Aztec Calendar Stone 

As part of my visit to Mexico City with Erin for my 65th birthday, one of the experiences I most looked forward to wasexploring the city’s museums, historic homes and cultural sites. Mexico City is layered with history at every turn from ancient civilizations. colonial architecture, political movements, art, religion and modern life all existing together in one remarkable place.

On our visit to the National Museum of Anthropology, we stood before this famous Aztec Calendar Stone. Its size, detail and complexity reveal the sophistication of the Aztec Empire. 

This massive stone is more accurately known as the Sun Stone. It was created in the early 1500’s and it represents Aztec cosmology, religion, astronomy and their understanding of time itself. At the center of the face is the sun god Tonatiuh, surrounded by symbols representing cycles of time, earlier worlds, sacred days and celestial movement.

What struck me most was realizing how advanced these civilizations were long before European arrival in the Americas. The mathematical precision, astronomical knowledge, artistic craftsmanship, and spiritual complexity carved into the stone reveal an incredibly sophisticated culture.

Museums like this challenge simplistic understanding of history and remind us how much knowledge and achievement existed in ancient civilizations across the world.