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Alexandre Tokovinine
Добавлен 12 июл 2009
Lecture 27: Classic Maya texts as literature
Lecture 27: Classic Maya texts as literature
Просмотров: 819
Видео
Lecture 26: Ancient Maya graffiti and dipinti
Просмотров 8722 года назад
Lecture 26: Ancient Maya graffiti and dipinti
Lecture 25: Classic Maya courtly culture, part II
Просмотров 8902 года назад
Lecture 25: Classic Maya courtly culture, part II
Lecture 24: Classic Maya courtly culture, part I
Просмотров 1,2 тыс.2 года назад
Lecture 24: Classic Maya courtly culture, part I
Lecture 23: Maya time and time lords
Просмотров 1 тыс.2 года назад
Lecture 23: Maya time and time lords
Lecture 22: Deixis in Classic Maya texts
Просмотров 6872 года назад
Lecture 22: Deixis in Classic Maya texts
Lecture 21: Ancient Maya gods, part 2: Gods, ancestors, and naguales
Просмотров 1,4 тыс.2 года назад
Lecture 21: Ancient Maya gods, part 2: Gods, ancestors, and naguales
Lecture 20: Derived transitives, relational nouns, and adverbs
Просмотров 9282 года назад
Lecture 20: Derived transitives, relational nouns, and adverbs
Lecture 19: Ancient Maya gods, part 1: major deities and narratives
Просмотров 5 тыс.2 года назад
Lecture 19: Ancient Maya gods, part 1: major deities and narratives
Lecture 18: Transitive verbs in Hieroglyphic Mayan
Просмотров 4512 года назад
Lecture 18: Transitive verbs in Hieroglyphic Mayan
Lecture 17: Classic Maya cities in their own words
Просмотров 2,8 тыс.2 года назад
Lecture 17: Classic Maya cities in their own words
Lecture 16: Intransitive verbs in Hieroglyphic Mayan
Просмотров 4922 года назад
Lecture 16: Intransitive verbs in Hieroglyphic Mayan
Lecture 15: People and places in Classic Maya texts
Просмотров 7482 года назад
Lecture 15: People and places in Classic Maya texts
Lecture 14: Verbs in Hieroglyphic Mayan: an introduction
Просмотров 5332 года назад
Lecture 14: Verbs in Hieroglyphic Mayan: an introduction
Lecture 4: Word and Image in Maya writing
Просмотров 6 тыс.2 года назад
Lecture 4: Word and Image in Maya writing
Lecture 13: Classic Maya personhood and names
Просмотров 8582 года назад
Lecture 13: Classic Maya personhood and names
Lecture 12: More on Classic Maya nouns and adjectives
Просмотров 4342 года назад
Lecture 12: More on Classic Maya nouns and adjectives
Lecture 10: Nouns and possession in Hieroglyphic Mayan
Просмотров 7332 года назад
Lecture 10: Nouns and possession in Hieroglyphic Mayan
Lecture 9: Tags and tagging in Classic Maya texts and images
Просмотров 9622 года назад
Lecture 9: Tags and tagging in Classic Maya texts and images
Lecture 1: Introduction: the context of Maya writing
Просмотров 3,9 тыс.2 года назад
Lecture 1: Introduction: the context of Maya writing
Lecture 8: Hieroglyphic Mayan: the pronouns
Просмотров 1 тыс.2 года назад
Lecture 8: Hieroglyphic Mayan: the pronouns
Lecture 7: Classic Maya writing: spelling rules
Просмотров 9462 года назад
Lecture 7: Classic Maya writing: spelling rules
Lecture 5: Classic Maya calendar: a very, very brief introduction
Просмотров 2,3 тыс.2 года назад
Lecture 5: Classic Maya calendar: a very, very brief introduction
Lecture 3: An overview of the Classic Maya script
Просмотров 2,1 тыс.2 года назад
Lecture 3: An overview of the Classic Maya script
CMHI presentation 2016 07 29: 3D scanning project
Просмотров 2057 лет назад
CMHI presentation 2016 07 29: 3D scanning project
AVISO A TODOS LOS USUARIOS DE RUclips NOS RESERVAMOS EL DERECHO DE COMENTAR EN SU VIDEO POR LO TANTO LE INFORMAMOS QUE NOS LIMITAMOS A ESTE COMENTARIO QUE ES LA FECHA (DOMINGO 16 DE JUNIO DEL 2024 6.58 PM) QUE PONDREMOS EN SU APARTADO DE COMENTARIO DA COMO RESULTADO EL QUE YA ESTAMOS ENTERADOS DE LA CASUALIDAD DE SU VIDEO GRACIAS MARTES 18 DE JUNIO DEL 2024 1.06 AM
this was very interesting. i love your passion as an educator
What if jaguars come out
Just echoing that lectures 2 and 6 are missing. If the videos are lost, do you have any other materials like slides or notes? What's here is amazing, thank you.
Also noticing this!
God ,goddess? I don't think so... what about if they have more like Budish Idea, why not? Divine of a special person yes, with knology in agriculture for example... the problem we want to understand the ancient cultures through cristianic filters, cristians have God, angels, saint ,virgen, ect.
Christians stole their stories/narratives from the Aboriginal peoples of the land, the Gods and Goddesses of the land. They twisted the perception of God and Goddess to make you believe they're some mystery force or fiction.
Thank a lot for posting! Great material. If you could post the slides, that would be super helpful in finding particular things.
The cruciform cosmogram graffiti behind the bench at Holmul is similar to the cruciform "mazelike" graffiti scratched through the painted body of a serpent behind the bench in the inner sanctuary at the Temple of the Chac Mool, Chichen Itza.
please do yourself and your students a favor and stop spelling things with a Spanish J, especially since you do not enunciate the difference from H.
You sound like you're in an echo chamber and you are speaking too fast.
I think that’s what disturbs me most about South American history in, it was as though the spanish conquestadir were scraping the indigenous people off the bottom of their boots, and that really bothers me, and plenty of signs to say they wanted to completely eradicate everything about the culture they discovered by building Their cathedrals right on top of the native Americans temples, and that is very bothering to me, talk about reparations…..
just starting your course. Thought you should know that the lecture was interrupted by ads (thats okay) But it was trump spewing propaganda and pretty distasteful.
I doubt the poster has anything to do with ad, put that all on RUclips. If you don’t want any ads go RUclips premium….well worth the money
I have no control of the ads...
@@RB-pm2ni i completely understand, i was just taken aback
@@talk2winik I know. how frustrating!
Please excuse me for this in the beginning of the system that the city and centered around a king in the proper pattens of life the head of the tribes or town's the king was known as a Chief.
You mentioned that the origins of Maya script are difficult to trace, and it probably has as potential origin in Olmec language, probably from Zoque. What about counting and numeric symbols? It is very well known that Olmecs were using the numeric and counting symbols for a long time before mayas, and mayas were using the same symbols later. Hence, for me, it is more than probable that mayas took many ideas for communication from Olmecs and Teotihuacans, don't you think? Arquelogist Tomas Perez affirms that the Mixe-Zoque conforms the Olmec Language, script and numeric symbols.
The Maya had a very sophisticated religious ideas and theories of the world.
This is criminally underviewed and its on something (legit) criminally understudied. Im gonna share this playlist with my peers and add Maya to my list of languages from the Americas to study. Thank you.
Lectures 2 and 6 appear to be missing from the playlist 😢
Its strange that he talk so much about purely phonetic spelling is so rear, when you got languages like Macedonian, modern Turkish, Bulgarian, Serbo-Croatian, Albanian, Georgian, Slovenian and many other that are very nearly if not pure phonographic spelling. Its really not as rear or unusual as his making it out to be
He's making connections to the English-speakers in the classroom. Unfortunately, many do not know what you have mentioned and so he uses the English language as a means to compare and contrast.
@@raycarl99 Yeah thata fair😅 Still he could have mentioned that purely phonetic speling is a lot more comman then people might think. He didnt need to go into any more detale on that. I know that for someone who only knows english that this kind of spelling something of an alien concept, but still😅
Very Informative and Interesting 💯👌🏽
I think it's Better to not to tamper too much with other indigenous peoples stuff.. anymore.. kinda back off n pay more attention to your own stuff
It's important to remember history, especially if the old language is endangered. If we have no memory of the Mayans, then we also have no memory of the terrible conditions the Spanish put them through. We need to remember all of this.
Which Mayan dialect are the numbers in at 7:30?
36:11
Man if one hour is just a brief introduction then I'm afraid how complicated this truly is 😢
Amazing!
Peace & Love. Thank you for your dedicated contribution, insights, and truly appreciate you. 🙌🏼🙏🏼💫
You say the crosshatching represents a net, I've wondered about that. Clearly the Maya were proud of this graphic invention. Speaking as a draftsman the advantage of crosshatching is that if it's laid down in a clean regular way you can draw considerable detail on top of it, the crisscross of lines doesn't cross out the detail. So a dark cave -so important to the Maya- can be shown full of detail. The crosshatching reads as 'darkness' to me, not 'blackness'. Also, blobs and expanses of ink can be sticky and messy (the Patent Office forbids expanses of black from patent drawings for that reason) and many inked lines dry faster than a blob, plus they consume less ink, so the crosshatching is better in a practical scribal sense. And you mention Mayan clowns -pictures please! Wearing nets, folks found this funny. Why? I'd guess that these people did a lot of fishing, and a fisherman's clown would be a fool tangled in his own net.
At 21:00 "It shall not be lost" perhaps is a reference to to the altar's durable stone-tough self, a way to declare 'I will stand forever' or 'I shall survive the ages' or is 'I shall never be lost from memory', it's the kind of thing monuments declare, permanence in stone. And it's true! The fact that it survived the ages and is still read supports that declaration. Thank you for these lectures, I enjoy them immensely.
csicsám issza = drinks my csicsa corn beer = chitzen itza
kohol mány
I was speaking to a young Mayan man in Quintana Roo. He told me that there are many words in Maya that sound like the things that you hear in the jungle. The word for certain things that have a sound also sound like the sound, at least that is what he told me...
Mayan languages (there are some 30 languages; I assume the person you talked to spoke Yukatek, for example) do not stand out for a high percentage of onomatopoeic glosses. English probably has more. As far as I know, when it comes to hieroglyphs, only the syllable <xa> has been treated as potentially onomatopoeic in origin.
@@talk2winik He said the sounds that you hear in the jungle relate to the words of the sounds. He gave several examples. I will ask again.
@@talk2winik also makaw mo Is like that
I love your lectures. I’m currently writing a paper on the subject of Mayan gods. Could I get the proper info to cite your work as a resource?
is it true the higland Maya didnt use Maya writing?
Are there any books or workbooks available
Seconding this question! Are there any good books for studying Ch’olti or even Ch’orti?
Thank you for your classes. I hope learn classic watching all classes.
Скажите, пожалуйста, 2, 4 и 6 лекции не ждать?
It depends...
@@talk2winik очень хотелось бы, смотрю под конспект, так забирает.
@@Kaukomielinen 4 has been added. 2 is decipherment and 6 is more specifically on language identification. Either subject is well covered elsewhere.