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Tloquenahuaque : ウィキペディア英語版 | Tloquenahuaque
In Aztec mythology, Tloquenahuaque, Tloque Nahuaque () or Tloque Naoaque ("Lord of the Near and the Nigh") was one of the epithets of Tezcatlipoca.〔For a summary of Tezcatlipocas epithets and their siginificance see Olivier (2003) Chapter 1.〕〔Tezcatlipoca en el mundo náhuatl. Doris Heyden. Instituto de Investigaciones Históricos, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México ()〕 Miguel Leon Portilla argues that Tloque Nahuaque was also used as an epithet of Ometeotl, the hypothetical single creator God of the Aztecs.〔Leon-Portilla 1999〕 Alonso de Molina's Nahuatl-Spanish dictionary, published in 1571, defines "Tloque Nauaque" as, "next to whom is the being of all things, conserving them and sustaining them". The original Spanish is "cabe quien esta el ser de todas las cosas, conservandolas y sustentandolas". ==Notes==
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