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  2. Santa Muerte - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Santa_Muerte

    Devotees praying to Santa Muerte in Mexico. Santa Muerte can be translated into English as either "Saint Death" or "Holy Death", although R. Andrew Chesnut, Ph.D. in Latin American history and professor of Religious studies, believes that the former is a more accurate translation because it "better reveals" her identity as a folk saint.

  3. Ghosts in Mexican culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ghosts_in_Mexican_culture

    In Mexico, the beliefs of the Maya, Nahua, Purépecha; and other indigenous groups in a supernatural world has survived and evolved, combined with the Catholic beliefs of the Spanish. The Day of the Dead (Spanish: "Día de muertos") incorporates pre-Columbian beliefs with Christian elements. Mexican literature and cinema include many stories of ...

  4. Day of the Dead - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Day_of_the_Dead

    Historian Elsa Malvido, researcher for the Mexican Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia (INAH, or National Institute of Anthropology and History) and founder of the institute's Taller de Estudios sobre la Muerte (Workshop of Studies on Death), was the first to do so in the context of her wider research into Mexican attitudes to death ...

  5. Maya death rituals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maya_death_rituals

    Maya death god in the lunar eclipse tables of the Dresden Codex. The Maya believe that the soul is bound to the body at birth. Only death or sickness can part the body and soul, with death being the permanent parting. To them, there is an afterlife that the soul reaches after death. [7]

  6. Welcome to Mexican "muerteadas," a traditional parade to ...

    www.aol.com/news/welcome-mexican-muerteadas...

    SAN AGUSTÍN ETLA, México (AP) — Daniel Dávila knew he would become a devil at age 12. Afterward, volunteers like Dávila take part in a theatrical representation in which a spiritist, one ...

  7. Personifications of death - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Personifications_of_death

    Our Lady of the Holy Death (Santa Muerte) is a female deity or folk saint of Mexican folk religion, whose popularity has been growing in Mexico and the United States in recent years. Since the pre-Columbian era , Mexican culture has maintained a certain reverence towards death, as seen in the widespread commemoration of the Day of the Dead.

  8. Ecuador gangs turn to "death saint" for protection — and ...

    www.aol.com/ecuador-gangs-turn-death-saint...

    Believed to date back to 18th century Mexico, the saint gained a following of drug lords there. Last November in Mexico, two women and a boy were shot dead at an altar to La Santa Muerte.

  9. Aztec mythology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aztec_mythology

    Aztec mythology is the body or collection of myths of the Aztec civilization of Central Mexico. [1] The Aztecs were Nahuatl-speaking groups living in central Mexico and much of their mythology is similar to that of other Mesoamerican cultures.