Mayan religion
Learn about this topic in these articles:
divination
- In divination: Nature and significance
…Etruscans in Italy and the Maya in Mexico as sacred; his concern was for the very destiny of his people. Divination has many rationales, and it is difficult to describe the diviner as a distinctive social type. He or she may be a shaman (private curer employing psychic techniques; see…
Read More - In divination: Intuitive divination
The idea behind Mayan maiden sacrifice was the same: a number of maidens were cast into a sacred cenote, or deep well, and those who survived after some hours were brought back to recite the messages received during their ordeal—a virtual enactment of the journey into the underworld.…
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feast and festival
- In feast: The significance of seasonal renewal in areas of other religions
Among the pre-Columbian Maya, the first month (uinal), Pop, of the New Year—which would be July in the presently used calendar—became a time for several renewal ceremonies. Old pottery and fibre mats were destroyed, and new clothes were put on. The temple was renovated to meet the needs…
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major references
- In pre-Columbian civilizations: Classic Maya religion
It has been denied that there was any such thing as a pantheon of deities in Classic times, the idea being that the worship of images was introduced by the Toltec or Itzá invaders, or both, in the Postclassic. Several gods who played…
Read More - In Mesoamerican Indian: Social, political, and religious institutions
Mesoamerican religion is a complex syncretism of indigenous beliefs and the Christianity of early Roman Catholic missionaries. A hierarchy of indigenous supernatural beings (some benign, others not) have been reinterpreted as Christian deities and saints. Mountain and water spirits are appeased at special altars in…
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Mayan society
- In Maya
…discoveries shed some light on Mayan religion, which was based on a pantheon of nature gods, including those of the Sun, the Moon, rain, and corn. A priestly class was responsible for an elaborate cycle of rituals and ceremonies. Closely related to Mayan religion—indeed, inextricable from it—was the impressive development…
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mushroom cults
- In drug cult: History of drug use in religion
…a mushroom cult in the Mayan culture of Central America. Columbus reported the use of snuffs, as referred to above. The Spanish priest-historian Bernardino de Sahagún reported with disapproval the cultic use of mushrooms in Mexico in the 16th century, and there were reports of the widespread use of psychotropic…
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mythology
polytheism
- In polytheism: Religions of ancient Mesoamerica
…civilizations, together with the associated Maya culture, laid great emphasis on astronomical observation and on a complex religious calendar. Important were the high god Ometecuhtli, the morning star Quetzalcóatl, and the various legends woven round Tezcatlipoca, patron of warriors, who in the form of Huit-zilopochtli was patron of the Aztec…
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symbolism
- In religious symbolism and iconography: Diagrammatic and emblematic
…in the religion of the Maya of Mexico and Central America with the four world directions—east (red), north (white), west (black), and south (yellow). The symbolism of metals and precious stones also is related to their colours (e.g., emerald with green).
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