Gold mask, Tumaco Culture
First records: 350 a. C.
Nariño, Colombia
They excelled in working with gold and platinum, the latter especially striking, since Western goldsmiths only achieved their mastery in the 18th century, given its high melting temperature.
This is what the description of the above video says:
On Good Friday the Jews paint their body colors, masks and wooden sabers and go out to look for Jesus the Nazarene. Personified by a 12 year old boy, dressed in yellow tunic, whom they chase until they catch him, and symbolically put him to death.
Then they dance to the sound of a drum and a reed flute.
The Enduring Mystery of the ‘Fool’s Cap Map of the World’
The full meaning of this 16th-century illustration may never be understood.
THE SYMBOL OF THE JEQUET, or the jester or the fool, has inspired thrones, playing cards and comic acts. But there is one particular image of the king's jester that has remained a real mystery among cartographers and historians.
In the engraving above, known colloquially as the Fool's Cap Map of the World, the intricate bust of a court jester-complete with bells and baubles-includes a face depicting the world as it had been mapped in the 16th century. Although researchers closely examine the map, they can only speculate why, when and by whom this peculiar map was made, explains map journalist Frank Jacobs in his blog on strange maps.
The Enduring Mystery of the 'Fool's Cap Map of the World'
Even in Russian lullabies.
The most frightening sleeping song Tili.tili.bom, Russian song.
What about the ice cream men?
They use circus music, they dressed in black and white in their beginnings, they are famous for stealing children both in the USA and in Mexico? black and white, music and children, like the piper.
View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r3M9JR7FeE4
African Dance Style (Zaouli) | The Most Impossible Dance in the World Explained
View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5fSQAQ-GOzw
Hopi katchina figurines (Hopi language: tithu or katsintithu), also known as kachina dolls, are carved figures, typically from aspen root, by the Hopi to instruct young girls and brides about katsinas or katsinam, the immortal beings who bring rain, control other aspects of the natural world and society, and act as messengers between humans and the spirit world.
Each year, throughout the period from the winter solstice to mid-July, these spirits, in the form of katsinas, descend on villages to dance and sing, bring rain for the next harvest and give gifts to children. The katsinas are known to be spirits of deities, natural elements or animals, or the deceased ancestors of the Hopi. Before each katsina ceremony, the men of the village will spend days carefully making figures in the likeness of the katsinam represented in that particular ceremony. The Kachina Giver then passes the figures to the daughters of the village during the ceremony.
Kachina - Wikipedia
Again the relationship with rain and thunder. The drawing of figures also reminded me of the figures in Nazca.
I consider these threads to be related as well.
The White Israeli Race
Chaharshanbe Suri and the Burning of Judas
The Inuit, Thule, & Tartarians - Was Jengiz Kaan The 2nd Coming Of Christ?
The Science and Magic of THOR and LOKI