
thumbnail|230px|right|Statue of Xiuhtecuhtli in the British Museum. In Aztec mythology, Xiuhtēcuhtli ("Turquoise Lord" or "Lord of Fire"), was the god of fire, day and heat. In historical sources he is called by many names, which reflect his varied aspects and dwellings in the three parts of the cosmos. He was the lord of volcanoes, the personification of life after death, warmth in cold (fire), light in darkness and food during famine. He was also named Cuezaltzin ("flame") and Ixcozauhqui , and is sometimes considered to be the same as Huehueteotl ("Old God"), although Xiuhtecuhtli is usuall
希烏特庫特利(Xiuhtecuhtli,意為「綠松石之主」),也作奎薩爾特辛(Cuezaltzin)、伊斯科薩烏基(Ixcozauhqui),是阿茲特克的火神。根據出土的神像,他通常被刻畫成一名年輕的男子:臉上塗著紅色與黑色的面彩嘴的兩側伸出牙齒、全身除圍腰布外赤裸、胸佩蝴蝶狀的綠松石首飾、戴著中央有火的符號的頭帶、持有作為背部的飾品。他的另一個名字是韋韋特奧特爾(Huehueteotl,意為「至老神」。);但令人感到弔詭的是,這個名字的涵義與希烏特奎特利年輕男子的形象大相逕庭。
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Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).