- AD).
Yopaat was
closely related to Chaac, the Maya rain god.
Yopaat is
depicted as
bearing a
flint weapon that
represents a thunderbolt.
Yopaat was held...
- Quiriguá's
rapid expansion in the 8th
century was tied to king K'ak'
Tiliw Chan
Yopaat's military victory over Copán in 738. When the
greatest king of Copán, Uaxaclajuun...
- K'awiil was
captured and
beheaded by Quirigua's
ruler K'ak'
Tiliw Chan
Yopaat (Cauac Sky).
Although this was a
major setback, Copán's
rulers began to...
- Lady K'awiil
Yopaat (died 774), was the
queen regnant of the Maya city of Toniná
between 762 and 774. She was the
daughter of king K’inich Tuun Chapat...
- Gutiérrez González, Ma.
Eugenia (2012). B. Arroyo; L. Paiz; H. Mejía (eds.). "
Yopaat, un dios maya de la
tormenta en Quiriguá" (PDF).
Simposio de Investigaciones...
- Kʼakʼ
Tiliw Chan
Yopaat,[pronunciation?]
previously known variously as
Cauac Sky,
Kawak Sky, Butsʼ Tiliw[pronunciation?] and Butzʼ Tiʼliw, was the leader...
- Kʼakʼ Chan
Yopaat was the
eleventh dynastic ruler at Copán. He was
crowned as king in AD 578, 24 days
after the
death of Tzi-Bʼalam. At the time of his...
- Yax
Yopaat was a Maya king of the Kaan
kingdom (Calakmul) who
ruled AD 572-579. His life is
mostly a
mystery for us today. A
monument at
Dzibanche records...
-
accession of Kʼak
Tiliw Chan
Yopaat, who was to be
subject to Copan's authority. In 734 on
Altar M at Quirigua, Kʼak
Tiliw Chan
Yopaat gives himself the title...
- the
celebration "was
witnessed by Sak
Jukub Yopaat Bahlam, Holy Lord of Paʼ Chan." Also
known as
Yopaat Bahlam II, this
mysterious ruler does not appear...