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Hunab Ku
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== Hunab Ku as symbol== [[File:Maya calendar (Hunab-Ku).svg|thumb|Argüelles' modification of the Hunab Ku symbol.]] After being introduced to the concept by Hunbatz Men, who discussed this concept in his 1986 book ''Religión ciencia maya'',<ref>Men 1986</ref> Argüelles popularized Hunab Ku in his 1987 book ''The Mayan Factor''.<ref>Argüelles 1987</ref> However, instead of Martínez' symbol, what Argüelles asserted was the "Hunab Ku" symbol was originally a rectangular design used by the [[Aztecs]] for a ritual cloak, known as the Mantle of Lip Plugs (or, arguably, mantle of "spider water"). The design survives today as a rug design being sold in central [[Mexico]], but was associated with the [[Milky Way]] and the god Hunab Ku by Argüelles, who modified the symbol to look more like a circular motif evoking a [[yin and yang]] symbol as well as a [[spiral galaxy]] or the blood dropped by Hunab Ku on the bones that [[Quetzalcoatl]] took from [[Ah Puch]] to create humanity. It has become associated with [[Mayanism]]. The earliest known appearance of the design is in the 16th century [[Codex Magliabechiano]], an [[Aztec]] (not Maya) document that is also known for graphic depictions of heart sacrifice drawn by indigenous artists. The design was first reproduced by [[Zelia Nuttall]], who rediscovered the Codex Magliabecchiano in Florence, Italy in 1898, in her 1901 book ''The Fundamental Principles of Old and New World Civilizations: A Comparative Research Based on a Study of the Ancient Mexican Religious, Sociological and Calendrical Systems.''<ref>Nuttall 1901: 103, Fig. 32</ref> Facsimiles of the codex were published in 1903 and 1982.<ref>Nuttall 1903</ref><ref>Boone and Nuttall 1982</ref> In 1976, the design was introduced to the weavers of Teotitlan, Oaxaca by epigrapher Gordon Whittaker, who commissioned a rug based on the design in the Codex Magliabbechiano. By 1978, it had been reproduced multiple times. Argüelles says he purchased two rugs from Teotitlan with the design, which he subsequently modified and popularized in his book ''The Mayan Factor'' (1987) and during the 1987 [[Harmonic Convergence]]. The design, rendered in black-and-white, appeared on the cover and on decorated pages of ''The House of the Dawn'' (1914), a romance novel by [[Marah Ellis Ryan]] set in [[Hopi]] territory during the [[Pueblo Revolt]] of 1680. Decorative borders on pages in the book combine this design with the [[swastika]], a motif that also appears frequently in other books by Ryan. It is likely that the illustrator for Ryan's book found the Aztec design in Nuttall's 1903 publication. [[John Major Jenkins]], who first saw the symbol as used by Argüelles, subsequently encountered Ryan's novel in a used book store.<ref>Jenkins 1994</ref> He appropriated the decorated borders for use in his [[zine]] ''Jaloj Kexoj and PHI-64: The Dual Principle Core Paradigm of Mayan Time Philosophy and its Conceptual Parallel in Old World Thought'' (1994) and also a version republished with modifications as the zine ''Aztec Sacred Science'' (1994). Despite the assertions of Martínez, Argüelles, and Jenkins, there are no known representations of "Hunab Ku" that have been documented for the ancient Maya. It is an [[Aztec]] motif (see the commentary on the [[Talk:Hunab Ku|Talk]] page for this article).
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