- The
Tzotzil are an
Indigenous Maya
people of the
central highlands of Chiapas, Mexico. As of 2000, they
numbered about 298,000. The muni****lities with...
-
Tzotzil (/ˈ(t)soʊtsɪl/; Batsʼi kʼop [ɓatsʼi kʼopʰ]) is a Maya
language spoken by the
Indigenous Tzotzil Maya
people in the
Mexican state of Chiapas. Some...
-
jaguars and the
acquisition of
jaguar power have been
preserved by the
Tzotzil and Chol Maya. This
mythological type
defines the
relationship between...
-
followed by
Yucatec Maya used
daily by
nearly 850,000 people.
Tzeltal and
Tzotzil, two
other Mayan languages, are
spoken by
around half a
million people...
-
speakers (at
least 400,000 speakers)
include Yucatec Maya,
Tzeltal Maya,
Tzotzil Maya, Mixtec, and Zapotec.
According to the Law of
Linguistic Rights, Mexico...
-
Casas (Spanish: [saŋkɾisˈtoβal de las ˈkasas] ), also
known by its
native Tzotzil name,
Jovel (pronounced [xɤ̞ˈve̞l]), is a town and muni****lity located...
- a
number of the
local peoples, but met with
fierce resistance from the
Tzotzils in the highlands. The
Spanish colonial government then sent a new expedition...
-
Mexican state of
Chiapas in
southern Mexico. 99.1% of its po****tion is
Tzotzil Maya, an
indigenous people with
linguistic and
cultural ties to
other highland...
- the
Tzeltalan branch,
Tzotzil and Tzeltal, both
spoken in
Chiapas by
large and
stable or
growing po****tions (265,000 for
Tzotzil and 215,000 for Tzeltal)...
- 200
meters (7,200 feet). It is
inhabited by the
indigenous Tzotzil Maya people,
whose Tzotzil language is one of the
Mayan languages. The town
enjoys unique...