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West Lord, and that's a title that he has throughout the Copan inscriptions throughout history. And then finally, the last two glyphs of the passage read "Hu'li
Uxwitikî," "he arrived at Copan." So there's no question in my mind that K'Inich Yax K'uk Mo' became a king at a very far away spot in Central Mexico and brought those emblems of office back here to Copan to found the dynasty.
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that represents his name, except for the dynastic founder Yax K'uk' Mo', who is seated on the glyph for "lord", and whose name is given in his headdress. Yax Kuk Mo is shown handing down the insignia of reign to Yax Pac. This was a form of propaganda, intended to show that Yax Pac was just as worthy
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The inscription on the top of Altar Q really tells the story about Yax K'uk Mo' and how he came to Copan. It begins with a reference to a day in the early 400s, when it says that he took the emblems of office at a place that we think is connected somehow to
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who conducted the first archeological exploration of the site in 1886. At that time the altar was located at the bottom of the staircase in
Structure 16, the central pyramid in Copán's acropolis. It has subsequently been moved to the
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was burnt, all the sculptures were torn from the temple, and another platform was built to efface the facade ...
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is the designation given to one of the most notable of the rectangular sculpted stone blocks (dubbed "
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Religious buildings and structures completed in the 770s
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119:. It was created during the rule of King
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305:. Vol. 54, no. 1. Penn Museum
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350:"Lost King of the Maya" 2001 PBS NOVA
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331:on 7 September 2014
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471:776 establishments
325:"The Copan altars"
141:Alfred P. Maudslay
103:Copán was a major
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486:Maya inscriptions
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278:. MesoWeb
195:See also
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