Description Coatlicue, also known as Teteoinan (also transcribed Teteo Inan) ('The Mother of Gods'), is the Aztec goddess who gave birth to the moon, stars, and Huitzilopochtli, the god of the sun and war. She is also known as Toci ('our grandmother') and Cihuacoatl ('the lady of the serpent'), the patron of women who die in childbirth.The word 'Coatlicue' is Nahuatl for 'the one with the skirt of serpents'. She is referred to variously by the epithets 'Mother Goddess of the Earth who gives birth to all celestial things', 'Goddess of Fire and Fertility', 'Goddess of Life, Death and Rebirth', and 'Mother of the Southern Stars'.She is represented as a woman wearing a skirt of writhing snakes and a necklace made of human hearts, hands and skulls. Her feet and hands are adorned with claws (for digging graves) and her breasts are depicted as hanging flaccid from nursing. Coatlicue keeps on her chest the hands, hearts and skulls of her children so they can be purified in their mother's chest.Her face is formed by two facing serpents, referring to the duality of her nature. For the Aztecs the snakes simbolized fertility, her World's motherhood also represented in her skirts. --Acoyauh (talk) 22:54, 21 January 2008 (UTC)Most Aztec artistic representations of this goddess emphasize her deadly side, because Earth, as well as loving mother, is the insatiable monster that consumes everything that lives. She represents the devouring mother, in whom both the womb and the grave exist.