Step inside one of the world's rarest pre-Columbian manuscripts to explore its surreal imagery, celestial calendars, and the mysterious narrative of gods and rituals.

The Codex Borgia isn’t just a book; it’s a cosmic map that uses art to weave together time, ritual, and the stars. It serves as a manual for how to survive the future by viewing life's dark moments as necessary transitions toward renewal.
The Codex Borgia is a pre-Columbian manuscript from the 15th century, currently housed in the Vatican Library. It is a screenfold book made from fourteen strips of deerskin glued end-to-end to create an eleven-meter long strip. The surface is coated in a white lime plaster or gesso, providing a smooth base for vibrant, mineral-based pigments like cinnabar red and azurite blue. Because of its accordion-fold design, the codex could be stretched out to display entire ritual sequences simultaneously, functioning like an ancient widescreen cinematic experience.
The codex was a sacred tool used by priests and specialists, likely kept in temples or specialized schools called calmecacs. It served as a cosmic map and an oracle, tracking the 260-day sacred calendar and the cycles of the sun, moon, and Venus. It provided a "script" for ceremonies and technical data for agriculture and rituals. Because the imagery was highly esoteric, it required years of training to decode; misinterpreting the symbols was seen as a high-stakes error that could throw the community's relationship with the cosmos out of balance.
"Stripe Eye" and "Smoke Eye" are names given by scholars to recurring figures in the codex's central eighteen-page narrative. Stripe Eye is viewed as an "idealized ruler" or a representative of the people who undergoes a transformative journey involving a ritual ball game, a supernatural flight through heavenly mist, and a descent into the underworld. Smoke Eye is a high-level priest, often identified by curls of smoke near his eye, who acts as a "technician of the sacred." He guides Stripe Eye through various ritual stages and ultimately performs the New Fire Ceremony to renew the world.
The codex represents a total solar eclipse as a moment of extreme cosmic crisis and battle. On Page 40, the Sun God, Tonatiuh, is shown being sacrificed by Venus gods, explaining the disappearance of light. This event is managed through the help of the "cihuateteo," the spirits of women who died in childbirth, who were regarded as warriors responsible for carrying the sun through the sky. The narrative uses these images to provide a ritual framework for ensuring the sun's return and the restoration of cosmic order.
The New Fire Ceremony is the grand finale of the codex’s narrative, symbolizing total cosmic renewal. Historically performed every 52 years, the ritual involved extinguishing all fires in the kingdom and lighting a single new one to prevent the end of the world. In the codex, the priest Smoke Eye is shown drilling a new fire into the chest of a fire serpent. This act represents the successful transition from darkness and sacrifice back into a fresh, holy cycle, serving as a manual for survival and rebirth.
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