https://aaeportal.com/?id=12569
Please wait while we complete your search...
Please wait while we complete your search...
Yale University Press
Accessibility Options
AA
Site search
  • Return to previous
  • Page

Mural fragment depicting two plumed coyotes with heraldic emblems

Image details
Description: Mural fragment depicting two plumed coyotes with heraldic emblems
Related content: Chapters (1) Images (200)

Select a chapter below to view this image within the text.


Description: The Ancient Americas: Art from Sacred Landscapes
Teotihuacan is called simply Las Pirámides (“The Pyramids”), in Mexico, because the colossal Pyramids of the Sun and Moon, located only an hour away from the capital, are, to many, synonymous with pre-Columbian civilization (see fig. 2). The neutral term “pyramids,” however, indicates how little we know about the archaeological site. Teotihuacan, the Aztec name for the city, means “Place of the Gods,” because the Aztec could not imagine that human hands could have built the pyramids. In myth, …
PublisherArt Institute of Chicago
Related print edition pages: pp.135-145
https://doi.org/10.37862/aaeportal.00118.015

Note: Some of the images of artworks presented on this platform were not sourced from the original print publication. However, in order to preserve the scholarly record of the print publication, all original image captions and credit lines have been retained on the platform. Learn more about our image policies.

Loading image