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The Lord of the Chapel, (in Spanish as Señor de la Capilla and Otomi as Zidada Nikjä), is a statue of the crucifixion of Jesus from Saint James Apostle parish in Santiago Tequixquiac, Mexico. The image is popularly believed to have placated any further disaster caused by illness and epidemics with Indigenous people. It became the patron saint of Santiago Tequixquiac, and is one of the most well-known images in Mexico State. It was probably created in Actopan ex-monastery by native artists around 1570, and is made of mixed materials, including sticks, plaques of agave fiber, and plaster. The author is unknown and belongs to the Spanish colonial period.

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  • Señor de la Capilla (es)
  • Señor de la Capilla (it)
  • Lord of the Chapel (en)
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  • Il Señor de la Capilla (Signore della Cappella) è un'immagine di Gesù di Nazaret che evoca il momento della sua crocifissione. Si trova nella Parrocchia di Santiago Apóstol di Santiago Tequixquiac (Messico). Risalente al periodo coloniale, prima metà del XVII secolo, misura 173 centimetri di altezza. la Processione del Signore della Cappella per le vie di Santiago Tequixquiac (it)
  • El Señor de la Capilla (en náhuatl es Tatatzin Teopan y en otomí Zidada Nikjä), es una imagen de Jesús de Nazaret que evoca el momento de su crucificción. Se encuentra en la Parroquia de Santiago Apóstol en Santiago Tequixquiac.​ Se desconoce al autor y pertenece al periodo colonial. La imagen cristiana data de la primera mitad del siglo XVI y mide 1,73 metros de altura.​ Entre la devoción local, es el cristo que cura las epidemias y patologías que atentan con la población. (es)
  • The Lord of the Chapel, (in Spanish as Señor de la Capilla and Otomi as Zidada Nikjä), is a statue of the crucifixion of Jesus from Saint James Apostle parish in Santiago Tequixquiac, Mexico. The image is popularly believed to have placated any further disaster caused by illness and epidemics with Indigenous people. It became the patron saint of Santiago Tequixquiac, and is one of the most well-known images in Mexico State. It was probably created in Actopan ex-monastery by native artists around 1570, and is made of mixed materials, including sticks, plaques of agave fiber, and plaster. The author is unknown and belongs to the Spanish colonial period. (en)
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  • http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Special:FilePath/Señor_de_la_Capilla,_Tequixquiac_(2).jpg
  • http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Special:FilePath/Señor_de_la_Capilla_por_las_calles_de_Tequixquiac.jpg
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  • El Señor de la Capilla (en náhuatl es Tatatzin Teopan y en otomí Zidada Nikjä), es una imagen de Jesús de Nazaret que evoca el momento de su crucificción. Se encuentra en la Parroquia de Santiago Apóstol en Santiago Tequixquiac.​ Se desconoce al autor y pertenece al periodo colonial. La imagen cristiana data de la primera mitad del siglo XVI y mide 1,73 metros de altura.​ Entre la devoción local, es el cristo que cura las epidemias y patologías que atentan con la población. Hay estudiosos de arte, que mencionan a los peyets y a muchos rangos físicos de la imagen, que tienen una relación directa de sincretismo cultural con los sefardíes y los pueblos indígenas; ya que algunas familias criptojudias se establecieron en los pueblos indios de la Teotlalpan, después de la conquista de México Tenochtitlán, al repartirse las encomiendas. (es)
  • The Lord of the Chapel, (in Spanish as Señor de la Capilla and Otomi as Zidada Nikjä), is a statue of the crucifixion of Jesus from Saint James Apostle parish in Santiago Tequixquiac, Mexico. The image is popularly believed to have placated any further disaster caused by illness and epidemics with Indigenous people. It became the patron saint of Santiago Tequixquiac, and is one of the most well-known images in Mexico State. It was probably created in Actopan ex-monastery by native artists around 1570, and is made of mixed materials, including sticks, plaques of agave fiber, and plaster. The author is unknown and belongs to the Spanish colonial period. The Christ image dates from the first half of the seventeenth century and measures 1.73 meters high. There is a strong relationship with Cryptojudaism because in this town its first Iberian inhabitants were Sephardic converts to Christianity arrived with Hernán Cortés; in the face of the image are very obvious a rabbinical signs, one of them are payots or curls in the side hair. (en)
  • Il Señor de la Capilla (Signore della Cappella) è un'immagine di Gesù di Nazaret che evoca il momento della sua crocifissione. Si trova nella Parrocchia di Santiago Apóstol di Santiago Tequixquiac (Messico). Risalente al periodo coloniale, prima metà del XVII secolo, misura 173 centimetri di altezza. la Processione del Signore della Cappella per le vie di Santiago Tequixquiac (it)
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