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Mayan Beliefs

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The Mayans believe that Mother Earth was a gigantic monster. It was an
alligator, toad, and a turtle combined. Above her was a sky with a layer for
each planet and spheres of movement for the sun and the moon. Below her was the
underworld where heavenly bodies passed when out of sight. All around her were
the spirits of rain and thunder. The deities of the food plants and animals
attended her. All nature was alive and it was constantly dying and being reborn
(Burland 1771).
The Mayans are American Indian people who lived in southern Mexico
(Miller "Maya" Grolier). The Yucatan was the center of the Mayan civilization
from about the 1st century B.C. ("Yucantan" Grolier). They flourished in Mexico
and central America from 250 to 1600 A.D. ("History of Agriculture" Grolier).
Their ancestors had crossed the Bering land Bridge from Asia (Miller "Maya"
Grolier). Honduras was once a part of the Mayan Empire. It had flourished
between 250 and 950 A.D. (Seligson "Honduras" Grolier). The Mayans also had
lived in Mexican states: Yucantan and Chiapas, British Honduras, Guatemala,
Honduras, and El Salvador (Burland 1770)
By 1200 B.C., they had dominated trade routes. The trade routes
extended from the modern Mexico state of Guerrero to Costa Rica (Miller "Maya"
Grolier). The Mayans had constant cultural and commercial contact from other
tribes such as the Aztecs. They were with the central and coastal Mexican
civilization that had influenced them and influenced other cultures (Harrison
"History of Latin America" Grolier).
The Mayans worshiped peace deities (Matthews 45). They also worshiped a
creator who lived beyond the sky, and believed it was male and female. Mayans
also believed that males were more important (Burland 1771). They explain this
with the fact that man came first (Thompson Internet). They also believe in
satisfying the creators and fear death. The Mayans had similar beliefs of
creation and similar and not similar gods with the Greeks, had a belief in a
Heaven and a Hell, four attempts at making humans and three different worlds
made.
The Greeks had believed there was nothing, that the world began with
Chaos, which is similar to the Mayan belief that there was no Earth, no sun and
no moon. The only existence was the house of Gucumatz, which is Heaven where
the father and mother of all creatures lived. The other is the house of the
Ahauab de Xibalba, which is Hell. In Hell, Hun Came and Vucub Caquix, Lords of
Hell lived (Eufraccio Internet).
The Mayans had many gods: Ah Puch, a god of death; Akhushtal, the
goddess of childbirth; Cit Bolon Tum and Ahau Chamahez, the gods of medicine;
Kan-u-Uayeyab, the god who guarded cities; Kukucan, the wind god; Ekahau, the
god of travelers and merchants (The Mythical Encyclopedia Internet); Ixtab, the
goddess of the noose and the gallows. The Mayans believed that if a person
committed suicide by a noose, he or she would go to her paradise. And Izamna is
the sun and sky god, he rules over the night. They also call him "God D." His
title is "lord of knowledge." He was the founder of Mayan culture. He taught
them script, healing, and the use of calenders and brought them his people maize,
which is corn, and cacao, a coca seed. Ixchel is the earth and moon goddess
and patroness of pregnant women. She invented the art of weaving. They think
that she was the consort of Itzamna. She had also given birth to the Bacabs
(Eufraccio Internet).
Bacabs, the children of Izamna and Ixchel, are a group of four
protective deities. They are the canopic gods. There are four Bacabs. They
stand at the four corners of the world, the cardinal points. They also
supported the heavens. The first one four of the Bacabs is Cauac. He is the
south and his color is red. Next is Ix. He is the west and his color is black.<...

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