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The 19th century discovery of chacmools in both central Mexico and the Yucatán Peninsula helped to promote the idea of a Toltec empire although the chacmool sculptures may have originated in the Maya region.
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Jan 26, 2019 · A Chac Mool is a very specific type of Mesoamerican statue associated with ancient cultures such as the Aztecs and Maya.
The figure is adorned with a headdress, earflares, bracelets, and anklets, all likely depicted as if they were made of jade. The bowl served as a receptacle for ...
Feb 3, 2017 · Chaac was the Mayan god of rain and water - the counterpart of the Aztec Tlaloc -. Chac Mool is some obscure character I've never heard of -.
Associated closely with the complex pan-Mesoamerican Feathered Serpent deity of warfare and sacrifice as well as being a manifestation of Venus (Quetzalcoatl in ...
…plaster cast of a limestone Chac Mool—a Mayan representation of the rain spirit, depicted as a male reclining figure with its knees drawn up together, its ...
At Tula and Chiche'n Itza', the chacmool was usually placed in the antechamber of a temple presumably to receive offerings or for sacrifice. Aztec chacmools ...
Jan 1, 2020 · At least two Aztec chacmools, one from Mexico City/Tenochtitlán and one now in Tacubaya, wear the distinctive goggles of this deity.121 ...
Oct 16, 2023 · Aztec chacmools bore water imagery and were associated with Tlaloc, the rain god. Their symbolism placed them on the frontier between the ...