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1 – Serpent (Chicchan)
kin 105 of 260


by Ian Xel Lungold

Movement and the creation of time. Sensual and dramatic. Instinctual wisdom. Connection from earth bound to Heavenly aspirations…Click here to read full description.

1 - Serpent artwork by Mayan Majix

The Trecena of Kan
(7th – 19th May 2026)

by Mark Elmy

The Trecena of Kan gives us new opportunities to learn, to discover new wisdom and to begin to empower ourselves and others.

Click here to view Mark’s Kan trecena video.

 

Mark Elmy

Tzolkin Trecena Notes
1 Serpent (Chicchan, Kan)

by William and Viola Welsch

To the Ancient Maya, Chicchan or Serpent/Snake was the bringer of rain, symbolized by the Snake Dance or Rain Dance performed by many native cultures such as the Hopi in the Desert Southwest and the Toltec in Mexico. In Maya legend, there were Four Chicchans, Sky Serpents, who encircled the world…Click here to read full article.

1 Serpent artwork by Judith Ann Griffith

Jaguar Wisdom
1 – Serpent (Chicchan, Kan)

by Kenneth Johnson

Serpent day is always good for transforming human experience into knowledge and insight. If the “smoking mirror” of reality shows you your shadow side today, don’t be afraid to look. Wisdom might very well be the result of your endeavors…Click here to read full article.

The Tzolk’in Clock
Serpent Trecena

by White Shaman

This article is about both the Serpent and Flint trecenas, with a focus on the Serpent trecena. Part two will focus on the Flint trecena. It is important to see how the two trecenas of a corner work. The Tzolk’in Clock has four faces and four corners. The faces on the Tzolk’in as depicted in the Madrid codex have the words east, north, west and south written in the Mayan language…Click here to read full article.

Startling Revelations At El Castillo At Chichén Itzá: A Monumental Maya Calendar

by Gary Manners

A new study has shed fresh light on one of the ancient world’s most celebrated architectural wonders. Four archaeoastronomers from leading Mexican research institutions have demonstrated that the famous “descent of Kukulcán” light phenomenon at El Castillo, the great pyramid at Chichén Itzá, is not confined to the equinoxes, as was long believed, but follows a precise, year-round pattern of solar illumination that encodes the entire Maya calendar within its very stones, . The findings, presented in Arqueologia Mexicana, suggest the pyramid was designed as a functioning astronomical instrument, capable of marking every major celestial event of the solar year...Click here to read full article.