Inside Emblem Glyphs: Tracking Royal Identies at Calakmul & Dzibanche
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- Опубликовано: 17 июл 2024
- Recalling the Ancestors: Maya Traditions across Time
For ancient and contemporary Maya alike, ancestors are ever-present and fundamental to the sense of identity, heritage, power and place. Join the Penn Museum as we celebrate Maya ancestors and the cultural traditions through which communities engage them. Guests are treated to a full day of special Maya-related programming, with lectures from speakers including Dr. Charles Golden, Brandeis University, and Dr. Payson Sheets, University of Colorado Boulder; a Maya hieroglyph workshop from Simon Martin, Associate Curator, American Section.
Penn Museum often has interesting programs with consistently poor audio. Someone with some audio engineering skills should help them out.
Go to dzibanche you won't regret, it is an amazing archeological site, there were found jade masks more than calakmul, it is believed that is the place where canul dynasty born
Really interesting lecture, thanks.
Great video, much more to think about. Thank you for your interest in Maya writing. I have a few demonstrations on my page.
fascinating - I visited Calakmul recently and interesting to learn more its history as well some other sites I hadnt heard of
Fascinating information, shame the uni didn't have any staff there capable of providing or requesting audio help. The presenter was obviously unaware, but between the mike being mis-attached and all that bouncing of the laser pointer, going to have to bail at half way in.
Poor audio, can’t hear the speaker. ☹️
sound quality is brutal
use of microphone is tricky. happens to the best.
I don't remember the name of the archeologist and his wife, living in Mexico and helping translate and also teaching/preserving the Nuatl language with the locals. His first name is Dave/David.
He mentioned the Dresden codex and the work of earlier people in helping him complete his translations.
A university can't figure out how to work the audio?
In resume. We still have no idea!
Jose Lay Well, the language is alive, and these guys can technically decipher a big deal of the writings because of that.
Can't hear anything.
"his/her god" is more likely "their god"
Antz-that-crawls-on-the-ground ~~ El_lord_de_Aztlan_y_Mexico
Muy bueno, pero por favor la traducción en español (traduction un spanish)
Cute. You know an ancient figurine of Tlāloc was found in Akron Ohio under 24 inches of soil, right?
audio is bad
Some videos belong to Arab civilizations, please include Arabic subtitles in the videos
Unintelligible due to poor audio and uneven vocal frequently falling to inaudible murmur.
Have to use cc because he cannot use the mic effectively. Lots of probablies and maybies.
Rather odd, U Penn Museum should edit the title for correct spelling.
This could be really interesting but unfortunately the sound is so bad it's pointless trying to watch it.
lighting poor, lacks explanatory intro
Every time they include the introduction, everyone complains! They say 'skip the boring intro'! It seems they can't win.
Slow