- Coatlaxopeuh
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Coatlaxopeuh is a word proposed by Mariano Rojas as a possible Nahuatl origin of the word Guadelupe.
Origin of Coatlalopeuh
Gloria Anzaldúa, in her book Borderlands / La Frontera, translates the name Coatlalopeuh as "She Who Has Dominion over Serpents." Because Coatlalopeuh sounds like Guadalupe, the Spanish saw Coatlalopeuh as parallel or identical to "the dark Virgin, Guadalupe, patroness of West Central Spain" (Page 27). Anzaldúa gives Coatlaxopeuh as a variant name. She sees both versions as being linked historically to Coatlicue, whose name means "Serpent Skirt."
Bibliography
- Anzaldúa, Gloria E. (2000). "Coatlalopeuh, la que domina a los serpientes." La diosa de las Américas. 12 p. New York: Vintage Books. ISBN 0-3757-0369-1.
- Anzaldúa, Gloria E. (2007). Borderlands / La Frontera: The New Mestiza. 3rd ed. San Francisco: Aunt Lute Books.
- Barnes, Rhonda L. (1997). Demanding Social Equality: A Feminist Re-Interpretation of the Virgin of Guadalupelink title.
Categories:- Our Lady of Guadalupe
- Titles of Mary
- Feminism and spirituality
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