Curicaueri

Curicaueri
God of Fire
Member of Tiripe-mencha, Trinity of Fire
Votive offering for Curicaueri, with a drawing of Curicaueri on the left
Other namesKurikaueri, Querenda-angápeti, Tatá juríata, Kurikaheri
AnimalsTurkey, Eagle, Coyote, Snake
GenderMale
RegionMesoamerica
Ethnic groupPurépecha
Genealogy
SiblingsTiripe-mencha
SpouseCuerauáperi
ChildrenAll other Purépecha Gods

Curicaueri (Purépecha: Kurhikuaeri, "the Great Fire" or "the Great Bonfire) is a deity in Purépechan Culture. He was considered the God of Fire, the Sun and oldest diety of the Purépecha, it is thought that he is the origin of all other Purépecha dieties, alongside Cuerauáperi his wife.[1] He also had a warlike aspect, who the warriors painted themselves black to represent.[2] Curiacaueri had five brothers known as the Tiripe-mencha, who governed the five divine houses of the terrestrial plane of the universe.[1]

The Uacúsecha clan, the ruling family of the Purepécha empire, considers Curicaueri their patron god, and it is through a prophetic vision from Curicaueri that Tariácuri set out to create a unified Purépecha state.[1]

  1. ^ a b c González Torres, Yólotl (2005). Diccionario de mitología y religión de Mesoamérica (1. Aufl., 11. reimpr ed.). Madrid: Larousse. pp. 54–55. ISBN 978-970-607-802-5.
  2. ^ "Kurikaueri : iconografía del sol purépecha". Mediateca - Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia (in Spanish). Retrieved 2024-12-18.

Curicaueri

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