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Xōchipilli [ʃoːt͡ʃiˈpilːi] is the god of art, games, dance, flowers, and song in
Aztec mythology. His name
contains the
Nahuatl words xōchitl ("flower")...
- Mācuīlxōchitl, the god of
gambling and
music as well as an
aspect of
Xōchipilli. Centzonmīmixcōah, the 400 gods of the
northern stars. Cua****tlīcac, one...
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Xochipilli,
subtitled "An
Imagined Aztec Music", is a
short composition for four wind
instruments and six
percussionists by the
Mexican composer Carlos...
- deities".[better source needed] A****ateteo
Ahwahnee Xochicuicatl cuecuechtli Xochipilli Cecilio A.
Robelo (1905).
Diccionario de Mitología
Nahoa (in Spanish)...
- such as the
Stone of the Sun (or the
Aztec calendar stone) and the
Aztec Xochipilli statue. The
museum (along with many
other Mexican national and regional...
-
Tonantzin Coatlicue,
goddess of fertility, life, death, and rebirth.
Xochipilli, god of love, art, games, beauty, dance, flowers, maize, fertility, and...
- Chávez uses the
trombone as a
substitute for the
conch in his 1940
piece Xochipilli.
American jazz
trombonist Steve Turre also
plays conches, in particular...
- god);
Tlazolteotl (a
female deity tied to
childbirth and ****uality); and
Xochipilli and
Xochiquetzal (gods of song,
dance and games). In some regions, particularly...
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cleansing and contamination,
absolver of
human guilt, and god of fate.
Xochipilli, god of flowers, pleasure, feasting,
frivolity and
artistic creativity...
- and beer Unsondo, Zulu god of the sky, sun, thunder, and
earthquakes Xochipilli, god of art, games, beauty, dance, flowers, maize, and song Xochiquetzal...