Tlaloc vessel

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 17 вер 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 21

  • @ronin6199
    @ronin6199 5 років тому +12

    I went to visit the museum of Anthropology in Mexico city a few weeks ago. We saw the huge mesolithic stone sculptures of many gods including tlaloc. As soon as the museum closed and we were leaving a huge torrent of rain began to fall from the sky. It only lasted for about an hour or maybe less. It seemed to come out of no where. It may be synchronicity, or maybe the ancient god noticed our presence and let his splendor be seen.

  • @KCarver
    @KCarver 7 років тому +4

    Always a pleasure ingesting these delightful videos.

  • @RivLoveshine
    @RivLoveshine Рік тому +1

    I love this person (lady's?) voice. I also love the videos themselves of course.

  • @gabrielacarvalho4793
    @gabrielacarvalho4793 7 років тому +3

    what you guys do is amazing.

  • @Antoinette_moctezuma
    @Antoinette_moctezuma Рік тому

    Tanks for your words full of knowledge, you really know about the Mesoamerican Culture. Tlazocamati 🖤💛💙❤️!

  • @jesusbravo7404
    @jesusbravo7404 4 роки тому +2

    Great history from ancient Mexico

  • @Sasha0927
    @Sasha0927 10 місяців тому

    That's a face only a mother (or devoted worshipper) could love, lol. The best depiction of him was around 1:06, imo. I love the matte finish of that vessel.
    I don't often think about the origins of colors - it's cool that the Mayan people have a blue specifically associated with them.
    Very curious about chinampa agriculture. It sounds like an inventive approach to growing crops.

  • @juanvarela.artemixtlan
    @juanvarela.artemixtlan 2 місяці тому

    Love&Amor!

  • @mikedaoud2164
    @mikedaoud2164 6 років тому +3

    He was also known for making lightning

  • @joyxbc1732
    @joyxbc1732 Рік тому

    I love Tláloc

  • @hwangeuiyoung8454
    @hwangeuiyoung8454 7 років тому +3

    just amaizing

  • @dman030
    @dman030 2 роки тому

    A little light jazz with your Tlaloc. :-)

  • @MissChubbington
    @MissChubbington 7 років тому +4

    "Burnt water"--interesting idea; don't know quite what that means.

    • @sfdko3291
      @sfdko3291 3 роки тому

      Coffee

    • @HeiressEllie
      @HeiressEllie Рік тому

      Probably refers to steam

    • @bennyadrianmartinez
      @bennyadrianmartinez Рік тому

      They don't either, they made it up. There's no reference in this video as to where they got that or that war was central to the Aztecs. They burned the books documenting everything including the reason for these buildings. Literally could say the opposite and it'd sound true.
      "Fire and water are opposites so placing them together on a temple is a way to depict peace and Holly brought people together that were in conflict."

    • @Antoinette_moctezuma
      @Antoinette_moctezuma Рік тому

      Atlachinolli is the symbol of water and fire, in the Nahuatl language is the metaphor of war.

    • @Antoinette_moctezuma
      @Antoinette_moctezuma Рік тому

      @@bennyadrianmartinez Totally wrong Atlachinolli “ Fire and Water” is a metaphorical way to name the war in Nahuatl language. Tlaloc is a very ancient Mesoamerican representation of the water, thunder and agriculture. The archeologists date him and his duality Chalchitlicue around at least six thousand years old. Huitzilopochtli en other hand was a Aztec-Mexica representation of strength, force and discipline. “The left humming bird” as Huitzilopochtli was known, represents the ritualistic flowery war.

  • @luckap79
    @luckap79 2 роки тому

    Tlaloc is a G !

  • @Texasmade74
    @Texasmade74 7 років тому +5

    Aztec God of lightning and thunder,rains and agriculture.He's actually very different from the Mayan God of the same or Incan.

  • @ericlopezvega7312
    @ericlopezvega7312 7 років тому +3

    cuatlicue send tlaloc "vessel" to california these days