Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Pre-Hispanic City of Teotihuacan' has mentioned 'Tikal' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
Contents 1 Name 2 History 2.1 Historical course 2.2 Origins and foundation 2.3 Year 378: Conquest of Tikal 2.4 Year 426: Conquest of Copxc3xa1n and Quiriguxc3xa1 2.5 Zenith 2.6 Collapse 2.7 Aztec Period 3 Culture 3.1 Religion 3.2 Population 3.3 Writing and literature 3.4 Obsidian laboratories 4 Archeological site 4.1 Excavations and investigations 4.1.1 Recent discoveries 4.1.2 Monuments of Teotihuacan 4.2 Site layout 5 Threat from development 6 Gallery 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External links
Year 378: Conquest of Tikal[edit]
In January 378, while Spearthrower Owl supposedly ruled in Teotihuacan, the warlord Sihyaj K'ahk' conquered Tikal, removing and replacing the Maya king, with support from El Peru and Naachtun, as recorded by Stela 31 at Tikal and other monuments in the Maya region.
In 378 a group of Teotihuacanos organized a coup d'etat in Tikal, Guatemala.
Variants of the generic style are found in a number of Maya region sites, including Tikal, Kaminaljuyu, Copan, Becan, and Oxkintok, and particularly in the Petxc3xa9n Basin and the central Guatemalan highlands.
[32] Analyses have traced the development into local variants of the talud-tablero style at sites such as Tikal, where its use precedes the 5th-century appearance of iconographic motifs shared with Teotihuacan.
Maya inscriptions note an individual nicknamed by scholars as "Spearthrower Owl", apparently ruler of Teotihuacan, who reigned for over 60 years and installed his relatives as rulers of Tikal and Uaxactun in Guatemala.