Kiche Maya Erotic

Homeland

Guatemala (western highlands)

Region

Central America

About Kiche Maya People

The K'iche' (also spelled Quiché) are the largest Maya group in Guatemala — approximately 1.93 million per the 2018 INE census, concentrated in the western highland departments of Quiché, Totonicapán, Sololá, Quetzaltenango, Suchitepéquez, and Retalhuleu. The K'iche' descend from the K'iche' kingdom that flourished in the highlands prior to Spanish conquest in 1524 and that produced the Popol Vuh, the K'iche' creation epic that is among the most important pre-Columbian Mesoamerican literary documents. The K'iche' language is part of the Eastern Mayan branch of the Mayan language family and is the most-spoken Mayan language in Guatemala. Cultural traditions including distinct municipal-level traje (women's traditional dress) systems, cofradía religious organization, and continuing ceremonial day-keeping (the 260-day tzolkin calendar) maintain strong post-conquest continuity.

Typical Kiche Maya Phenotypes

Reference for AI generation — hair, eyes, skin, facial structure, build

Skin tone is predominantly Fitzpatrick III-IV with copper-bronze undertone characteristic of Mesoamerican Maya populations. Hair is uniformly straight (Andre Walker 1A-1B), uniformly black to very dark brown. Facial features include broader nasal bases, full lips, and prominent cheekbones; epicanthic-fold variants are common (estimated 40-60% in less-admixed populations). Stature is typically below the Guatemalan national average — adult K'iche' males average around 156-160 cm and females around 145-150 cm, reflecting both genetic ancestry and historical undernutrition. Within-population variance is moderate; some highland K'iche' communities maintain less-admixed phenotype profiles than communities in mixed Ladino-Maya zones.

Discussion Board

Please log in to post a message.

No messages yet. Be the first to comment!