Page:Myths of Mexico and Peru.djvu/481



177; God L thought to be, 176; probably parallel to Yacatecutli, 177

186

(When they eat Bean Food). Festival of Tlaloc, 77

Mexican, 103-104

Mexican, 95

Peruvian, 306

122-123, 323-324

Mexican, 91

And the Maya writing, 162, 163; on God L, 176

and America, 3

His work on Mexican lore and antiquities, 58

Name given to God E by Brinton, 174

of Dr. Schellhas' system; a death-god, 172-173; thought to resemble the Aztec Xipe, 174

Doubtless Quetzalcoatl, 173

a god of the pole-star, 173

a moon-god, probably Itzamna, 173

a maize-god, similar to Centeotl, 174

Resembles God A, 174

a sun-god, 174

174

Probably a god of the Quetzalcoatl group, 175-176

Probably an earth-god, 176

Probably a god of travelling merchants, 176-177

Probably god of the "unlucky days," 177

a frog-god, 177

A water-goddess, 175

Probably tutelar of married women, 177

Connection of, with war and the food-supply, 74; Nahua conception of the limited productivity of food and rain deities, 77; American myth rich in hero-gods, 237

Work on Mexican lore, 58

(Darklings). Inhabitants of the primeval earth in Peruvian myth, 301

The first of mortals in Peruvian myth, 301

I. The state; the Maya of, 157-159. II. The city; the lost Popol Vuh found in, 207

(Serpent with Green Feathers). Kiche form of Quetzalcoatl, worshipped in Guatemala, 83, 167, 236; in the Kiche story of the creation, 209

father of Madoc, 5

I. The god assigned to Mahacutah in the Kiche story of the creation, 230; turned into stone, 231. II. Mountain at which the Kiche first saw the sun, 231

His English Voyages, cited, 5

Chieftain of the Antahuayllas; defeated by Pachacutic, 284-285; joins with Pachacutic, 285

His patronage of early American explorers, 6

And the goddess Ix chebel yax, 170

Abode of the bat-god, 171; mentioned in Popol Vuh myth, 226

In the Kiche Hades, 226

Ruin at Aké, 186

Rh