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The Mayan Civilization Introduction Conquest of the Jungle
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There never was a Mayan prophesy.
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Classic Highland Maya and Lowland Maya thrived in southern Mexico, Guatemala and Honduras.
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Early pre-Maya and contemporary sites ► San Jose Magote in Mexico’s southern highlands. 3500 years old. Lasting from before 1500 BC to 1150 BC. Not urban. ► El Mirador. From 300 BC to 250 AD. Unique architecture, urban ceremonial center. ► Monte Alban in Oaxaca. 500 BC to about 700 AD with decline to 1500 AD ► Teotihuacán in Valley of Mexico 100 BC to 500 AD and decline to 1000 AD.
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Mayan Chronology ► Preclassic 500 BCE-300 CE Contemporary with Olmec ► Classic 300 CE -800 CE Dominant in their region ► Contemporary with Teotihuacan ► Post-Classic 800 CE-1530 CE Abandon the highlands ► Post-conquest since 1530 Under Spanish, then Mexican domination
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El Mirador complex
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El Mirador
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Mayan Accomplishments ► Mathematics ► Astronomy ► Engineering ► Irrigation agriculture ► Trade (long distance) ► Architecture ► Writing and sacred libraries ► Chocolate
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“El Castillo” at Chichen itza. Post classic phase. The sophistication of Mayan astronomy has led some to seek an extraterrestrial explanation.
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During solstice.
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El Caracol. The “observatory.”
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Sacred cenote at Chichen itza.
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Mayan Books ► Reading Mayan glyphs: Pattern recognition insufficient for translation. ► Sir Eric Thompson the leading Mayan epigrapher until his death in 1974.* ► Insights made by Yuri Valentinovitch Knorosov in 1960’s of syllabic fusion of separate elements into one glyph.
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The struggle ► Several theories about Mayan glyphs competed Was it pictographic; phonetic; syllabic; symbolic-- non spoken; esoteric magic… ► Bitter rivalries and harsh words into the 1980’s. ► Sir Thompson shown to be almost fully incorrect in his analysis. Came to be convinced before he died. ► Current approach has unanimous support
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The Mayan World Highlands and Lowlands Maize God figurine.
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► Economy based on agriculture (maize) and trade. ► Spiritual world dominated all aspects of life. ► Cosmology: a living landscape ► Urban life integrated cosmology: architecture, ritual, food consumption all linked to beliefs.
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The Ball Game ► Ritual for the gods, cycle of life, fertility, death and sacrifice. Sacred. ► Different rules in different places and through history. ► Teams played with out using hands or feet. ► Rubber ball weighed as much as 5 pounds. ► Losers could be sacrificed. Sometimes winners too.
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Ball court at El Tajin. The city has 11 courts.
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Ball court (small version) at Monte Alban
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Ball court rings. Chichen itza. This court is the size of two modern football fields.
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Chichen itza. Yucatan. The “jaguar” temple. Near entry to ball court. Post Classic (after 800 AD)
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► Forensic analysis from burials of ball players reveal numerous injuries. Some died while playing the game. ► Mostly fractures and head injuries. ► Archaeological evidence demonstrates the game was violent: protective gear was required.
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A brief look at the Diversity of Mayan city Centers. Architectural Identity
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Artist reconstruction of Copan. Honduras.
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Temple complex at Copan. Yucatan.
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Uxmal. Mexico. The city is sacred, devoted to Venus. The so-called “Nunnery.”
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Tikal. Guatemala.
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Tikal
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Coba Yucatan
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Bonampak
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Calakmul
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Imagery Carvings and figurines
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Image from a tzompantli carving (skull rack).
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Kulkalcan
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► Lord Pacal: Ancient Astronaut? ► Refer to Feder Chapter 9.
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Mosaic Puuc style architectural façade. Chichen itza. Yucatan, Mexico
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Choc mool. Toltec derived sacrificial altar. Late post classic Maya were significantly influenced by Toltec and Aztec culture—including increase focus on sacrificial rituals.
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Maya people today
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► Throughout Mexico, Guatemala, Honduras ► Discriminated minority. ► Mostly poor and rural. ► Maintain some language and a few cultural arts and traditions. ► Mostly Catholic, but practice blended faith.
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Analysis ► Reading a page from one of the only surviving Mayan books. ► Page from the Dresden Codex Pattern recognition ► Clues ► spaces
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What does it mean? ► We need to calculate the values shown. ► Which way do the numbers go and how do they group? ► Experimentation is the only way to solve this.
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Patterns ► Look for groupings ► Note: the Maya counted in base 20 ► Read the numbers ► Place value system as in our familiar base 10, but … ► Instead of 1’s, 10’s, 100’s (10x10) the Maya counted in the 20’s, 400’s (20x20) and so on. ► They get some really big numbers.
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Palenque. Mexico
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