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The Stone of Motecuhzoma I on display in Mexico City. The Stone of Motecuhzoma I is a pre-Columbian stone monolith dating back to the rule of Motecuhzoma I (1440-1469), the fifth Tlatoani (ruler) of Tenochtitlan. The monolith measures approximately 12 feet in diameter and 39 inches tall, and is also known as the Stone of Motecuhzoma Ilhuicamina ...
A thirteen-step staircase leading into this temple is flanked by side struts. [4] and two feline sculptures that face the plaza in front. [8] The Cuauhcalli consists of two rooms, one rectangular and the other circular, with an opening in the wall between the two.
A cuauhxicalli or quauhxicalli (Nahuatl: [kʷaːʍʃiˈkalːi], meaning "eagle gourd bowl") was an altar-like stone vessel used by the Aztec in sacrificial ceremonies, [1] believed to be for holding human hearts. [2] [3] A cuauhxicalli would often be decorated with animal motifs, commonly eagles or jaguars. [4]
Temple University student arrested after impersonating ICE agents. At 9:35 p.m. local time Saturday, Temple University Police responded to a call after two men, ...
The stone was likely created in 1438 under the rule of Axayacatl (1469-1481). [1] [10] The artist of the Coyolxauhqui stone carved this disk in high relief out of a single large stone, 3.25 meters in diameter. Aztec historian Richard Townsend describes it as one of the most powerfully expressive sculptures of Mesoamerican art, using "an ...
Police at Temple University in Philadelphia are investigating after two students allegedly impersonated U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents at a business on campus over the weekend.
Tyler Sabapathy, an 18-year-old Temple University freshman, is dead after he fell from a light pole on the streets of Philadelphia following the Eagles' NFC championship win on Sunday.
The Stone of Tizoc, Tizoc Stone or Sacrificial Stone is a large, round, carved Aztec stone. Because of a shallow, round depression carved in the center of the top surface, it may have been a cuauhxicalli or possibly a temalacatl. [1] Richard Townsend maintains, however, that the depression was made in the 16th century for unknown purposes. [2]