Title |
La Piedra del Sol |
Source Donors |
Lugo Villalba, Karina |
Date |
1997 |
Description |
Color scanned image of an Aztec Sun Stone astronomical time teller (not a calendar). Unlike a Gregorian calendar, the Sun Stone consists of a 260-day cycle of 13 months of 20 days each. The Sun Stone originally came from the Mayans as a way to tell the story of the five suns. Donor obtained this piece because it helped her study and understand her identity. The piece represents the four guardians: North, South, East, West. Everything rotates around the 5th sun. Belief in duality. |
Collection |
Peoples of Utah Revisited (POUR) |
Identifier |
POUR24_0055_002 |
Contributing Institution |
UMFA and Artes de Mexico |
Publisher |
Utah Historical Society |
Subject |
Art; Aztec art; Aztec calendar; Aztecs; Calendars; Culture; Duality (Logic); Mayans; Mexico--Antiquities; Mythical creatures; Pre-Columbian art; Relief (Sculpture); Religious art; Sculpture; Symbolism; Mexico City, Mexico |
Genre |
Aztec calendar |
Spatial Coverage |
Ciudad de México, , Mexico https://www.geonames.org/3527646/ciudad-de-mexico.html |
Rights Management |
Utah Historical Society |
Rights |
 |
Type |
Image |
Format |
application/pdf |
Scanned By |
Michelle Gollehon |
Metadata Cataloger |
Amy Green Larsen |
ARK |
ark:/87278/s6bc1btx |
Setname |
dha_pour |
ID |
2634938 |
Reference URL |
https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6bc1btx |