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Eye Goggles For A Mayan Ruler I don't spend much time watching television, but when
Novas archaeological mystery story "Lost King of the Maya" aired recently on our area Public Broadcasting Station I found
myself glued to the set. The story was about a mysterious Mayan ruler named Yax K'uk Mo, who came out of the jungle from some unknown origin and founded a dynasty of 16 rulers, lasting 400 years at
The story carved in the stones told how this ruler, whose
name means "Lord of the West," took his emblems of office before traveling 153 days to reach the settlement of A study of the complex Mayan calendar reveals that a 400-year
cycle, or Baktun, was a special "long count" or period of time that was regarded with superstition, much like people regard each
turn of a century in contemporary times. The arrival of Yax K'uk Mo in The great mystery about this ruler is that he arrived
from nowhere, united a band of feuding warlords into a single government, obviously carried on trade with neighboring people,
and left a legacy of great stone monuments and art work that still mystify and marvel all who come to visit them. More than one writer has drawn the similarities between
this strange story and the myth of the great Aztec feathered god figure Quetzalcoatl, also known among the Mayans as Kukulcan
and linked to the lesser gods Xolotl, Tlaloc, Xipe and Tezcatlipoca. That Quetzalcoatl was identified as a white skinned visitor
who came among the people, taught them numbers, astrology and culture, then went away as mysteriously as he arrived, suggests
alien visitation. If you link this story with Aaron's story about human
roots with Luciferian DNA manipulation of Earth primates, things begin to make sense. Writer Thomas Blackstar, in his own personal analysis of this same television show, wrote that he never saw "sculptures of a Mayan ruler
that looked as extraterrestrial as Yax K'uk Mo." Author Adrian Gilbert linked Yax K'uk Mo with the Aztec rain god Tlaloc and suggests that the jungle cities like Gilbert writes: "Rows of these Tialoc faces have been
found at Again we return to the initial question about Yax K'ui
Mo. How did one man emerge out of a jungle, claim authority over a band of savage people already at war with each other, and
almost overnight turn them into a civilized dynasty? This man appears to have been a real supernatural figure, capable of
making the people of the area consider him a god and turning to him for leadership. Yet the takeover was not as easy as that. Archaeologists believe they have uncovered the bones of
Yax K'ui Mo, buried deep in the ruins of a great structure used for placing the remains of all of the former rulers of that
great dynasty. From all descriptions, Yax K'ui Mo was a man who died
in his mid-fifties following a life of severe conflict and hardship that left him crippled with numerous scars and broken bones. He obviously was involved in many battles before rising to power. The record shows that the skeletal remains found in the
tomb reveal that Yax K'ui Mo's right arm was deformed from a fracture that may have been suffered in battle, the other arm
was once broken, there had been a small fracture of the skull, the first thoracic vertebra and first cervical vertebra in
the backbone showed signs of trauma and were rubbing against each other, and several ribs were fractured. Thus this ruler, toward the end of his life, probably
lived in pain. He carried a bent right arm, his lower chest was pushed in and protruding above, his shoulder pulled medially,
his upper back was so stiff he held himself rigid, he probably minimized movement of his neck, and limped on his right foot. That he lived the end of his life in |
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