyolxauhqui ("she with bells painted upon her face") on the second floor. The goddess ruled the night, the Aztecs believed, but died at the dawning of every day, slain and dismembered by her brother, Huitzilopochtli, the sun god.

Look also for the striking lade-and-obsidian mask and the full-size terra-cotta figures of the guerreros águilas, or eagle warriors. A cutaway model of the Templo Mayor shows the layers and methods of construction.

Off the zócalo Phone: 5/542-0606 . Fax: 5/542-1111. Open: Tues-Sun 9am-5pm (last ticket sold 5pm). Admission $2.25 (valid for both ruins and museum); free Sun. Use of still camera $1.50; personal video camera $4. Metro: Zócalo.


Attractions and Activities:
Basílica de Nuestra Señora de Guadalupe Palacio Nacional and the Diego Rivera Murals
Museo Frida Kahlo Templo Mayor and Museo del Templo Mayor (Great Temple)
Museo Nacional de Antropología  
denotes a Frommer's Favorite


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