>>119793736cont:
>>119757825>>119758148>>119760109Next episode prob, the end of episode 5 showed the Temple of the Niches at El Tajin as
>>119785934 notes, which is seen in the opening behind her. We also see a Voladores tower, which is associated with the Totonac civilization, who are associated (but not nessacarily the builders of) El Tajin + Xanastaku also is seen in the ending using an intrument used in the Voladores ceremoney.
>>119785939>>119786059>>119786148>>119786311>>119785939>>119786607>>119786651>>119787006>>119788069>>119788614>>119789133Mesoamerican gender norms are complicated, I had written up a big reply to people back when they were debating if Zyanya being a warrior was accurate or not that I didn't get around to posting, but I don't have time to go dig that up or re-locate it right now
It would have differered depending on the specific culture/civilization and perhaps to reply to
>>119787006 even the specific city-state (the Nahuatl term for this being "Alteptl", Maya, Zapotec, etc had equivalent concepts): We have a few records of the Mexica of Tenochtitlan, the Texcoca, Tlaxcalteca (all 3 of whom belonged to the broader Nahua culture; what
>>119787131 says isn't quite true, "Aztec' can mean either the Mexica speffically, the Nahuas as a whole, or the "Aztec Empire", which was an alliance between Tenochtitlan, Texcoco, and Tlacopan, and their collective conquered subjects, and included most but not every Nahua states (tlaxcala was never conquered for example), and a bunch of non-nahua states, such as maya, zapotec, mixtec, totonac, otomi, huastec, etc ones) the Purepecha, Totonac, Zapotec, Mixtec, etc commenting on each other and the sterotypes they had of one another. Off the top of my head I believe the Mexica thought Purepecha women dressed scandalously, and ate too much fish, the Texcoca thought the Mexica were violent and not as refined as themselves, the Zapotec thought the Mixtec were haughty and hubirstic, etc
3/?