Coiled serpent - Aztec, 15 century

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Coiled serpent - Aztec, 15 century
[Yes, said Talon, his voice the hiss of a coiled serpent.]
~ Spiral Bracelet in the Shape of a Serpent.
Date: 3rd century B.C.
Place of origin: Krasnodar Territory, Taman Peninsula, 15 km to the south-east of Taman
Archaeological site: Vasyurinskaya Gora Barrow, the First Middle Burial Mound, Stone Sepulchre
Medium: Gold
A winged celestial being with Zodiac markings, wrapped in a serpent, standing on a globe and holding a key. Demonology and devil-lore. 1879.
Internet Archive
~ Coiled Serpent.
Date: 15th–early 16th century
Place of origin: Mexico, Mesoamerica
Culture: Aztec
Medium: Stone
The Dangers and Deception of Meditation Exposed [Video]
The Dangers and Deception of Meditation Exposed [Video]
“This video is about the dangers and deceptions of eastern meditation. It is a mechanism for satan to put his demons in people and to further separate people from the living God, Jesus Christ of Nazareth. Satan’s goal is steal, kill, and destroy and he is deceiving the masses into thinking eastern meditation is a good thing when it…
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Kundalini
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Coiled Serpent, 15th–early 16th century Mexico; Aztec Stone; H. 11 1/2 in. (29.2 cm) Museum Purchase, 1900 (00.5.32)
Serpents held an important place in the belief systems of many peoples in ancient Mexico and they are the most frequently portrayed animals in art. Serpents had multiple connotations and inspired sky and earth imagery alike. Above all, they were fertility symbols, probably suggested by their terrestrial habitat and periodic skin shedding. At the Main Temple in the Aztec imperial capital Tenochtitlan, serpent depictions proliferate: monumental snake heads, probably representing different species—with open fanged mouths and forked tongues—flank braziers and stairways leading to the sanctuaries. The temple itself is said to have been surrounded at the time of the Spanish conquest by a serpent wall, or Coatepantli, formed by hundreds of adjoining sculptures of snakes. In three-dimensional stone sculpture, serpents are most frequently shown coiled or knotted, as in this example. Carved from a porous stone, the body of the reptile is a tightly wound knot; the tail end with two rattles in shallow relief is visible on one side. Its flattened head, emerging from the tangled body at the top, has a pointed, closed mouth, and sunken oval eyes under bulbous supraorbital ridges. The function of this snake sculpture is uncertain.
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