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http://worldcat.org/entity/work/id/1807012816

Popol Vuh

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http://schema.org/about

http://schema.org/alternateName

  • "Language of the Seeds"
  • "Popul Vuh: The Quiché Maya Creation Myth"

http://schema.org/description

  • ""This animated short from Chile tells the tale of creation based on 'Popul vuh: the ancient stories of the Quiché, ' written by the iindigenous Maya Quiché people after the Spanish Conquest. The vibrant illustrations are taken from Mayan codices, paintings found on vessels, and stones carved with scenes from the 'Popul vuh' between the years 300-900 A.D. Accompanying the narrator is original music performed with pre-Columbian and other ethnographic instruments from the Americas. The text relates solely to the creation of the world and humankind, and gives the viewer a unique look into Mayan culture and history"--Container."
  • "This animated short from Guatemala tells the tale of creation based on "Popul Vuh: the Ancient Stories of the Quiché," written by the indigenous Maya Quiché people after the Spanish Conquest. The vibrant illustrations are taken from Mayan codices, paintings found on vessels, and stones carved with scenes from the "Popul Vuh" between the years 300-900 A.D."
  • ""This animated short from Chile tells the tale of creation based on 'Popul vuh: the ancient stories of the Quiché,' written by the iindigenous Maya Quiché people after the Spanish Conquest. The vibrant illustrations are taken from Mayan codices, paintings found on vessels, and stones carved with scenes from the 'Popul vuh' between the years 300-900 A.D. Accompanying the narrator is original music performed with pre-Columbian and other ethnographic instruments from the Americas. The text relates solely to the creation of the world and humankind, and gives the viewer a unique look into Mayan culture and history"--Container."
  • "This animated short from Guatemala tells the tale of creation based on "Popul Vuh: the Ancient Stories of the Quiché, " written by the indigenous Maya Quiché people after the Spanish Conquest. The vibrant illustrations are taken from Mayan codices, paintings found on vessels, and stones carved with scenes from the "Popul Vuh" between the years 300-900 A.D."

http://schema.org/genre

  • "Folklore"
  • "Encoded moving images"
  • "Documentary films"
  • "Nonfiction films"
  • "Ethnographic films"
  • "Streaming video"

http://schema.org/name

  • "Popol Vuh"
  • "Popol vuh"