#aztec myths

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The Xantilmeh Clans: The Yopica.In the times of old, the xantilmeh had many clans who ruled  in thei

The Xantilmeh Clans: The Yopica.

In the times of old, the xantilmeh had many clans who ruled  in their underground cities, the ancient city of Ethenuke, the modern Temixtitlan, had four ruler clans: The Tepacnecatl, Tlachi, Tecuanhuey and the Yopica.

The Yopica clan it´s a trader one, they came from Danni Ba in a pilgrimage from Oaxaca to the center of México to settle in the old and forgotten ruins of Ethenuke and prosper in their walls.

The invasion of the vampire forces to Temixtitlan affected greatly to their trader costumes, and bloody rebellions happened.


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Good evening. My name is Carl Engström. I am originally from Uppsala, Sweden, and on the recommendat

Good evening. My name is Carl Engström. I am originally from Uppsala, Sweden, and on the recommendation of a friend who is a regular visitor to this page, I would like to share the following photograph of a document that I found among the belongings of my great-grandfather, Martin Engström.

My great-grandfather was born in 1895, and worked as a school teacher in Stockholm. In the 1940s, he travelled to Mexico with a British professor from his university, James Lewis Thomas Chalmers Spence.

Among the many articles he brought back from the country, this document was one of them, and from what my grandfather can remember, I know that he obtained it from a priest of a church located in a town called Yagul, Oaxaca, alluding to the fact that it was part of the evidence from a well-known case of the Spanish Inquisition against the Indians of the area during the 1650s.

I know that he came to acquire more documents of this kind, but one of his friends by profession, Elthon Kirowan, a scholar who had a shady reputation, asked him to examine them, without returning them. We know that he lived on a farm in Sussex, England, and if it is possible, attempt could be made to locate the family on the possibility that his relatives know the destiny of the other documents.

We do not want to give them to any museum, because they are part of our family legacy, but I have considered sharing a photograph of it, because apparently, it is a unique piece of Mexico’s past and it deserves to be shown to a wider public. I want also to avoid what I have heard are very long protocols in the investigatory process to expose such documents.


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cangrejovolador:Iztapaltotec “Our Lord Sandstone” Deified Sacrifitial Knife, he is an aspect of Xicangrejovolador:Iztapaltotec “Our Lord Sandstone” Deified Sacrifitial Knife, he is an aspect of Xicangrejovolador:Iztapaltotec “Our Lord Sandstone” Deified Sacrifitial Knife, he is an aspect of Xi

cangrejovolador:

Iztapaltotec “Our Lord Sandstone”

Deified Sacrifitial Knife, he is an aspect of Xipe Totec, he is an obscure God, known only from the Aztec calendar, he is patron of the Ce Tochtli (one rabbit) trecena. He is depicted as a personified knife.


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