SH Archive Welcome to Tenochtitlan as it was in 1520

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KorbenDallas
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Between July 1519 and September 1526, Hernando Cortés (1485-1547), the soldier and adventurer who in 1519-21 conquered for Spain what is now central and southern Mexico, sent five extended letters to Emperor Charles V in which he described his exploits and placed himself and his actions in a favorable light. This book contains the first Latin edition of Cortes’s second letter. In it, Cortés gives an account of his first meeting with the Aztec emperor, Montezuma II. Dated October 30, 1520, the letter was translated from Spanish into Latin by Petrus Savorgnanus and printed in Nuremberg, Germany, in 1524. This printing also contains the first published plan of the Aztec city of Tenochtitlán (present-day Mexico City), which Cortés and his army attacked and destroyed in May 1521. Also included is an early map of the Caribbean Basin.

This printing contains the first published plan of the Aztec city of Tenochtitlán.
1520


Tenochtitlan_1520_1.pngTenochtitlan_1520.jpgTenochtitlan_1520_1.jpg

Am I the only one, or in 1520 Tenochtitlan looked like a European town, considering that it was only conquered in 1521? Who built all those European looking buildings?

Moctezuma II
How native does he look?
Moctezuma II_2.jpgMoctezuma II_1.jpg

Source titled, "The Splendid Narrative of Ferdinand Cortes About the New Spain of the Sea and Ocean Transmitted to the Most Sacred and Invincible, Always August Charles Emperor of the Romans, King of the Spaniards in the Year of the Lord 1520: In Which is Contained Many Things Worthy of Knowledge and Admiration About the Excellent Cities of Their Provinces…Above All About the Famous City Temixtitan and Its Diverse Wonders, Which Will Wondrously Please the Reader"

Temix Titan = Tenochtitlan

temix titan_1.png

Makes me wonder why Cortes himself would call the city Temix Titan? We all know the traditional meaning of the word Titan.
  • In Greek mythology, the Titans were members of the second generation of divine beings, descending from the primordial deities and preceding the Olympians. They ruled during the legendary Golden Age, and also comprised the first pantheon of Greek deities.
Note: This OP was recovered from the Maxine archive.
Note: Archived Sh.org replies to this OP: Welcome to Tenochtitlan as it was in 1520
 
This colossus on the Chatelain Henri map in the Rumsey library, is it curious to me and who does it represent?
https://www.davidrumsey.com/luna/se...List_No,Series_No;lc:RUMSEY~8~1&mi=19&trs=878Neptune, Abaxas?
It is in many of the first engravings on Tenochtitlan "Temix-titan"
Ogilby gives us a little description about him and the city:
The famous Colossus, which towered over the Refuge of Rhodes, between whose Legs all the Ships Sailed, entering or leaving the Port, cannot compete with the Super Vuichilabuchichi Idol, whose Head touches the Arch Roof of the high Temple. Near his post, several minor images, made of flour and all kinds of herbs together and kneaded with man's blood. Along the walls there are dark vaults in which only the priests walk; above them there are great Halls, full of Presentations of their Gods, which serve as the burial places of their Kings.
In the Walls, being of an inordinate height, there are several Turrets, so high that they seem to hide their Needles in the Clouds; and to have Apartments, where the Priests Diet, Lodge and Study, which are promoted by the Marble Steps.
I'd like you to give me a few ideas of what you think about this colossus.
 

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I recently read Bernal Diaz's account. He does say Montezuma had a beard I have read recently that the Indians in the SE USA had beards, but only higher-up types were allowed to wear a beard. I don't recall if I had replied to this post on the old site, but I hadn't read Bernal Diaz at that time.

His book does not remark that Tenochtitlan was a particularly European appearing city, and he was pretty well acquainted with it, before he helped to destroy it.
 
Lately I have been making crazy hypotheses based on the Korben Dallas threads and some of my reading.
I'll try to give you a little summary ...
John Ogilby in his book full of the sources of his time: 1671 although sources are not specified, but I suspect the volume of David Ingram mentions:
In the American city of Norumbega, live a people who speak the same language and observe the same customs with Mexicans.
In this corner there are also some Alavards, or Longobards, or Lombards, as they say.
Now KD in his Norumbega thread tells us what David Ingram said, which is the following ...
He reported a populous and prosperous land dotted with large settlements, divided into a multitude of what he calls kingdoms with kings ... The Norumbega language that sounds like "Latin" added a peculiar twist to this whole legend of history. This fact or speculation is obviously not

Now let's remember KD's thread from the "Newspaper about the country that the Spanish found in 1521, called Yucatán."
Here he told us about ... King Mathozoma who is the heart / of great Venice / and the most powerful king ... On the same lake there is a great city ... Christians call it great
Venice ... Why would Cortes put it that way?
Wasn't he himself a Christian?
Why would Christians / Spanish call it Great Venice unless it reminded them of Venice?
The conquerors generally named their territories after their countries of origin.

Bernardino de Sahagun
1529, he would leave for the recently conquered New Spain (Mexico). Where, curiously, he would teach Latin to the young Nahua, mainly those children of the pipiltin (nobles) who survived the indigenous nobility.
I find "Latin" curious, if we take into account the comparison with Norumbega.
But Bernardino from 1547 devoted himself almost totally to the construction of his historical-anthropological work. Work that would bring him not a few problems: General history of the things of New Spain.
I put together about four volumes, of which only three remain today. And that by hell did not come to light until 1905 that Francisco del Paso y Troncoso published it, in the form of plates in Madrid and then in 1979.
Bernardino tells us how those who arrived before the Aztecs were the Chichimecas who later took another name: Toltecas which means: Master builder, practically these men taught all kinds of things such as astrology, about plants, construction, cultivation, obtaining precious stones, etc.

"And they were tall, with more body than those who now live, and because they were so tall they ran and jammed a lot, which is why they were called tlanquacemilhuique, which means they ran a whole day without resting."

John Ogilby in his book tells us how the Aztecs had to make their way to their promised land after countless wars more than anything and precisely with the Chichimecas that Bernardino de Sahagun spoke to us about.
What was known as New Mexico was in a way "old Mexico."
Because I have to tell you that Ogilby made the Tartars more likely to be the planters of "Native Americans" to the continent.
Which even reminds me of Fomenko's theories about Mexico as a so-called Moscow.

But looking at the two Ogilby engravings of the city of Old Mexico and New Mexico, I feel that the old one is on a smaller lagoon and the new one on a larger one or perhaps they were part of the mass as I will show below ...
https://www.davidrumsey.com/luna/se...List_No,Series_No;lc:RUMSEY~8~1&mi=15&trs=887https://www.davidrumsey.com/luna/se...List_No,Series_No;lc:RUMSEY~8~1&mi=64&trs=887Book: https://www.gutenberg.org/files/59745/59745-h/59745-h.htm
In the book published by John Ogilby in collaboration with Montanus and others.
In the part where he describes us ...
The Kingdom of Mexico or New Spain.
Limits of New Spain. gives us descriptions of nearby cities such as: Cholula, Texcoco. Mexicaltzingo, Yztacpalapa, Cayocan and Quitlavaca.
The latter catches my attention for its description:
4. Quitlavaca, by the Spanish called Venezuela, (because it is, like Venice, surrounded by water and divided into several islands).
Perhaps you already noticed, the description reminded me of that little book: "Newspaper about the country that the Spanish found in 1521, called Yucatán."
Where they tell us about that city called "Great Venice".
And since this city of Quitlavaca sounded so much like Cuernavaca to me, I decided to look for the location.

Interestingly, we have a region called Temixco.
Which sounds very familiar to me to Temix Titan, the old way they called Tenochtitlan.
The area also seems to be deep so perhaps in the past it was in a lagoon.

What do you think of all this?
I have a few other data saved but I also hope to hear from you.
Each of these threads are addictive.
 

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This colossus on the Chatelain Henri map in the Rumsey library, is it curious to me and who does it represent?
https://www.davidrumsey.com/luna/se...List_No,Series_No;lc:RUMSEY~8~1&mi=19&trs=878Neptune, Abaxas?
It is in many of the first engravings on Tenochtitlan "Temix-titan"
Ogilby gives us a little description about him and the city:
The famous Colossus, which towered over the Refuge of Rhodes, between whose Legs all the Ships Sailed, entering or leaving the Port, cannot compete with the Super Vuichilabuchichi Idol, whose Head touches the Arch Roof of the high Temple. Near his post, several minor images, made of flour and all kinds of herbs together and kneaded with man's blood. Along the walls there are dark vaults in which only the priests walk; above them there are great Halls, full of Presentations of their Gods, which serve as the burial places of their Kings.
In the Walls, being of an inordinate height, there are several Turrets, so high that they seem to hide their Needles in the Clouds; and to have Apartments, where the Priests Diet, Lodge and Study, which are promoted by the Marble Steps.
I'd like you to give me a few ideas of what you think about this colossus.

Very interesting map. Curious that it shows the aqueduct concurrent with a time human sacrifice was supposedly being performed.
The narrative tells us these roman looking aqueducts in the Americas were built by European missionaries. It has been mentioned before that the brackish lake city would need a source of fresh water.
The description of Mexico city seems to explain this away, noting the city was rebuilt after 1629. And the mention of a flood without explanation reminds me of a number of stories that suggest Jesuit sabotage of lakes and dams.


mexico city.JPG
The city of Mexico is the largest and richest place in America, it was located in the middle and between two lakes, one of fresh water and salt water. It was taken by Spanish Ferdinand Cortez on Montezuma, last emperor in the year 1521.
The wars it fought and the flood which happened there in 1629 having almost destroyed this large city. We rebuilt it as it is today on the shores of these same lakes.
 
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And how about this giant carrying the little man, maybe the giants were common at that time.?
GIGANTON.png
WE ALSO SEE THE STRONG STAR OF VERACRUZ
 
Lately I have been making crazy hypotheses based on the Korben Dallas threads and some of my reading.
I'll try to give you a little summary ...
John Ogilby in his book full of the sources of his time: 1671 although sources are not specified, but I suspect the volume of David Ingram mentions:
In the American city of Norumbega, live a people who speak the same language and observe the same customs with Mexicans.
In this corner there are also some Alavards, or Longobards, or Lombards, as they say.
Now KD in his Norumbega thread tells us what David Ingram said, which is the following ...
He reported a populous and prosperous land dotted with large settlements, divided into a multitude of what he calls kingdoms with kings ... The Norumbega language that sounds like "Latin" added a peculiar twist to this whole legend of history. This fact or speculation is obviously not

Now let's remember KD's thread from the "Newspaper about the country that the Spanish found in 1521, called Yucatán."
Here he told us about ... King Mathozoma who is the heart / of great Venice / and the most powerful king ... On the same lake there is a great city ... Christians call it great
Venice ... Why would Cortes put it that way?
Wasn't he himself a Christian?
Why would Christians / Spanish call it Great Venice unless it reminded them of Venice?
The conquerors generally named their territories after their countries of origin.

Bernardino de Sahagun
1529, he would leave for the recently conquered New Spain (Mexico). Where, curiously, he would teach Latin to the young Nahua, mainly those children of the pipiltin (nobles) who survived the indigenous nobility.
I find "Latin" curious, if we take into account the comparison with Norumbega.
But Bernardino from 1547 devoted himself almost totally to the construction of his historical-anthropological work. Work that would bring him not a few problems: General history of the things of New Spain.
I put together about four volumes, of which only three remain today. And that by hell did not come to light until 1905 that Francisco del Paso y Troncoso published it, in the form of plates in Madrid and then in 1979.
Bernardino tells us how those who arrived before the Aztecs were the Chichimecas who later took another name: Toltecas which means: Master builder, practically these men taught all kinds of things such as astrology, about plants, construction, cultivation, obtaining precious stones, etc.

"And they were tall, with more body than those who now live, and because they were so tall they ran and jammed a lot, which is why they were called tlanquacemilhuique, which means they ran a whole day without resting."

John Ogilby in his book tells us how the Aztecs had to make their way to their promised land after countless wars more than anything and precisely with the Chichimecas that Bernardino de Sahagun spoke to us about.
What was known as New Mexico was in a way "old Mexico."
Because I have to tell you that Ogilby made the Tartars more likely to be the planters of "Native Americans" to the continent.
Which even reminds me of Fomenko's theories about Mexico as a so-called Moscow.

But looking at the two Ogilby engravings of the city of Old Mexico and New Mexico, I feel that the old one is on a smaller lagoon and the new one on a larger one or perhaps they were part of the mass as I will show below ...
https://www.davidrumsey.com/luna/se...List_No,Series_No;lc:RUMSEY~8~1&mi=15&trs=887https://www.davidrumsey.com/luna/se...List_No,Series_No;lc:RUMSEY~8~1&mi=64&trs=887Book: https://www.gutenberg.org/files/59745/59745-h/59745-h.htm
In the book published by John Ogilby in collaboration with Montanus and others.
In the part where he describes us ...
The Kingdom of Mexico or New Spain.
Limits of New Spain. gives us descriptions of nearby cities such as: Cholula, Texcoco. Mexicaltzingo, Yztacpalapa, Cayocan and Quitlavaca.
The latter catches my attention for its description:
4. Quitlavaca, by the Spanish called Venezuela, (because it is, like Venice, surrounded by water and divided into several islands).
Perhaps you already noticed, the description reminded me of that little book: "Newspaper about the country that the Spanish found in 1521, called Yucatán."
Where they tell us about that city called "Great Venice".
And since this city of Quitlavaca sounded so much like Cuernavaca to me, I decided to look for the location.

Interestingly, we have a region called Temixco.
Which sounds very familiar to me to Temix Titan, the old way they called Tenochtitlan.
The area also seems to be deep so perhaps in the past it was in a lagoon.

What do you think of all this?
I have a few other data saved but I also hope to hear from you.
Each of these threads are addictive.



I find it curious how David Ingran tells us about a place called Norumbega that is related to Mexicans, both in customs and language.
Which language? That language similar to "Latin"
What did Bernardino come to teach? Latin to the Aztecs, but if they already had a relationship with the Norumbega people who speak something similar to "Latin" it sounds interesting.
Now, the Aztecs were not the first but these Chichimecas.
What Bernardino tells us about the language of these Toltecs-Chichimecas:
"And these Toltec sayings were ladinos in the Mexican language, they were not barbarians, although they did not speak it as perfectly as it is now used."
For that same reason, Nahuatl was special among the Aztecs because it was the language of these Toltec-Chichimecas who arrived with a certain Quetzalcoatl, even the first Aztec Tlatoani was of Toltec origin, it is said, called Acamapichtli.

1024px-Acamapichtli,_the_First_Aztec_King_(Reigned_1376–95)_WDL6718.png

Another thing, if the people of Norumbega were, according to Ogilby, "Lombards."
What do we know in summary about the Lombards?
They were a Germanic people originally from northern Europe who settled in the Danube Valley and from there invaded Byzantine Italy in AD 568 under the leadership of Alboino. They established the Lombard Kingdom of Italy, which lasted until AD 774, when it was conquered by the Franks.
In the 7th century work Origo gentis Langobardorum (Origin of the Lombard people) he tells us:
It tells the story of a small tribe called the Winnili, they lived in southern Scandinavia, as good Scandinavians owed their name to Odin.
"Langobardo" comes from Langbarðr, a nickname for Odin.
The name 'langobardo' came from the length of their beards, from the Germanic words lang 'long' and bard 'beard'.
Tacitus, in his work Germanía (98 AD), describes the Lombards in the following way:
The langobards, on the other hand, are distinguished by their small number. Although surrounded by a host of more powerful tribes, they are secure, not by submitting, but by defying the dangers of war.
While in Pannonia, the Lombards were first affected by Christianity, but their conversion and Christianization was largely nominal and far from complete. During Wacho's reign, they were Catholics allied with the Byzantine Empire, but Alboino converted to Arianism as an ally of the Ostrogoths and invaded Italy. All these Christian conversions affected, for the most part, the aristocracy; common people sometimes remained pagan.
If Ogilby said that these Norumbega people are Lombard and speak something similar to Latin now it makes a little more sense and having a Germanic relationship, I am not surprised by the similarity of a Norumbega Name with Nuremberg.
Now it also reminds me of that legend of the seven cities of Civola, where the city of Quivira is ruled by a long-bearded king named Tartarrax.
Another thing, if the people of Norumbega were, according to Ogilby, "Lombards."
800px-Aistulf's_Italy-es.svg.png


Yet another interesting thing, Ogilby says: The constitutions of the Tatars and Americans agree.
Tartars, without laws or legislators, who change places, both recognize the immortality of the soul, both as cannibals, eating and sacrificing human flesh. How famous was he among the ancients on the Altar of Diana in Taurica (Crimea).
Strabo relates, that ancient people consider an honorable Death to be cut into pieces, and their meat served in the Commons. Those who die of age, a natural death, are despised as criminals, and as punishment according to their demerits, they are left in the open fields, a prey of birds and beasts; some delight in that disgusting gorging on man meat, others, on the contrary, detest not only humans, but all kinds of meat.
I wonder who hated that barbarism and lived as vegetarians even in America?

Let's go back to Bernardino to answer that question, Quetzalcóatl, whose priest had the same name that they also called him Quetzalcóatl and he used to tell them many times that there was only one lord god, and that he wanted nothing more than snakes and butterflies to offer him and give him a sacrifice .
Many could not follow him and stayed and they are the ones who perhaps give testimony to the Aztecs of these Toltecas-Chichimecas and as the first Tlatoani Acamapichtli it would be said to be Tolteca.
Let's continue with more of Ogilby
The Tartars - A rude people in their religion, habits, and dwellings, and yet in all this Americans differ but very little. Lastly, how common is it among them to worship the devil?
In the Temples of Virginia there are still the horrible Images of the Demons Oka and Menetto.
Others in Virginia believe that there is a great and supreme Deity, who is eternal and forever. Tatars are also of the same type.
The stereotypes that in those times were said of the Tartars and the Scythians arise here and yet we have all these monstrous and incredible constructions everywhere, but could these wild nomads make them, who?
We already know many things about the Tartars in relation to Gengiskhan, that many were Mohammedans, Christians, there are many Jews inside as well, Tibetans and etc. That is why I do not understand these statements about them.
And since Ogilby made mention of sites with idols, an idol that was in Tenochtitlan catches my attention since it appears on various maps.

tenoctitlan.jpg

This colossus can be associated with different gods from other cultures, Neptune, a goddess Scythian perhaps.
Even this map shown in this thread made by the Cortes himself for Carlos V contains that statue.
Letters from Hernán Cortés, addressed to King Carlos V, would shape a book published in Latin, and printed in the city of Nuremberg. Four of the 11 copies included in the appendix a map apparently based on previous plans, made by the Mexica themselves, or on sketches drawn by Hernán Cortés himself.
Again, everywhere "Latin".
We could say the same about Braun and Hogenberg, Civitates Orbis Terrarum was an editorial project conceived as a complement to Abraham Ortelius' atlas of the world. Collection of panoramic views.
As I already told you: Ogilby tells how this region of Norumbega and Virginia observe the same customs as Mexicans.
Wiki says about it: it's a real sham ...
To represent a scene of religious practice in Virginia, Arnoldus Montanus in his work "America" of 1671.
The artist transformed the Mexican god into a great idol and placed it in a space based on a Mexican temple. The scene falsely depicted the natives of Virginia with a culture almost identical to that of Mexico.
Here wikipedia agrees with Ogilby on how in Virginia there were still centers for these idols

120356977_204097914467851_8285072578177268403_n.png

And in this engraving he led us to another OGILBY IN ITS REPRESENTATION OF HUITZILOPOCHTLI
Viztlipuztli was generally presented as a minor Image, called Tlaboc (TLALOC?)
Description of the Viztlipuztli image.
It was a wooden image like a man, sitting on a blue seat in a triumphant chair; at each end of which was placed a Staff with a Serpent's Head on it, from whose Forehead, which was painted blue, ran a Streak of the same color, crossing its Nose towards its Ears; on his head was a plume of feathers, the ends of which were covered with a golden varnish; his left Hand held a white Shield, in which five Feathers were glued, and on top a Laurel Bough; then the Shield put four Arrows, pretended to be sent from Heaven; in his right hand, a truncheon, full of blue stripes twisted like snakes; Behind his shoulders appeared Wings, not very different from those of a Bat, his large and round Eyes, and his Mouth extending from Ear to Ear, made him terrible to contemplate, also gaping and full of Teeth, which protruded from his Belly; on his chest were also two burning eyes, and under them a withered nose; their feet ended in claws, hung around with precious jewels, golden boxes and shields with colored feathers. The curtain behind which this idol sat did not open, except on a feast day.
I hope you noticed the people in turbans and the men in robes.
If the Norumbega people were Lombards who lived with the Byzantines for a long time, it would make people with robes and people with turbans more normal.

116720836_3541248695909018_5973638408363120314_n.png



And about that grotesque colossus also curious things arise, that he was a man, sitting in a blue seat in a triumphant chair reminds me of a certain coat of arms in the past that corresponded to Alexander the Great.
Lucas_van_Leyden_nine_worthies.jpg


About that face on his chest of a Lion perhaps, I would like to theorize that it was a shell with that figure of Leon, everything is interpreted in different ways.
Museo_del_teatro_romano_-_coraza_perfil.jpg





Now if you ask about those bat wings.
Perhaps you have seen the Saint Petersburg rostra that contains a woman with bat wings, also these wings inspired by the Mayan monster Camatzotz with origin from a giant bat according to wikipedia.
120774016_205737007637275_8989829269724791745_n.png

According to Fomenko:
The name MEXICO or MESHIKO is a slight distortion of the name MOSOCH-MESHECH or MOSCOW.
Thus was also called the vast Tartary of MOSCOW.
The word MESHECH itself could have originated from sMESHAYU ('I will mix' - translated from Russian), sMESHEniye ('Mix, mixed' - translated from Russian), that is, a mixture of races.
 
Between July 1519 and September 1526, Hernando Cortés (1485-1547), the soldier and adventurer who in 1519-21 conquered for Spain what is now central and southern Mexico, sent five extended letters to Emperor Charles V in which he described his exploits and placed himself and his actions in a favorable light. This book contains the first Latin edition of Cortes’s second letter. In it, Cortés gives an account of his first meeting with the Aztec emperor, Montezuma II. Dated October 30, 1520, the letter was translated from Spanish into Latin by Petrus Savorgnanus and printed in Nuremberg, Germany, in 1524. This printing also contains the first published plan of the Aztec city of Tenochtitlán (present-day Mexico City), which Cortés and his army attacked and destroyed in May 1521. Also included is an early map of the Caribbean Basin.

This printing contains the first published plan of the Aztec city of Tenochtitlán.
1520


Tenochtitlan_1520_1.pngTenochtitlan_1520.jpgTenochtitlan_1520_1.jpg

Am I the only one, or in 1520 Tenochtitlan looked like a European town, considering that it was only conquered in 1521? Who built all those European looking buildings?

Moctezuma II
How native does he look?
Moctezuma II_2.jpgMoctezuma II_1.jpg

Source titled, "The Splendid Narrative of Ferdinand Cortes About the New Spain of the Sea and Ocean Transmitted to the Most Sacred and Invincible, Always August Charles Emperor of the Romans, King of the Spaniards in the Year of the Lord 1520: In Which is Contained Many Things Worthy of Knowledge and Admiration About the Excellent Cities of Their Provinces…Above All About the Famous City Temixtitan and Its Diverse Wonders, Which Will Wondrously Please the Reader"

Temix Titan = Tenochtitlan

temix titan_1.png

Makes me wonder why Cortes himself would call the city Temix Titan? We all know the traditional meaning of the word Titan.
  • In Greek mythology, the Titans were members of the second generation of divine beings, descending from the primordial deities and preceding the Olympians. They ruled during the legendary Golden Age, and also comprised the first pantheon of Greek deities.
I was thinking of the name Temix Titan.

Considering that some friars considered that the apostle Thomas may have evangelized these lands before with the name Quetzalcoatl, see my related thread. Quetzalcoatl seemed to have similar characteristics to a Christian priest.

Quetzalcoatl was a white, blue-eyed individual. The friars of the XVI century tried to find the reason for the presence of the indigenous people in these lands by looking for the answer in the Bible, concluding that they were part of the dispersed tribes of Israel.
On the other hand, the image of Quetzalcoatl, a character who did not accept human sacrifices and who was chaste, came to hand so that the friars began to consider that he was some kind of apostle. Fray Diego Durán says: "That venerable man, whom they call Topiltzin [...] was according to indigenous traditions a chaste and penitent priest, of whom apparently miraculous episodes are remembered [...] this holy man was some apostle that God brought to this land".
Don Carlos de Sigüenza y Góngora wrote in the second half of the 17th century (Sigüenza y Góngora, 1959) that Quetzalcóatl was the apostle Saint Thomas, who had come to preach the Gospel"...that Saint Thomas, one of the Twelve Apostles, had migrated to this land, whom they called Quetzalcóatl, finding the coincidence of both names by the Apostle's clothing, doctrine and prophecies..."
1794, Fray Servando Teresa de Mier was invited to give the sermon in honor of the Virgin of Guadalupe. Based on data from José Ignacio Borunda, who had written his Clave general de interpretación de los jeroglíficos mexicanos, in which he established that the tilma of Juan Diego where the Guadalupana was represented was none other than the garment of Santo Tomás/Quetzalcóatl, he lashed out against the Spaniards denying that they were the first to evangelize in New Spain, since that had been done centuries before by the apostle in the figure of Quetzalcóatl.

Temix could be related to Tomas and Titan because he was in fact a Titan if we take the relation of San Cristobal, a Canaanite giant.
Sixteenth century maps from Tuscany
Sixteenth century maps from Tuscany

The murals of the temple of the Apostle Santiago in the pyramidal ruins of Tlatelolco have a mural of the giant, cananite, San Cristobal.
Google Maps
Tlatelolco (altepetl) - Wikipedia
Saint Christopher - Wikipedia

800px-Tlatelolco-ArcheologicalMap.jpg
13.png
14.png


Taking into account that Tomas founded the city of Argon or Aragon that left Preste Juan as ruler of the Indies.

argon.jpg
tartar-city-12.jpg
1587 urbano monte3.png

D. Tomas alias Judas alias Brother of Jesus.
Thomas the Apostle is commonly known as Thomas the Unbeliever because he doubted the resurrection of Jesus when he was first told of it; later, he confessed his faith, "My Lord and my God," upon seeing the wounds of Jesus' crucifixion.
According to legend, Thomas was a skilled carpenter and was asked to build a palace for the king. However, the Apostle decided to teach the king a lesson by devoting the royal grant to acts of charity and thereby laying up treasures for the heavenly abode. Although little is known about the immediate growth of the church, Bar-Daisan (154-223) reports that in his time there were Christian tribes in northern India who claimed to have been converted by Thomas and to have books and relics to prove it.
Acts of Thomas
D. Thomas could also mean Didymus Thomas .
Didymus is the middle name given to the apostle Thomas in three places in the Gospel of John: 11:16; 20:24; 21:2 .
Since Didymus and Thomas mean "twin," the true name here is Jude.
Was the apostle Thomas really the twin brother of Jesus Christ?
Twin of Jesus?
The secret of the twins Quetzalcoatl and Xolotl

KD's opinion: I believe that D. Thomas, mentioned in the 1598 map, was Thomas the Apostle , also known as Jesus' brother Judas . This is just my opinion. To be honest, for the purposes of this article, it's not really important if they were the same. What is important is that they (or he) lived at the same time as Jesus.
See the entire thread on KD very closely related.
What event turned Scythia into Tartary?

This all sounds very crazy but it is full of historical parallels to understand and it is all in the threads I will leave here, even very difficult to understand if you are just starting out in this historical parallels thing.

I don't even know if this thread is related. Is Mexico-Tenochtitlan in reality the mythic Quinsay as described by Marco Polo?

Thinking about Temix Titan, I heard sometime that those temix, theemis? were like the different regions.

photo_2022-10-21_17-58-33.jpg

Or how about a Scythian kingdom called Tomyris, Thomyris, Tamyris. Tomyris - Wikipedia
 
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