a person's name, shortened from cipactli ("Crocodile" or "Dragon"); a calendrical name; attested male in Mexico City in the second half of the sixteenth century and female in Cuernavaca and Tepetlaoztoc
ytoca çipac = named Cipac (Cuernavaca region, ca. 1540s)
jua. cipac (Tepetlaoztoc, sixteenth century)
Marcos, Marcos Cipac, and Marcos Tlacuilol (seemingly the same person, and a painter who was painting boards to hang in the marketplace) are all named in the Annals of Juan Bautista. (ca. 1582, México)
Don Luis de Santa María Cipac (or Nanacacipactzin) is said to have been a governor of Mexico City, ca. 1536–1565. He appears on the Codex Reese (ca. 1565) or "Beinecke Map" that is held in the Beinecke Library at Yale University.
Nica toxiuhal 10 acatl, hamdres cipac alguacil = Aquí, nuestro año 10 acatl. Andrés Cipac, alguacil. (Tetzcoco, 1587)