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Description of Uoke

Uoke is a chthonic deity-destroyer in Rapa Nui mythology.
It was Uoke, according to legend, who drowned a significant part of the land of Rapa Nui with the help of his magic lever and made it an island, not a continent (the traditional legend of the worldwide flood).
In Rapa Nui mythology, Uoke and his lever are also responsible for the destruction of the ancestral home on the mythical island of Khiva.
Uoke is an antagonistic deity in relation to Make Make, which can be regarded as the beginnings of the dualistic ideas of the Rapa Nui people.

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Easter Island Rapa Nui main description

   

Easter Island Rapa Nui Symbols

Easter island Rapanui symbols Easter Island Rapa Nui is renowned for its massive stone statues, the moai, constructed on this tiny isolated island lying over 2000 miles from the coast of Chile. The moai constitute part of the short-term but magnificent cultural achievement of Easter Island, which lasted no more than 1400 years before being undermined by environmental degradation and endemic war- fare. Yet the moai were just one element of a remarkable artistic output. History, as much as art, made this island unique. But attempts to unravel that history have produced many interpretations and arguments. The missionary’s anecdotes, the archaeologist’s shovel, the anthropologist’s oral histories and boxes of bones have all revealed something of the island’s story. The motifs of Easter Island symbols are very diverse, ranging from simple cup marks to elaborate bas-relief carvings of subjects including anthropomorphs, ships and the birdman- an image which combines the body of a man with the head and beak of a frigate bird. This typology is a considerable achievement, and its presentation includes an analysis of the distribution of motifs across the island to show significant variability and patterning. It combines a very clear and precise descriptive prose with a splendid series of line drawings, although these pale in comparison with the magnificent color plates. The most important motif is the birdman. This figure pervades the rock art of Easter Island and is the theme for many variations such as a two headed birdman, a birdman with legs splayed and a birdman with human-like feet.

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