- The
Mazatec are an
Indigenous people of
Mexico who
inhabit the
Sierra Mazateca in the
state of
Oaxaca and some
communities in the
adjacent states of Puebla...
- The
Mazatec shamans are
known for
their ritual use of
psilocybin mushrooms,
psychoactive morning glory seeds, and
Salvia divinorum. María
Sabina was one...
- and
other indigenous languages. The
Mazatec language is
vigorous in many of the
smaller communities of the
Mazatec area, and in many towns, it is spoken...
-
Jalapa Mazatec is a
Mazatecan language. An
estimate from 1990
suggested it was
spoken by 15,000 people, one-third of whom are monolingual, in 13 villages...
-
Velada is the name of the
healing vigils carried out by
Mazatec curanderos (such as María Sabina). The
rituals involved the use of
psilocybin (magic mushrooms)...
-
Mazatec may
refer to:
Mazatec people,
indigenous inhabitants of
Sierra Mazateca in
Northern Oaxaca,
Mexico Mazatecan languages, the
subgroup of the Oto-Manguean...
-
compound salvinorin A and can
induce a
dissociative state and hallucinations.
Mazatec shamans have a long and
continuous tradition of
religious use of S. divinorum...
- Mazatlán
Mazatec is a
Mazatecan language spoken in the
Mexican state of Oaxaca, in the town of Mazatlán
Villa de Flores.
Egland (1978)
found 80% intelligibility...
- María
Sabina Magdalena García (22 July 1894 – 22
November 1985) was a
Mazatec sabia (wise woman),
shaman and poet who
lived in
Huautla de Jiménez, a town...
- Tecóatl
Mazatec, also
known as Eloxochitlán
Mazatec and
Northern Highland Mazatec, is a
Mazatecan language spoken in the
Mexican states of
Oaxaca and...