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The Mayan Calendar is a fully illustrated and annotated wall-display calendar featuring full-color Mayan images, historical facts, and hieroglyphic dates correlated to the modern Julian calendar. This is the only wall-display calendar to display the correct dates of the Maya calendar for each day of the year.
Perform this script about an ancient Maya love story.
En Español y Ingles NEW for 2010. Time is cyclical. The Maya Calendar does not end in 2012. It is only a new beginning.This book and calendar is written by a Mayan Priestess (Ajkij) living in Guatemala. Simple to understand, yet thoroughly comprehensive, it will help guide you through these ancient and sacred teachings, as passed down from Mayan elders. In full color with detailed explanations, excerpts from ancient texts, and a 12- month calendar, take a journey through space and time - discover the truth for yourselves.*The proceeds from the sale of this book go to Mayan communities in Guatemala.El tiempo es cíclico. El Calendario Maya no terminará en 2012, es solo un nuevo comienzo. Este libro y calendario fue escrito por una sacerdotisa Maya (Ajkij) en Guatemala. Es un análisis informático y preciso, sin embargo, fácil de entender. Les guiará a un entendimiento de estas enseñanzas antiguas y sagradas, pasado directamente de los Ancianos Mayas. En color, con explicaciones detalladas, extractos de textos antiguos, y combinado con el calendario Gregoriano, tomen un viaje por el espacio y el tiempo - descubran la verdad por sí mismos.*Las ganancias de la venta de este libro van a comunidades Maya en Guatemala.
The only small, popular book on the important subject of ancient calendars. The study of heavenly cycles is common to most ancient cultures. The ancient Egyptians, Chinese, and Babylonians all tried to make sense of the year. But it fell to the later Mesoamerican Maya to create a series of calendars that could be cross referenced. In doing so, the Maya discovered many strange numerical harmonics. Their lunar calendar was extremely accurate-far more so than the Greek Metonic cycle; they tracked Venus to an accuracy of less than a day in five hundred years and their tables could have been used to predict eclipses seven hundred years in the future. This book will provide a much needed compact guide to the Mayan calendar systems as well as covering the essentials of calendar development throughout the world.
Described as a landmark in the ethnographic study of the Maya, this study of ritual and cosmology among the contemporary Quiché Indians of highland Guatemala has now been updated to address changes that have occurred in the last decade. The Classic Mayan obsession with time has never been better known. Here, Barbara Tedlock redirects our attention to the present-day keepers of the ancient calendar. Combining anthropology with formal apprenticeship to a diviner, she refutes long-held ethnographic assumptions and opens a door to the order of the Mayan cosmos and its daily ritual. Unable to visit the region for over ten years, Tedlock returned in 1989 to find that observance of the traditional calendar and religion is stronger than ever, despite a brutal civil war. ". . . a well-written, highly readable, and deeply convincing contribution. . . ." --Michael Coe
This daily planner includes an introduction to the Mayan "Count of Days" via the Tun (prophetic) and Tzolkin (personal) calendars; a section on Galactic Astrology; a calendar with room each day to journal or note appointments; and a quick-reference guide to the energies of the day. By correlating our Gregorian calendar to the Tzolkin calendar, we can awaken to the cosmic significance of the patterns in our lives and be better prepared for what the Divine design has in store for us. 224 pp.
By 1,800 years ago, speakers of proto-Ch’olan, the ancestor of three present-day Maya languages, had developed a calendar of eighteen twenty-day months plus a set of five days for a total of 365 days. This original Maya calendar, used extensively during the Classic period (200–900 CE), recorded in hieroglyphic inscriptions the dates of dynastic and cosmological importance. Over time, and especially after the Mayas’ contact with Europeans, the month names that had originated with these inscriptions developed into fourteen distinct traditions, each connected to a different ethnic group. Today, the glyphs encompass 250 standard forms, variants, and alternates, with about 570 meanings among all the cognates, synonyms, and homonyms. In The Maya Calendar, Weldon Lamb collects, defines, and correlates the month names in every recorded Maya calendrical tradition from the first hieroglyphic inscriptions to the present—an undertaking critical to unlocking and understanding the iconography and cosmology of the ancient Maya world. Mining data from astronomy, ethnography, linguistics, and epigraphy, and working from early and modern dictionaries of the Maya languages, Lamb pieces together accurate definitions of the month names in order to compare them across time and tradition. His exhaustive process reveals unsuspected parallels. Three-fourths of the month names, he shows, still derive from those of the original hieroglyphic inscriptions. Lamb also traces the relationship between month names as cognates, synonyms, or homonyms, and then reconstructs each name’s history of development, connecting the Maya month names in several calendars to ancient texts and archaeological finds. In this landmark study, Lamb’s investigations afford new insight into the agricultural, astronomical, ritual, and even political motivations behind names and dates in the Maya calendar. A history of descent and diffusion, of unexpected connectedness and longevity, The Maya Calendar offers readers a deep understanding of a foundational aspect of Maya culture.
You've noticed lately -- haven't you? -- that for the past few years, UFOs and phenomena in the skies are all over the place. Well, hold on to your hats! You can be pretty sure this is only going to increase in its frequency in the skies. In this book, you'll be able to read a little bit about who the beings in the UFOs are, where they're from, why they're here, and so on. In the future, it won't just be airplane pilots reporting on these things. You'll be talking about it among yourselves because regular folks just like you will be seeing these ships. This time, don't keep it quiet. Just talk about it with your neighbors or your friends online. It gives other people permission to believe what they saw. People have been taught, you know, not to believe what they see. So you can believe it -- it's real.