By his second wife, this god fathered four mountain-dwelling dwarves who tend maize fields in an illustration from the Codex Borgia. This god is believed to live in a mountain where a group of owl-men anointed Nezahualcoyotl after his near death. Ehecatl and his brothers dwell in a realm ruled over by this god. This god’s name is sometimes given to the four large trees in his realm that hold up the vertical universe. This god unleashed fire on the earth after his first wife, Xochiquetzal, was stolen from him by Tezcatlipoca during this god’s role as the third sun. This god, to whom many crying children were sacrificed, rules a land of eternal springtime that houses those who die by lightning or drowning. For 10 points, name this Aztec rain god. ■END■
ANSWER: Tlaloc [accept Tlālōcān; accept Four Tlálocs]
<Editors, Mythology>
= Average correct buzz position