- ceramics.
These avian features are
related to
Naylamp, the key
figure in Sicán mythology. The name "
Naylamp" was
first mentioned by the
Spanish chronicler...
- have the
figure of
Naylamp on its top, as many
Sican culture's
tumis are
thought to have a
depiction of this
symbolic figure.
Naylamp was a
mythic hero...
- Chornancap, the
first of them
believed to be
related to the
legend of
Naylamp.
Chotuna was a
ceremonial center of the
Sican culture, one of the cultures...
-
women in
northern Peru
drowned in the
swell when 2 m (6 ft 7 in)
waves hit
Naylamp beach, Lambayeque,
dragging a
truck into the sea. The
driver escaped. Twenty-two...
-
gardens of the
museum is a
statue dedicated to the
mythical figure of
Naylamp,
founder of the
Lambayecanos Kings' dynasty. The
front facade has a mural...
- tumi is a
ceremonial knife used by the
Lambayeque culture,
represents Naylamp. 'Sea' the sea was
always very
important for its
marine resources and legends...
- Lambayeque, Peru. The
legends of war were said to have been told by the
leaders Naylamp in the
Sican language and
Taycanamo in Chimú. The
people paid
tribute to...
- animals, a
number still live, such as a
female Tumbes crocodile known as
Naylamp and two Galápagos
tortoises known as Sansón and Job, both
weighing 220...
- more than one non-FIFA nationality. "Molinos El
Pirata FC:
Piratas del
Naylamp - De
Chalaca Copa Perú". dechalaca.com. p. es.
Archived from the original...
-
reports that the
valley was
settled by Llapchillully, the
favored tailor of
Naylamp, the
mythical founder of Lambayeque.
American anthropologist Izumi Shimada...