Showing posts with label Teotihuacan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Teotihuacan. Show all posts

Teotihuacan

3 Minutes of video at the Sacred City of the Dead Gods Theotihuacan

 

15 Minutes of video at the Sacred City of the Dead Gods Theotihuacan

 

 

Mexico City Museum of Antropology Short Version 8 min

 

Mexico City Museum of Antropology Long Version 57 min min 30 talks about Theotihuacan

 

 

Valiant Thor Book that talks about Theotihuacan 22:21 Min Video Valiant Thor Scientific Teachings The Teotihuacan and Giza Pyramids

 

Was Tula The Capital of the Toltec Empire Theotihiacan?

Teotihuacan name comes from two words Teo means God in Nahuatl and Ti means God. The name stands for The City of God Wahcan.

Tula the Toltec Capitol had different variation in names such as Tollan or Tullan. It is possible to be Teotihuacan. 
(The Toltec Empire, Toltec Kingdom or Altepetl Tollan was a political entity in modern Mexico. It existed through the classic and post-classic periods of Mesoamerican chronology, but gained most of its power in the post-classic. During this time its sphere of influence reached as far away as the Yucatan Peninsula.)

Cronyn's description of the site:
"Under the ruins of Teotihuacan lies the ruins if a much earlier civilization buried beneath 15-20  feet of debris washed down from the surrounding hills."

On the ruins of this long dead metropolis arose Tula of early Nahuatl times.through the city an avenue several miles in length runs which was lined with temples.

On the Nirth it terminated  innthe temple studded wall inclosing the grand Court of the Pyramid of the Moin.

South West it passed the Pyramid of Querzalcoatl.

Midway between these extremes stood the Pyramid if the Sun, raising its bulk above the conglomeration of temples palaces and Shrines.

No diety had a greater shrine than Quetzalcoatl. Avast court over six hundred feet wide by nineteen hundred feet long surrounded by a massive walk two hundred and sixty feet thick at the base and thirty two feet high, crowded by fifteen minor temples rising from all four sides bore whitness to the reverence the Toltecs paid to their greatest and most revered ditties

The famous wall.of Babylon dwarfs into insignificance in presence if this vast sanctuary erected to the God of the Winds.

In the center if the court on a truncated Pyramid is a ceremonial altar reached on all sides by stairs containing the thirteen traditional steps representing the thirteen cycles of The First Sun Age.

In the rear of this altar stands a higher one approached by a single.stairway of 39 steps symbolically of  the 39 Ages.

(Remembet the history books were thrown in flames by the conquering Spanish.)

Vast underground stairways of soft conglomerate stone faced with cement take us to underground chambers of the fire worshipers who preceded the lava flows which inundated the southern end if the valley.

Source "Jesus in America Valiant Thor's Book of Querzalcoatl" by Valiant Thor






Teotihuacan

At its peak, around 200 AD, Teotihuacan counted a population of well over 125,000, boasted hundreds of temples and palaces, and three massive pyramids named after the Sun, the Moon, and the Feathered Serpent (itself a symbol of the planet Venus). The ruins of what is often called the Rome of America , Teotihuacan, lie a mere 50 km (31 miles) North-East of modern day Mexico City.

A view of Teotihuacan, Mexico. (CC BY-SA 2.0)

A view of Teotihuacan, Mexico. ( CC BY-SA 2.0 )

City of the Gods

By the time the Aztecs came onto the scene, at the beginning of the 14th century AD, the ancient metropolis already lay in ruins, its great pyramids covered in shrubs and vegetation. No doubt the Aztecs were left with the same questions that every modern visitor to the site is confronted with today. Who were the mysterious builders of Teotihuacan, and where had they come from? To the Aztecs, the answer to this question could be no other than the Gods themselves.

A mural showing what has been identified as the Great Goddess of Teotihuacan.

A mural showing what has been identified as the Great Goddess of Teotihuacan. ( CC BY 2.0 )

Their legends told of the arrival of wise men from a land beyond the Sea: “ They say they came to this land to rule over it ”; wrote Spanish chronicler Bernardino of Sahagún: