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Alonzo Batilla's treasures: Difference between revisions

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<gallery widths="180" position="center" captionalign="center">
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ACP Treasure Statue of the Deity.png|'''[http://www.latinamericanstudies.org/maya-urns.htm Statue of the Deity]'''<br>{{Wiki|Itzamna}}, the founder of Mayan culture, taught people how to grow plants, use [[Medicine|medicine]], and draw calendars
ACP Treasure Statue of the Deity.png|'''[http://www.latinamericanstudies.org/maya-urns.htm Statue of the Deity]'''<br>{{Wiki|Itzamna}}, the founder of Mayan culture, taught people how to grow plants, use [[Medicine|medicine]], and draw calendars
ACP Treasure Statue of the Goddess.png|'''[http://www.latinamericanstudies.org/maya-urns.htm Statue of the Goddess]'''<br>{{Wiki|Ixhcel}}, the Goddess of childbirth and rainbows, decides how the moon affects men and women
ACP Treasure Statue of the Goddess.png|'''[http://www.latinamericanstudies.org/maya-urns.htm Statue of the Goddess]'''<br>{{Wiki|Ixchel}}, the Goddess of childbirth and rainbows, decides how the moon affects men and women
ACP Treasure Fertility Sculpture.png|'''{{Wiki|Dumbarton Oaks birthing figure|Fertility Sculpture}}'''<br>Mayan women made offerings to the fertility goddess twice in their lifetime: once as a child, once as a mother
ACP Treasure Fertility Sculpture.png|'''{{Wiki|Dumbarton Oaks birthing figure|Fertility Sculpture}}'''<br>Mayan women made offerings to the fertility goddess twice in their lifetime: once as a child, once as a mother
ACP Treasure Deity's Head.png|'''[http://www.nichbelize.org/mob-hoc-featured-exhibit/jade-head.html Deity's Head]'''<br>A ten-pound piece of jade carved in the shape of the {{Wiki|Kinich Ahau|sun god}}
ACP Treasure Deity's Head.png|'''[http://www.nichbelize.org/mob-hoc-featured-exhibit/jade-head.html Deity's Head]'''<br>A ten-pound piece of jade carved in the shape of the {{Wiki|Kinich Ahau|sun god}}

Revision as of 23:57, 7 January 2024

Over the course of his time in the West Indies during the early 18th century, the pirate Alonzo Batilla came across many treasures, the maps to which he retrieved from the wrecks of merchant and military ships alike, after besting them in naval combat.[1]

Treasures

Hernán Cortés

The Spanish Conquistador

San José
The Rich Galleon

Imperio Español
The Treasure Fleet

Gems
The Rare Stones

Lovers' souvenirs
Dangerous Liaisons

British Empire
The Navy's finest

Aztec relics
Of Gods and Men

Mayan relics

The Lost Empire

Incarelics
Children of the Sun

Strange artifacts
The Oddest Treasures

Henry Morgan
The King of Pirates

François l'Olonnais
The Bane of the Spanish

Exquemelin
The Barber Surgeon

African relics

A plundered continent

Sea treasures
Rare finds

Lucky charms
Symbols of future wealth

Rare weapons
From all over the world

Snuff bottles
Crafted in the Orient

Alcohol
Drunk on plunder

Mayan Genesis

The Creation Myth

Lords of the Night 1
The 9-day cycle

Lords of the Night 2
The character archetypes

Lords of Light
Deities of the Earth

Vikings artefacts
First explorers

Mayan Weapons

Classic headbreakers

Chess Pieces
Ancient gameplay

Animal Kingdom
Holy figures

The Zodiac 1
The Sun's path

The Zodiac 2
The Moon's path

Headdresses
Gorgeous adornments

Independence Day

Revolutionary war artifacts

Pirates' Day
Navigation tools

Halloween
Esoteric stuff

Christmas
Celebration items

Chinese New Year
Chinese pirates' treasure

Behind the scenes

The description of the Garnet Ring is a play on the phrases upon the fictional One Ring in J. R. R. Tolkien's book The Lord of the Rings.

Appearances

References