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Humanity's fascination with the moon has spawned moon gods and goddesses from Japanese, Hawaiian, Chinese, Aztec, Greek, Indian, Roman, Inuit, and Nordic civilizations spread across the annals of ...
A 1,200-pound stone head of an Aztec moon goddess has moved into the Getty Villa. So have life-size statues of a warrior adorned with eagle feathers, a duck-billed wind god and a demon known as ...
It turned out to be the Aztec Goddess of the Moon, Coyolxauhqui. The sculpture was found in an area where the Aztecs, 500 years earlier, had built the capital of their empire: the city of ...
This article was originally on a blog post platform and may be missing photos, graphics or links. See About archive blog posts. A 1,200-pound stone head of an Aztec moon goddess has moved into the ...
The discovery of this stone disk depicting the Aztec moon goddess Coyolxauhqui in 1978 prompted the excavation of the rest of the Templo Mayor (Miguelao/Wikipedia/CC BY-SA 2.0) ...
A re-interpretation of the Aztec myth of the Moon Goddess will be performed by the Latina Dance Project in "Coyolxauhqui ReMembers" at St. Ambrose University's Galvin Fine Arts Center on ...
I arrived early in the morning before the inevitable line began to form. Aztec dancers in native dress perform traditional rituals for tourists as one approaches the Templo Mayor from the Zócalo.
It turned out to be the Aztec Goddess of the Moon, Coyolxauhqui. The sculpture was found in an area where the Aztecs, 500 years earlier, had built the capital of their empire: the city of ...