In Yucatec ethnography, the animal transformation involved is usually a common domestic or domesticated animal, but may also be a ghost or apparition, for example 'a creature with wings of straw mats'.2 Moreover, in the 16th century, wild animals such as jaguar and grey fox are mentioned as animal shapes of the sorcerer, together with the ah uaay xibalba or 'underworld transformer'.3 Some sort of 'devil's pact' seems to be implied. The Yucatec way has its counterparts among other Maya groups. In Tzotzil ethnography, the way (here called wayihel or chanul45) is more often an animal companion and refers not only to domestic animals, but also to igneous powers such as meteor and lightning. In Tzeltal Cancuc, the nagual animal companion is considered a 'caster of disease'.6 Other names found are: lab, labil, wayixelal or vayijelal, way and wayxel or wayjel.7
A Classic Maya hieroglyph is read as way (wa-ya) by Houston and Stuart. These authors assert that a glyph representing a stylised, frontal 'Ahau' (Ajaw) face half covered by a jaguar-pelt represents the way, with syllabic wa and ya elements attached to the main sign clarifying its meaning.8 Many way animals are distinguished by (i) a shoulder cape or scarf tied in front; (ii) a splashing of jaguar spots or other jaguar characteristics; (iii) the attribute of an upturned 'jar of darkness'; and (iv) fire elements.9
The Classic wayob include a far wider array of shapes than the 20th-century ones from Yucatán (insofar as the latter have been reported), with specific names assigned to each of them. They include not only many mammals (especially jaguars) and birds, but also apparitions and spooks: hybrids of deer and spider monkey, walking skeletons, a self-decapitating man, a young man within a fire, etc.10 The animal wayob are likely to be transformative shapes of human beings, the walking skeletons (Maya Death Gods) more particularly of the ah uaay xibalba transformers.
At times, the name of the way is followed by an 'emblem glyph' giving the name of a specific Maya kingdom (or perhaps its ruling family).11 The skeletal way prominent on a Tonina stucco wall carries the severed head of a defeated opponent.12
Diccionario Maya Cordemex 1980, p. 916. - Barrera Vásquez, Alfredo; Bastarrachea Manzano, Juan Ramón; Brito Sansores, William, eds. (1980). Diccionario Maya Cordemex: maya-español, español-maya. with collaborations by Refugio Vermont Salas, David Dzul Góngora, and Domingo Dzul Poot. Mérida, Mexico: Ediciones Cordemex. OCLC 7550928. https://search.worldcat.org/oclc/7550928 ↩
Redfield & Villa Rojas 1934, pp. 178–180. - Redfield, Robert; Villa Rojas, Alfonso (1934) [1964]. Chan Kom, A Maya Village. University of Chicago Press. OCLC 634014054. https://search.worldcat.org/oclc/634014054 ↩
Roys 1965, pp. 166–171. - Roys, Ralph Loveland (1965). Ritual of the Bacabs. University of Oklahoma Press. OCLC 492341. https://search.worldcat.org/oclc/492341 ↩
Calvin 1997, p. 870. - Calvin, Inga (1997). "Where the Wayob Live: A Further Examination of Classic Maya Supernaturals". In Justin Kerr (ed.). The Maya Vase Book: A Corpus of Rollout Photographs of Maya Vases. Vol. 5. New York: Kerr Associates. pp. 868–883. ↩
Pitt-Rivers 1970, p. 186. - Pitt-Rivers, Julian (1970). "Spiritual Power in Central America: The Naguals of Chiapas". In Mary Douglas (ed.). Witchcraft Confessions and Accusations. pp. 183–206. ↩
Villa Rojas 1947, p. 584. - Villa Rojas, Alfonso (December 1947). "Kinship and Nagualism in a Tzeltal Community, Southeastern Mexico". American Anthropologist. 49 (4): 578–587. doi:10.1525/aa.1947.49.4.02a00050. ISSN 0002-7294. OCLC 481352036. https://doi.org/10.1525%2Faa.1947.49.4.02a00050 ↩
Diccionario Multilingue Svanal Bats'i K'opetik Siglo xxi editores argentina, S.A. 2005 p 175 ↩
Houston & Stuart 1989. - Houston, Stephen; Stuart, David (1989). The way glyph: evidence for "co-essences" among the Classic Maya (PDF online facsimile). Research Reports on Ancient Maya Writing series, no. 30. Barnardsville, NC: Center for Maya Research. OCLC 248784010. http://www.mesoweb.com/bearc/cmr/30.html ↩
See figures in Robicsek & Hales 1981, pp. 28–34. - Robicsek, Francis; Hales, Donald M. (1981). The Maya Book of the Dead: The Ceramic Codex. University of Virginia Art Museum. OCLC 9073379. https://search.worldcat.org/oclc/9073379 ↩
Grube & Nahm 1994. - Grube, Nikolai; Nahm, Werner (1994). "A Census of Xibalba". In Justin Kerr (ed.). The Maya Vase Book. Vol. 4. New York: Kerr Associates. https://archive.org/details/maya-vase-v-4-2004-1994 ↩
Freidel, Schele & Parker 1993, pp. 191–2. - Freidel, David A.; Schele, Linda; Parker, Joy (1993). Maya Cosmos: Three Thousand Years on the Shaman's Path. New York: William Morrow & Co. ISBN 0-688-10081-3. OCLC 27430287. https://search.worldcat.org/oclc/27430287 ↩
Freidel, Schele & Parker 1993, pp. 320–3. - Freidel, David A.; Schele, Linda; Parker, Joy (1993). Maya Cosmos: Three Thousand Years on the Shaman's Path. New York: William Morrow & Co. ISBN 0-688-10081-3. OCLC 27430287. https://search.worldcat.org/oclc/27430287 ↩