xōlōchi

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xōlōchi

@nati0lin

I make art and stuff | mesoamerican vibes | COMMISSIONS ARE OPEN

Xikākwa, Illiniwek Katılım Eylül 2021
491 Takip Edilen20 Takipçiler
xōlōchi
xōlōchi@nati0lin·
@Majora__Z @Cozticapetztli I know kushkatan had a post back in 2020 where he illustrated Aztec male hairstyles, he showed it there and called it “ixquazontli.” I don’t remember his source rn, I’d assume Florentine but I’m not 100%
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MajoraZ
MajoraZ@Majora__Z·
Can you clarify on this? You mention a similar hairstyle used by other Indigenous cultures, but I mean like, can you post sources which establish that's what's going on here or can you point out what makes you think that? It looks like a diadem kinda like the Xiuhuitzolli to me , but I admit that I'm not super informed on Piltzintecuhtli/Tonatiuh iconography, so I could be mistaken!
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Cozticapetztli
Cozticapetztli@Cozticapetztli·
Well, I tried Drawing clothes in this game is torture
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xōlōchi
xōlōchi@nati0lin·
@Majora__Z @Cozticapetztli Tēskatl Ihpōka has the same hairstyle in Borgia. It might not be clear on Piltsin but on TI it’s evident this is a hairstyle, not headwear. He’s in the panel immediately to the right of Piltsin on this plate, 14. Also clear on P 21
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xōlōchi
xōlōchi@nati0lin·
@MiCorazonMexica Out of curiosity, why diverge so strongly with her body paint? The Relación doesn’t have many, but it does have images showing their body paint, as shown in this graphic by Daniel Parada
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Corazon Mexica
Corazon Mexica@MiCorazonMexica·
This is one of the paintings in my giveaway. I will announce the winner on Thursday. She is a noble woman of the P’urhépecha. She spins maguey fiber, drawing thread from the shredded strands that rest across her shoulders, turning the spindle in her hands. This is the work that becomes cloth, cord, and the material life of the household. Very little survives to show how noble women dressed in the late P’urhépecha empire. The cut of her garments comes from the Relación de Michoacán, while her body painting and textile patterns are drawn from ancient pottery. Her blue dyed hair, gold, and turquoise jewels place her within a world of refinement and status. She is a noblewoman. You can find this painting as a print in my Etsy shop, and you can enter the giveaway and get the chance to win the original painting. enchanting-king-26038.myflodesk.com/pzvouqpuph #Purépecha #MesoamericanArt #IndigenousArt #Agave #TextileTraditions
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xōlōchi
xōlōchi@nati0lin·
@AbbasiJuan Are there any books or other sources you recommend to learn more?
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Mexican Myths and Folklore.
Mexican Myths and Folklore.@AbbasiJuan·
Among the Huastec people, the devil, unlike in the Western canon, is not an entirely evil figure, but a "necessary evil" that represents wild nature, fertility, and the power of the night, which must be appeased with dances and offerings, although there are those who seek his favor directly, remaining under his influence after death, becoming his slaves in the underworld where they are transformed into laborers or even beasts of burden. #Mexico #indigenous
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xōlōchi
xōlōchi@nati0lin·
@MiCorazonMexica Dude, it’s been a month and you know this is stolen from a Nahua artist. Why is this still up? Please show some respect for Axolito and take it down.
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Corazon Mexica
Corazon Mexica@MiCorazonMexica·
Im pretty sure this is AI which I try to avoid, but it’s pretty(surprisingly) accurate. The hairstyle of the man, the knot of his loincloth, even the glyphs. In his cape. His cape is not tied, which is inaccurate and her hair is in the wrong hairstyle (for a couple of late Mexica empire) but I thought it was lovely so in spite of myself I am sharing. AI art is almost always so historically inaccurate. Not to mention soulless.
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vittorio
vittorio@IterIntellectus·
> be microplastics researcher 2015 > develop better detection method > can see particles 10x smaller than before > run samples > counts 100x higher than previous estimates > publish > conclusion: "more research needed" > funding expires > be different researcher 2020 > even better detection > same samples > counts higher still > publish > grant rejected: "not novel" > be researcher 2024 > can now detect nanoplastics > counts astronomical > particles in brain tissue, testes, placentas > concentrations increasing decade over decade > publish > industry response: "correlation not causation" > plastic production: up 4% every improvement in measurement finds worse news. thats not uncertainty. thats the answer
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fares . sh 🇵🇸
fares . sh 🇵🇸@fares__2001·
🇵🇸 🇵🇸 🇵🇸 🇵🇸 🇵🇸 🇵🇸 🇵🇸 My child is sick 🇵🇸 🇵🇸 🇵🇸 🇵🇸 🇵🇸 🇵🇸 🇵🇸 🇵🇸 🇵🇸 🇵🇸 🇵🇸 My child is sick 🇵🇸 🇵🇸 🇵🇸 🇵🇸 🇵🇸 🇵🇸 🇵🇸 🇵🇸 🇵🇸 🇵🇸 🇵🇸 My child is sick 🇵🇸 🇵🇸 🇵🇸 🇵🇸 🇵🇸 🇵🇸 🇵🇸 🇵🇸 🇵🇸 My child is sick 🇵🇸 🇵🇸 🇵🇸 🇵🇸 🇵🇸 🇵🇸 🇵🇸 🇵🇸 🇵🇸 🇵🇸 🇵🇸 🇵🇸 If you see this reply with a dot . chuffed.org/project/suppor…
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Amazon Piss Jugs
Amazon Piss Jugs@JeremyWard33·
Amazon vastly accelerated nitrate poisoning of an entire town and refuses to do anything about it
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slimyKris
slimyKris@slimyKris·
Hello. Retweets are super appreciated, Thank you. ko-fi.com/slimykris
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The Reclamation
The Reclamation@thereclamation4·
@UShouldn_tCare @space_canti My theory is that Aztec human sacrifice is like a deep genetic undercurrent in the Mexican genome that comes out in their love of death and gore and all things hideous. Peverting the Catholic faith and leading to the brutality of the Cartels and gangs. Incorrigible across time.
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xōlōchi
xōlōchi@nati0lin·
@Lee_H_Ovale @jah_cook @NahuatlGPT Having reread, you’re addressing op. They readily apologized and have indicated it was a misunderstanding of the source material, and likely they’ve seen other pop posts like this one. No mental health confinement needed!
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xōlōchi
xōlōchi@nati0lin·
@jah_cook @Lee_H_Ovale @NahuatlGPT It’s not that you shouldn’t rely on Spanish sources, in fact for the best results researching you must include Spanish results. However, you need to do better research before posting online if quality of information matters to you. Especially surrounding Nāwatl.
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Tlatoani_Cuauhtemoc
Tlatoani_Cuauhtemoc@Cuauhtemoc_1521·
El Lienzo de Cuauhquechollan: Una Visión Náhuatl de la Conquista De las sombras del siglo XVI emerge el Lienzo de Cuauhquechollan como un testimonio vivo de resistencia y alianza. Este códice del siglo XVI, pintado sobre una tela de algodón de 2.35 por 3.25 metros, no es solo un mapa, sino un relato pictográfico que captura la perspectiva indígena de la conquista española de Guatemala. Fue creado por los nahuas locales de la población de Quauhquechollan —hoy San Martín Huaquechula, Puebla—, para reclamar privilegios ante la Corona, evidenciando cómo los pueblos originarios se insertaron en la narrativa europea sin perder su voz. La obra inicia con una escena emblemática: un abrazo simbólico entre el gobernante nahua de la población y Hernán Cortés, flanqueado por La Malinche y un español portando una oriflama con cruz. Este gesto, datado en 1520, representa la alianza estratégica de los cuauhquecholtecas contra el yugo mexica. Bajo el mando de Jorge de Alvarado —hermano de Pedro de Alvarado—, miles de guerreros nahuas marcharon hacia el sur, co-conquistando Guatemala entre 1527 y 1529. El lienzo original se halla en el Museo Regional de Cholula, en Puebla.
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MajoraZ
MajoraZ@Majora__Z·
There were some (but a minority of) city-states which allied with Cortes to topple the Aztec, but this wasn't in South America, nor was it from the Aztec being "that evil" It was ironically because the Aztec, while conquerors, ruled loosely, enabling opportunistic side switching as a method to gain or hold onto political status See below for more info (Also Apocalypto is horribly inaccurate, see: x.com/Majora__Z/stat…) ----------- For a somewhat longer explanation While the Mexica of the Aztec capital of Tenochtitlan were conquerors, they and other major Mesoamerican powers didn't often directly govern the places they conquered (no draft animals + the terrain made it logistically iffy): Subjects usually kept their kings, laws etc, with basic obligations like to not block roads, to pay taxes (not usually of sacrificial victims: those were mostly collected in wars, not from already conquered subjects, keep in mind too EVERYBODY did sacrifices, groups allied with Cortes), and so on That meant subjects (which were STATES, not "tribes", the region had cities writing etc for millennia already, see pic) kept their own political ambitions and agency. Defecting was common, as was pledging yourself as a subject (as they got mostly left alone) or an ally to another state to take out your collective rivals or capitals, to then have higher status within that new kingdom you helped prop up THAT is what happened with Cortes and how he got allies The Mexica/Tenochtitlan got help overthrowing their old capital and rose to power this same way a century before Cortes. And decades after Cortes, various states like the Zapotec kingdom of Tehuantepec, the Iximche Maya etc allied with other Conquistadors to take out their rivals too, with the Mexica being uninvolved... actually, they may have fought ALONGSIDE the Mexica, who were in Spanish subject armies by then! So this was just a common thing, not a unique reaction to Mexica rule in particular, and not even most Spanish authors thought it was particular bad or unfair: To the contrary Cortes, Diaz, the Anonymous Conqueror, Sahagun, Duran, Acosta, and Las Casas all praised Mexica rule as dignified, just and proper (I'd argue they were TOO excusing, here) Now, Tlaxcala specifically may have resented the Mexica, yes... because they were at war, Tenochtitlan was trying to conquer Tlaxcala: It wasn't a subject already inside the empire. Texcoco, Chalco, Xochimilco etc WERE inside it, and (to varying degrees) BENEFITTED from Mexica rule, due their political marriages with Mexica royalty and the taxes Mexica conquests brought into the valley Which is why they, unlike Tlaxcala, only allied with the Conquistadors and Tlaxcala AFTER Tenochtitlan was ravaged by smallpox, multiple Mexica kings/nobles died etc. By then states had less to lose & more to gain by switching sides Even then, most Aztec subjects didn't defect; (there were ~500 Aztec subjects, arguably only a dozen or so defected) and of those that did, some only did so conditionally, unwillingly, or only specific officials/factions switched sides (EX: Ixtlilxochitl II of Texcoco and his followers defected, not his brother/the king Coanacochtzin; while Xochimilco only switched sides after being beaten and forced to etc) Even Tlaxcala, the closest thing to a innocent victim here, in contrast to the Mexica as frequent aggressors, used Cortes to attack other cities to further their own political reach, not just to strike back at the Mexica: Everybody was using and manipulating each other, it wasn't as simple as states rallying against Mexica tyranny (which as I said, wasn't much of a thing), nor Cortes dastardly playing (or graciously liberating) local states against each other There were no clear "good guys" or "bad guys", just different groups with different interests willing to go to slightly different lengths -------------------- For even more info, see: x.com/majora__z/stat… on how Cortes was used and manipulated by local kings & officials like Xicomecoatl, Ixtlixochtlli II, Xicotencatl II, and even Moctezuma II, as much as Cortes used them x.com/majora__z/stat… Touches on the motives behind Moctezuma II's actions a bit and his attempt to use Cortes (I should do a more in depth version of this) x.com/Majora__Z/stat… and x.com/Majora__Z/stat… and x.com/Majora__Z/stat… are more in depth versions of the above explanation, while docs.google.com/document/d/1PE… is an even MORE-more in depth version (and this also in turn links to stuff about Flower Wars, in the meantime since I need to make a tweet about to add here too) x.com/Majora__Z/stat… and x.com/majora__z/stat… are me addressing people who were skeptical of the above info, in case you want to see me further clarify on things x.com/Majora__Z/stat… Gives more info info on Aztec vs Mexica vs Tenochca vs Nahua etc as terms x.com/Majora__Z/stat… touches on Aztec warfare/militarism and how it was more pragmatic then ritualistic, see also docs.google.com/document/d/1JW… for more on Aztec warfare, and x.com/Majora__Z/stat… for other common conquest myths x.com/Majora__Z/stat… Has quotes of Spanish, Italian, and German sources of the time praising Aztec art, cities, systems of law and order, even ethics and virtues x.com/Majora__Z/stat… is a directory general Mesoamerican infodumps I've done, including some of the above links, but also stuff on cities, architecture, engineering, warfare, etc
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xōlōchi
xōlōchi@nati0lin·
@Itzcacalotl Just saw your other replies that it’s in Oaxaca. Wild, in GTO there’s at least one site with sunken patios and a not dissimilar layout to this site
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xōlōchi
xōlōchi@nati0lin·
@Itzcacalotl Yooo are those west Mexican sunken patios?? This isn’t Plazuelas, is it?
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Shi-Gu🐦‍⬛
Shi-Gu🐦‍⬛@Itzcacalotl·
Can anyone recognize this location? (it's not Monte Albán). Background WIP for #CodexBlack book 3
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