Attributes and scenes of god L are indicative of at least three main functions.
Wealth Recurrent attributes are a bundle of merchandise and a walking-stick. The floating ends of god L's cloth can show footsteps, again pointing to travelling merchants. In view of the further functions of god L, the Maya merchants should perhaps be compared to the Aztec
nahualoztomecah, warriors disguised as merchants. The wealth of god L has been suggested to refer specifically to the cacao orchards of the Gulf Coast; in
Cacaxtla, god L is associated with maize stalks and cacao trees. God L's wealth seems to include women as well. On the
Princeton vase (see figure), god L is surrounded by five young women, whereas in the Dresden Codex (14c2), he holds a young woman (
goddess I) with a maize sign., Classic period
Magic and shamanism The cigar which, more often than not, is smoked by god L suggests the
apotropaic magic of a merchant or, perhaps, the habit of a shaman. The owl on the hat points to a connection to the underworld and night, and recalls the Nahua term for sorcerer,
tlacatecolotl 'Man-Owl'. The jaguar is also a reference to night and the underworld.
War God L's jaguar and owl (
kuy) attributes point to sorcery, violence, and warfare, qualities that may be related to his Postclassic role as a personification of Venus rising from the underworld, and throwing spears at his victims (Dresden Codex). God L's connection to warfare is also suggested by the decapitation of a bound prisoner, perhaps a captive writer, in front of god L's jaguar palace (
Princeton vase). On the central relief of the Palenque Temple of the Sun – a war temple – god L, together with one of the other
Maya jaguar gods (viz. the Jaguar God of Terrestrial Fire), supports an emblem consisting of the sacred shield and lances of the Palenque kings. His submissive posture suggests he now represents a defeated enemy chief. ==Connections to other deities==