Kukulkan

Dragons

Yahweh and Dragon Stories

The names of these draconian rulers—such as Quetzalcoatl, Kukulkan, Quetzal, Kishak, Kokachidra, Kuchu, Kur, and Draig in Wales—often share a common phonetic element, the "k" or "ch" sound.

Cycles
Paul Wallis

A populated universe

What Moses repeated was the sound he heard, and then he had to think, "What does that sound mean?"[41:45] Generations of theologians have had to ask, "What does that sound mean?" Yahweh sounds the way it does because we’ve inserted vowels into the Tetragrammaton to make it pronounceable, and when we do that, it makes the H’s almost silent.[41:39] In "Echoes of Eden," I point out that H’s in Proto-Semitic were not silent—they sounded like this: chhh.[41:49] Now, if I tell you that all around the world there are stories of our ancestors being governed by beings that were as violent and punitive and hungry for beef, gold, and virgin girls as Yahweh appears to be in the Bible, if you go to Mesoamerica, you will read about feathered serpents or what we might call dragons called Kukumatz or Kukulkan or Quetzalcoatl.[42:24] Go to Georgia, it’s the Caucasus; Japan, you’ve got the Akuchi or Kuchi-dera; go to Spain and Portugal, Pacoca; go to Greece, it’s the Drakos.

Famous Sirian people

Akhenaten, Kukulkan, and Manco Capac held significant roles in the religious beliefs of their cultures.

Kukulkan was a revered deity in Mesoamerican religions, associated with creation, wind, rain, and learning.

Kukulkan, also known as Quetzalcoatl in Aztec mythology, is a feathered serpent deity in Mesoamerican religion.

In the traditions of the Maya civilization, Kukulkan was considered a god of wind, rain, and learning, as well as a patron of cities and merchants.

Kukulkan played a significant role in the religious beliefs of various Mesoamerican cultures, including the Maya and the Aztecs.

Kukulkan was also linked to Venus, the planet, and his movements were observed and studied by ancient astronomers.

The worship of Kukulkan persisted through different Mesoamerican cultures and time periods, and the deity remains a prominent figure in the mythology and history of the region.

Although Kukulkan was mentioned as a historical person by Maya writers of the 16th century, the earlier 9th-century texts at Chichen Itza never identified him as human and artistic representations depicted him as a Vision Serpent entwined around the figures of nobles.