radle said:flannan said:stuff
On the other hand, the manga seems to be sure what happened. Chapter 27 page 6 says she "violated her younger sister and got expelled from her throne". Which doesn't match Wikipedia's version.
Quetzalcoatl is a MALE... not a female. Not the first time Japan has done this as I seem to recall them doing the same thing with
Oda Nobuna no Yabou . And also with
Rokka no Yuusha using the temples we did which was strange seeing the cast pale mix of Japanese and European and the rest are I guess a representation of us who are varied shades of light brown to very black skinned complexion.
On the other hand, the manga seems to be sure what happened. Chapter 27 page 6 says she "violated her younger sister and got expelled from her throne". Which doesn't match Wikipedia's version.
Not surprising. The author chose what they liked for the narrative of their story and altered it. It's nothing new tho I cringe seeing Quezacothl as female I know it ain't real. You shouldn't rely on Wikipedia so much. You can use it as a beginners to get an idea of something but not use it as factual. Further in that page you missed how there are multiples of different folklore's if they are even true in the first place that it came from my people and not the typical twisting from Europeans with wild imaginations of vainly interpreting what has nothing to do with them.
Further, the codex Chimalpopoca is also lost. All that is left is speculative talk of the copies the Europeans who stole basically everything of my people's stuff can't even find it themselves further the ones who claimed to have studied it in the late 19th century are going by what they think and not by any of us even when we taught then the Nahuatl and other languages they usually can't help but spin it. Further, it was studied by I think one of my people in the 16th century who spoke both Nahuatl and Spanish and the issue with this is that his work went into the hands of Jesuits which is automatically bad since they are cunning and evil. This is the work in question "Relacion historica de la nacion tulteca" if you can read the language that is as I dunno if there's an English translation.
Anyways, that should be looked into for anything Indigenous from the mouth of an actual descendant and not from the twisted lips of Europeans. If you look at the references of the link you used they are from the 1980s to the present so unless they source from actual Indigenous descendants of Mexico testimonies I would seriously be cautious since historically speaking Europeans have a tendency of exaggeration and straight out lie however many people don't care about accuracy even when it comes to Indigenous history as long as it comes from the lips of Europeans who have been for centuries been telling my people's history in many documentaries for example and hardly any of them has us talking about our history which is typical of control freaks with a god complex.
Going by this quote "The exact significance and attributes of Quetzalcoatl varied somewhat between civilizations and through history" there is no "varied civilizations throughout history" only we Mexica people along with my Mayan brethren (who called him Kukulkan) wrote of him.