Aztec's calendar stone has become a national symbol of Mexico. After underestimated, forgotten and abused decades of degraded Latin American art it became one of Mexico's most national treasures. Codex Mendoza, after years of research on calendars and documents of Spanish conquistadors, it has become clear how Aztecs are actually living and that art plays such a big role in society It was. It not only gives researchers a deep insight into Aztec culture and religion, it also affects contemporary and mainstream media like fashion and graphic design.
There is a symbol similar to the central part of Aztec's calendar. The Aztec calendar stone is so familiar that it was not discovered until 1790. In the center of the calendar, there is a face design, that is, the face of God. Some of these mysterious rock paintings are the center of Aztec's calendar. Another symbol appeared in Aztec's calendar. Tecpatl It is a symbol of Flintstone. People sculpting these symbols are at least familiar with what these symbols are in different cultures. Maybe this person understands what they mean. I do not understand well, but those who carved these symbols coincidentally used the same symbols of ancient culture.
Finally, there are several snake heads on the Aztec calendar stone. A symbol can represent 52 years of cycle. There are symbols between the tails that may indicate the date the stone was engraved. The end is eight equally spaced holes. There is a possibility that the stick is arranged so that the calendar can be used as one day.
Ancient civilization in Central America developed a complex calendar system based on overlapping periods. Aztec's calendar stone is a symbolic depiction of the four disasters that led to the collapse of the four previous universes in Aztec's cosmology. It also includes the layout of hieroglyphs and emoticons of how Aztec people measure time. This stone has myth and astronomical significance. This megalith of the 15th century was carved from a 24 metric ton basalt to shape a disk 24 meters in diameter and 4 feet thick and represents the god of the sun symbolizing the present and the past. The sun is surrounded by several segmented rings, some are surrounded by hieroglyphs and show the division of the period of Azteca.