Design inspired by Kukulkan, the serpent deity, is one of the three main gods that the Mayans believed created the world. They also believed that Kukulkan had a human form and brought rain and winds.
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ancient civilization, mayan, mayan design, mayan glyph
A reinterpretation of Itzamná - a Mayan upper god and creator deity thought to reside in the sky. Itzamná is one of the most important gods in the Classic and Postclassic Maya pantheon.
Inspired by the Mayan God A — Death God - Cizin “Farter” - Cizin is a skeleton figure with a distended abdomen, pronounced spinal column, truncated nose and grinning teeth. He resides in the Mayan Underworld Xilbalba "The Place of Fright." This is a playful reinterpretation of Cizin.
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ancient civilization, cizin, mayan, mayan death god, mayan glyph
Many U.S. historians now feel that the U.S. Constitution is influenced by Iroquois Confederacy form of governance than any European model, afterall in the Iroquois Confederacy, the chiefs were considered a servant to the people, not a king. Franklin Benjamin observed and wrote about Iroquois confederacy and was impressed by their form of democracy. This illustration reflects the Iroquois influence on the formation of the United States.
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us constituti, iroquois, benjamin franklin, iroquois confederacy, constitution