-
Cocijo[pronunciation?] (occasionally
spelt Cociyo,
otherwise known as
Guziu in the
Zapotec language) is a
lightning deity of the pre-Columbian Zapotec...
-
deities are
Tohil in Kʼiche mythology,
Bolon Tzacab in
Yucatec mythology,
Cocijo in
Zapotec mythology, and
Tezcatlipoca in
Aztec mythology. Juracán Chaac...
- name, e.g., the Maya
version was
known as
Chaac and the
Zapotec deity as
Cocijo. Chalchiuhtlicue, or "she of the jade skirt" in Nahuatl, was the
deity connected...
- The
Zapotec culture is polytheist.
Notable deities include:
Cocijo, god of rain Coquihani, god of
light Copijcha, god of war Cozobi, god of
maize Pecala...
- mythology) Wakíŋyaŋ (Sioux/Lakota mythology)
Xolotl and
Tlaloc (Aztec mythology)
Cocijo (Zapotec mythology)
Chaac (Maya mythology)
Yopaat (Maya mythology) Chibcha****...
- Zapotecs. One
example is of San
Pedro who
resembles the
Zapotec rain god
Cocijo. The
first missionaries among the
Zapotecs were Bartolomé de Olmeda, a Mercedarian...
- 66 mm Blue
Benito Juárez,
balancing scale and book
Monte Albán, mask of
Cocijo 19 June 2006 20
August 2007
current $50 127 × 66 mm
Magenta José María Morelos...
- rain goddess,
servant of Guabancex, and
sidekick of
thunder god Guatauva.
Cocijo,
Zapotec god of lightning. Ehecatl,
Aztec god of wind. Guabancex, top Taíno...
- K'iche' Maya rain god Tlaloc, in
Aztec and all the
other Nahua religions;
Cocijo, in
Zapotec religion; Tirípeme Curicaueri, in Purépecha religion; Dza****...
-
Mound 190 is an
elite residence with the
entrance flanked by two
imposing Cocijo masks, the
Zapotec rain god. The site
dates to the Late
classic and Early...