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Rapporter et oversættelsesproblem
So; nope.
The most important object in the sky was the Sun, which has always been recognized everywhere as the main source of life on Earth. Tonatiuh, a red eagle with a huge eye was the god associated with the sun king. Due to the inclination of the Earth's axis, the Sun appears in different positions in the sky depending on the time of year. They came to calculate with great precision the moment at which the sun would rise and set, and even more surprisingly, they determined that the duration of the 365-day solar year (as I had mentioned previously). The duration of the year, in fact, as you already know, is 365.2422 days.
Venus was a great attraction for the Mayans. They believed that he was connected with one of his most important deities: Quetzalcoatl. The planet was known as Xux Ek, the "Big Star", and the Mayans knew that it was the same object that appeared both in the morning and in the afternoon throughout the year. They determined that their synodic period (that is, how long their orbit lasts) was 584 days, again, very close to the 583.92 they need to cover their orbit. When Venus rose in the sky during the morning, it was considered a sign of bad luck, and everyone would remain inside their houses, blocking their chimneys so that the evil light of Venus could not enter. Not only did they calculate the synodic period of Venus, they also deduced that Mars was 780 days (lasts 779,936) and Mercury's 117 days (lasts 116), but they did not show much interest in Jupiter and Saturn. None of the planets came to be seen as objects different from the rest of the stars, something atypical if we consider that, in comparison to the stars, they move much more in the sky.
You're welcome.