Akots said:
On the subject of feathered serpents, what exactly is a Quetzalcoatl? I mean besides the prehistoric dinosaur-glider. I love the name, and i love the imagery it conjures up in one's imaginations, but i know nothing of it's signifigance, or where it originated from.
Historically speaking, a Quetzalcoatl is a Toltec king, born about 950 CE or thereabouts. His father, Mixcoatl, was king until he got killed by a jealous uncle (Lion King, anyone?) who took the throne.
Quetzalcoatl didn't have that name to begin with. He was a precocious genius, apparently, and his teachers gave him the name - which means "plumed serpent" - and was synonymous with "sage". Quetzalcoatl grew up and, after a fight, pushed his evil uncle into a sacrificial fire, thereby reclaiming his rightful place as king (The ciiiircle of liiiiiife.......).
Quetzalcoatl was a "bleeding-heart liberal" who abolished human sacrifice (after bumping off his uncle), declaring only snakes, birds, and plants approved for the ritual. This seriously pissed off the priests - and this is where the real Quetzalcoatl starts becoming intertwined with legend and myth. The priests hired a Bad god whose name started with a T (sorry, can't help you more than that). With the help of some other Bad gods, he got Quetzalcoatl very drunk, and used a beautiful girl to seduce him. His hangover the next morning was nothing compared to the shock of his broken vow of celibacy, and he ran away in shame, wandering around for some 20 or 30 years until he got to the Gulf of Mexico.
Promising some witnesses that "I shall return", Quetzalcoatl sailed off like General MacArthur across the sea, landing amongst the Mayas in the Yucatan peninsula, who called him Kukulkan, "feathered serpent". They loved him, but for some reason he couldn't take life anymore and went out in a blaze of glory, torching himself Buddhist monk-style (sorry). Suffering from moderate to acute death, Quetzalcoatl was unable to make his glorious return to Mexico.
The Toltecs never knew this, even after conquering the Maya; so when they became the Aztecs over time, the story of Quetzalcoatl promising to return was passed on. Like Joe DiMaggio, Quetzalcoatl was so popular that after he'd been dead (or missing, in this case) awhile, he became a god. Somehow, though, Quetzalcoatl also became white - and when about 200 Spanish Conquistadores invaded, they were able to destroy an empire of thousands of warriors, because the Aztecs were afraid to touch the white visitors, who may have been embodiments or relatives of Quetzalcoatl. Religion never hurt anyone...