Alom and Tepeu deliberated together in the primordial darkness above the still waters, their council producing the creative word that raised mountains from the sea and set the earth in order.
Tepeu and Kukulkan (Q'uq'umatz) sat together in the primordial sea before creation, forming the sovereign-serpent pair whose deliberation and creative word brought the world into existence in the Popol Vuh.
Qaholom and Tepeu deliberated together in the primordial darkness above the still waters, their council producing the creative word that raised mountains from the sea and set the earth in order.
Q'uq'umatz, Tepeu, and Huracan fashioned the first four men from white and yellow maize after failed attempts with mud and wood, grinding the corn and mixing it with water to form Balam-Quitze, Balam-Acab, Mahucutah, and Iqui-Balam.
Huracan, Q'uq'umatz, and Tepeu spoke the world into being over the primordial waters, raising the earth and establishing Yax Che, the great ceiba world tree, as the cosmic axis connecting heavens, earth, and underworld.
In the Popol Vuh, the creator gods — Huracan, Q'uq'umatz, Tepeu, Alom, and Qaholom — consulted the divine daykeepers Xpiyacoc and Xmucane, who cast maize kernels and coral seeds to divine that corn was the substance from which true humans should be fashioned.
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