Zipper Hoodie Maya Resistance 1517
Zipper Hoodie Maya Resistance 1517
Our February 2022 design was created by the US based Mexican artist Julio Mendoza. It celebrates the Indigenous resistance to Spanish colonialism in February 1517. The back of the shirt represents a Maya warrior wearing a jaguar helmet. For the Maya, the jaguar represented power, ferocity and valour; the embodiment of positive aggressiveness. The Maya word muuk’ means fuerza in Spanish respectively – strength or force in English. The front of the shirt features a corn in the shape of an arrow referring to famous Maya leader Nachán Can. It is said that when Spanish invaders sent a messenger to get tribute from Nachán Can, he sent back a message saying that the only tribute he would give to the Spanish would be turkeys in the shapes of spears and corn in the shape of arrows. The arrow also features the year of the battle against Hernandez de Cordova, who set out from Cuba to Mexico in February 1517 in order to find Indigenous peoples to enslave. But he was defeated by Maya fighters and forced to retreat, soon dying from his wounds.
Attention: Made to order production
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Important: Please take enough time to choose the right size for you. You can find the size chart at the end of each product picture gallery. All products are made especially for you and therefore cannot be easily sent back and be replaced. Of course, unworn goods with obvious material or printing errors are excluded from this.
Brand: Stanley & Stella
Material: 85 percent organic cotton, 15 percent recycled polyester
Printing & Finishing: High quality skin and ecofriendly direct-to-garment prints
Care: Important care instructions are available at the bottom of our website.