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Wickfield — Historically Accurate El Dorado

#16thcentury #aztec #chel #eldorado #mayan #mexican #mexico #miguel #renaissance #spain #spanish #tulio #historicallyaccurate #roadtoeldorado
Published: 2015-03-06 15:33:25 +0000 UTC; Views: 69855; Favourites: 1392; Downloads: 172
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Description Being the history geek that I am, I guess it is kind of surprising that I haven't really done a "historically accurate" animation series before, but after seeing that awesome Buzzfeed Disney Princess video, and of course all the amazing art on here, I was inspired to make my own.  I guess it is better late than never!

As I've said before elsewhere, from an artistic standpoint, I'm not at all bothered by the animated designs of the characters in Disney and Dreamworks films. They weren't documentaries after all so in most cases they didn't need to be accurate, and in animation in particular, it is more important to convey character and style in the designs.  I am not trying to "fix" anything because I don't think there is anything to fix!  That being said, it can still be fun to learn how your favorite characters might have looked if they had existed in real life.    

For my series, I am trying to be as accurate as I possibly can.  I'm taking the country of origin, the social class, the culture, and the specific decade into mind (instead of just a general sweep of multiple decades), and also adapting the colors and styles to fit what was available and worn everyday.  I will try to keep the characters recognizable where I can, but I want to make my pictures realistic and so some elements of the original designs might be altered in the process.

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For my first picture, I decided to do the one "Non-Disney" film I will be including, which also happens to be one of my favorites - Dreamworks' "The Road to El Dorado"!  I haven't seen much "historic" art for this series and I thought it would be a good place to start.  This movie takes place in 1519, the year Hernan Cortez discovered the Aztec civilization.  Obviously in the movie, Miguel and Tulio discover it first!  This one was pretty easy since I actually had a specific year to work with, so I tried to find fashion that fit each character.  Maybe Miguel and Tulio were gods, considering their clothes in the movie were almost 300 years ahead of their time!

Miguel was actually the easiest to translate.  In southern Europe at the time, men would wear a ruffled, low necked chemise under a colorful doublet with huge, baggy sleeves - much like Miguel's shirt in the movie.  Men still wore hose at this time too.  I changed Miguel's hair a bit based on a Raphael painting .  I also gave him a fuller beard since men didn't really wear goatees in 1519.  And of course I had to draw his lute!  I based it on the more typical design you see in 15th and 16th century paintings.

Tulio was more of a challenge - apparently, when you make him accurate, he looks kind of like Jesus.    His original outfit did not resemble 1510s clothing at all so I had to be more creative.  First of all, I drew his hair loose (based on another Raphael painting ).  Since he wouldn't wear sideburns and a soul patch, I could draw him either clean shaven or with a beard.  He looked too young when he was shaven so I found a picture of a beard with a similar shape .  To suit Tulio's more careful style, I gave him a high-necked chemise and doublet with the puffed sleeves of the early 16th century.  He is also wearing a blue jerkin to mimic his shirt from the movie.  Tulio's hose are different, his are in two parts, with garters holding up the lower portion - I thought it did a good job of drawing attention to his skinny legs! 

Lastly, I'd have to say Chel was the most interesting to draw!  Although El Dorado in the movie has some elements from different Mesoamerican cultures (and although the "real" El Dorado was in Colombia), it most closely resembled the Aztec culture, which was also confirmed by the arrival of Cortez in the movie.  Many of the scenes in the movie like the sacrifice, feast, and game of hip ball were also inspired by Cortez' real life adventures.  A lot of information about the Aztecs has been perserved in a series of books called the Aztec Codices , which were drawn by the Aztecs themselves, so that was a great primary source.  Every single woman I saw in the codices was wearing the same kind of outfit, which is much less revealing than what Chel wears in the movie (in fact, in the movie, Chel is actually wearing a male loincloth!).  An Aztec woman's clothing consisted of a woven cotton skirt called a cueitl, and a matching blouse called a huipil that fell to her elbows and knees.  They were usually plainly decorated with red bands of color.  Aztec commoners like Chel would not wear shoes.  Married women had a special braided hairstyle that looked like horns, but the codices also show some images of (probably unmarried) women with long hair and bangs like Chel's.  In Aztec culture, only "shameless" women wore cosmetics , but I don't think Chel would care much about her reputation, so I gave her red lipstick, and I also gave her hair a purplish cast, because some Aztec women dyed their hair with indigo.   Because Chel was likely a lower-class woman, she wouldn't have had much jewelry, maybe a plain pair of bone or shell ear plugs.  But I gave her a pair of jade bracelets and gold ear plugs, because I thought Tulio probably gave them to her when he had his "godly" status in El Dorado.

Anyway, I had a lot of fun doing the research and designs for this picture.  I think I will do a few of the rarer Disney heroines next too, so look for those in the next week or so.
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Comments: 120

Sagittarianism [2022-10-06 10:23:38 +0000 UTC]

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Eouintus [2022-09-21 00:16:47 +0000 UTC]

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souletyler [2022-06-21 20:05:15 +0000 UTC]

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ku5rdandav4tzom [2021-11-27 05:46:46 +0000 UTC]

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thecrimsonartista In reply to ku5rdandav4tzom [2024-02-23 07:19:54 +0000 UTC]

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Lucas-Stl [2021-11-08 21:38:26 +0000 UTC]

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juha91 [2021-10-20 23:45:32 +0000 UTC]

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Daskarios [2021-09-21 17:13:55 +0000 UTC]

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aaronJR126 [2021-08-22 14:35:57 +0000 UTC]

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TrendyStaMacigian [2021-06-06 13:51:38 +0000 UTC]

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Touch-Not-This-Cat [2020-10-02 00:57:28 +0000 UTC]

Yeah, but I doubt their clothes would have survived the jungle journey intact like that. More likely, they would have continued to wear sailor’s clothes, unless they hauled around a separate set in a sack for just this Occasion.

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Lupilstinskin [2019-09-17 12:26:30 +0000 UTC]

Wow great art, and awesome style.


Talking about Chel`s outfit, and the thing of being historically accurate, as far as I knew (I supposed I am wrong jajaja) the idea behind "El Dorado" in this movie was something like a wird mix of many diferent pre-Columbian cultures, and portrait "el Dorado" as a legend place, something like  Atlantis.

That is why the name Chel (women in mayan), El Dorado (a place in Colombia), the ball game (aztec), etc.

At the tame of the screening of the movie many people protested because the "historical horrors", so the creatives behind the story explained what I just wrote

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Diabolik91 [2019-09-14 09:20:39 +0000 UTC]

that's amazing!

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Carnelian-Troubador [2019-08-13 02:57:01 +0000 UTC]

What I want to know that if the people in El Dorado hadn't made contact with Spanish people before, how were they able to speak the same language??

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moonlitinuyasha1985 [2018-09-15 18:24:09 +0000 UTC]

Chel dressing conservatively?


This is new to me.

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Wickfield In reply to moonlitinuyasha1985 [2018-09-16 01:42:50 +0000 UTC]

You know she's naked under those clothes...

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moonlitinuyasha1985 In reply to Wickfield [2018-09-16 01:52:05 +0000 UTC]

...Never mind, then. ^^

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FadedShadowFox [2018-06-01 07:48:25 +0000 UTC]

Ohh, yeah! This is just what I wanted. Thank you!

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Wickfield In reply to FadedShadowFox [2018-06-01 15:48:05 +0000 UTC]

No problem!

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jbriskin [2018-01-29 05:51:02 +0000 UTC]

Funny, I'd always thought of the people of El Dorado in the film as being Maya (the mention of Xibalba-- the Mayan spirit world-- by Chel is a bit of a tipoff)...


In case you're wondering what would make me think this, I wrote a research paper about the Maya for my freshman year high-school English class, after reading Barbara Kingsolver's The Bean Trees. (The alternative was to write about the Cherokee Nation.)

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Wickfield In reply to jbriskin [2018-01-29 14:14:30 +0000 UTC]

Honestly they were a pretty big mix between the Mayans and Aztecs.  I just went with Aztecs for the series because the movie was so clearly based off of the experiences of Hernan Cortes/

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Ruitherga [2017-10-07 00:55:02 +0000 UTC]

nice!

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Wickfield In reply to Ruitherga [2017-10-07 01:00:42 +0000 UTC]

Thank you!

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Ruitherga In reply to Wickfield [2017-10-07 01:09:58 +0000 UTC]

you're welcome

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Jioseph-superfan63 [2017-09-10 21:26:12 +0000 UTC]

"Historically Accurate".........

Because the existed peoples from the existing El Dorado existed!

And the poor spanishs didn't dress as what they wanted!

And there are proofs about the clothes used by the "El-Doradians"!

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helskald In reply to Jioseph-superfan63 [2017-09-19 05:10:09 +0000 UTC]

El Dorado was a Spanish myth about a lost city of either Aztec or Mayan origin. So yes, technically there is historical precedent for what Doradans would've worn. Although you have a point to some degree.

As for the Spaniards, no they didn't wear "whatever they want" because they didn't have shopping malls, sweatshops, and boutiques that everyeone could buy from. They had tailors, who made certain clothes in certain styles, and anything custom would be extremely expensive. If anything, the only issue here is that there's no reason for the artist to change Tulio's ponytail to loose hair. Long-haired people have worn ponytails for as long as there has been scraps of fabric to tie their hair back with. Another thing is that Miguel and Tulio's clothes are a bit too fancy for a pair of poor con-men. But, hey, it is still well-designed stuff.

Good job, Wickfield!

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Jioseph-superfan63 In reply to helskald [2017-09-22 22:52:42 +0000 UTC]

Wow, that's a lot of facts.

But honestly I did that comment more as a joke than a serious argument :/

I didn't want to insult the artist in neither a way.

But now that I relook at the comment seems really incorrect, maybe I will hidden it.

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helskald In reply to Jioseph-superfan63 [2017-09-23 03:01:04 +0000 UTC]

Up to you to hide itif you want, I wouldn't. Just as you had a comment done as a joke, I commented as a means of dropping some knowledge bombs, as I like to go off about history

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Jioseph-superfan63 In reply to helskald [2017-09-24 20:07:40 +0000 UTC]

Ah. Why didn't you tell me that we weren't about a overly serious discussion.
I make drama only for a thing!

Then......are you really sure that El Dorado is a myth? Because I went to it 3 days ago. They make fantastic burritos.

And why do you think that Tulio and Miguel couldn't wear something as fancy as what they wear in the drawing? They're gods after all! 

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helskald In reply to Jioseph-superfan63 [2017-09-25 00:08:00 +0000 UTC]

Poor gods, my friend. Though possibly they could've spent most of their money on the outfits to better scam people.

That being said, El Dorado is not originally a place, it's a person. Either "El Hombre Dorado" or "El Rey Dorado" (Meaning either the Golden Man or the Golden King). He was a mythical chief who took a raft of gold-and coated himself in gold-out into the middle of a lake as an offering to a god, but the raft broke and he drowned at the bottom of the lake. The Conquistadors were looking for the spot he drowned in in hopes of gaining the gold. Overtime "El Dorado" became the short-hand for where he might've drowned, and I believe the misunderstanding of it being a city was that it was so much gold it was described as an underwater "city of gold" or something to that effect. However the animators may have been aware of that since at the beginning origin-story for the movie's El Dorado, you see it rise up from water, as if suggesting it was below the water.

El Dorado simply means "The Golden" in Spanish. So the idea that Dorado means "City of Gold" is a mistake.

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Jioseph-superfan63 In reply to helskald [2017-09-29 22:33:16 +0000 UTC]

Honestly I think that the movie maked good clothes for these spanish mens. And Tulio without ponytail seems pointless considered that even the vickings wore them.

I studied spanish and i know it. In italian would be " Il dorato"

And isn't this what the myth are made of? By a lot of thing happened who have maked everyone believe to other thing that don't have anything to do with that?
Like Atlantis.

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helskald In reply to Jioseph-superfan63 [2017-10-01 05:07:45 +0000 UTC]

No that's a very recent interpretation of the myth. In all the traditional versions of the myth, El Dorado is the nickname for the chief.

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Jioseph-superfan63 In reply to helskald [2017-10-01 21:29:43 +0000 UTC]

Oh, I didn't know....Well the more you know!

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Sleepwalker48 [2017-07-31 20:06:06 +0000 UTC]

'Discovered' is probably a subjective term, implying that Europeans needed to usher in 'Enlightened' ideas to the 'heathens' of the New World at that time.

'Enlightened' ideas, converting the native peoples with Christianity. And if they didn't convert, well, rape and slavery was an option.

Other than that, neat pic.

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Wickfield In reply to Sleepwalker48 [2017-07-31 20:27:13 +0000 UTC]

"Discovering" can't be subjective, it just means you found something you didn't know about previously - it isn't a value term. Still, I'm more than familiar with the issues of colonialization in the "new" world, but I had no need to discuss it in my description for this specific image.

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Quick-5 [2017-04-06 17:08:18 +0000 UTC]

"Awesome" and "Buzzfeed" are two words you almost never hear in the same sentence.

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nekkro-cat In reply to Quick-5 [2017-04-29 08:31:42 +0000 UTC]

Exactly LOL

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Wickfield In reply to Quick-5 [2017-04-06 17:24:31 +0000 UTC]

Lol, very true...actually since I finished the series I realized Buzzfeed's video wasn't all that accurate itself. Still interesting though!

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Animefan-279 [2016-02-26 04:18:31 +0000 UTC]

Fitting that Miguel looks like a Shakespearean character. Also, what would an Aztec slave or sacrifice wear? Apparently, Chel was going to be a sacrifice.

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criticT209 In reply to Animefan-279 [2021-04-09 15:46:16 +0000 UTC]

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Carnelian-Troubador In reply to Animefan-279 [2019-08-14 02:20:14 +0000 UTC]

Late comment, but it depended on the sacrifice. Aztecs performed sacrifices quite often, since they believed that the sun god, Huitzilopochtli, needed blood sacrifices to keep the sun "on," or else it would be devoured by the moon goddess, as the two were always fighting (aka, the sun rising and setting). They also performed many other sacrifices to other gods; if my research is correct, the sky god Quetzalcoatl, who took the form of a feathered serpent, was one of the only gods that didn't require a human sacrifice, but rather corn instead. Some sacrifices were done with a lot of pomp and circumstance, such as those of higher-up members of society such as nobles, who viewed it as a necessary duty and honour when it happened, and there would be a large ceremony for them before they were sacrificed, so I believe they'd wear a lot more ornate clothing than what Chel was wearing. Others were more routine, such as sacrifices of commoners, criminals, and prisoners of war. Since Chel was not of noble background and initially accused of stealing from the temple, I suppose her outfit would be much plainer.
I did a lot of in-depth research on Aztec sacrifices a few years back and am mainly going off of what I learned out of some books and internet searches, but if any of this is inaccurate, I apologize!

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Wickfield In reply to Animefan-279 [2016-02-26 04:29:47 +0000 UTC]

I'm sure you can find out that information using the sources I've posted.  I prefer to depict my female characters in situations of power, not when they are being mistreated or abused.

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SceneDemonz [2016-02-20 02:00:27 +0000 UTC]

Idk why, but this one is one of my favorites lol

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Wickfield In reply to SceneDemonz [2016-02-20 14:55:21 +0000 UTC]

It was a good way to start the series!

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SovietMentality [2015-12-02 21:45:55 +0000 UTC]

They look even more charming then usual 

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Wickfield In reply to SovietMentality [2016-02-04 16:45:56 +0000 UTC]

Awesome!

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ToscaSam [2015-08-10 14:51:29 +0000 UTC]

love it! You were very accurate!
how adorable *-*

i like Chel's outfit and her features too.
great job!

(it's an historian who tells you )

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Wickfield In reply to ToscaSam [2015-08-10 20:12:54 +0000 UTC]

I was glad I could show a bit about Chel's culture in this picture.  Thanks!

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BorussiaMacau89 [2015-07-24 01:38:20 +0000 UTC]

Gasp! Chels a cross dresser!

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Wickfield In reply to BorussiaMacau89 [2015-07-24 01:39:46 +0000 UTC]

Yep!  I guess Chel can pull any outfit off, though.

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