Mayan History & Culture
Much has been written on this subject and I could post a very long excerpt from Wikipedia but I found this slightly more succinct version on a website called:
https://www.livescience.com/41781-the-maya.html
This describes some of the history and amazing culture of this civilization about which we sadly do not know much as large parts of the history of the Mayans was destroyed by the European colonialists.
https://www.livescience.com/41781-the-maya.html
This describes some of the history and amazing culture of this civilization about which we sadly do not know much as large parts of the history of the Mayans was destroyed by the European colonialists.
"The Maya refer to both a modern-day people who can be found all
over the world as well as their ancestors who built an ancient civilization
that stretched throughout much of Central America, one that reached its peak
during the first millennium A.D.
The Maya civilization was never unified; rather, it consisted of
numerous small states, ruled by kings, each apparently centered on a city.
Sometimes, a stronger Maya state would dominate a weaker state and be able to
exact tribute and labor from it.
Mayan calendar
A system of writing using glyptic symbols was developed and was
inscribed on buildings, stele, artifacts and books (also called codices).
The Maya calendar system was complicated. "By some
1,700 years ago speakers of proto-Ch'olan, the ancestor for three Maya
languages still in use, had developed a calendar of 18 20-day months plus a set
of five days," wrote Weldon Lamb, a researcher at New Mexico State
University, in his book "The Maya Calendar: A Book of Months"
(University of Oklahoma Press, 2017). SOUND
This calendar system also included what scholars call a
"long-count" that kept track of time by using different units that
range in length from a single day to millions of years (the unit in millions
was rarely used).
Contrary to popular belief, this
system did not predict the end of the world in 2012, the unit in
millions of years providing evidence of this.
Also, contrary to popular belief, the
Maya civilization never vanished. While many cities were abandoned around 1,100
years ago, other cities, such as Chichén Itzá, grew in their place.
When the Spanish arrived in Central America in force in the 16th
century, the diseases they brought devastated the Maya. Additionally, the
Spanish forced the Maya to convert to Christianity, going so far as to burn
their books (the reason why so few of them survive today). However, it is
important to note that the Maya people live on today and can be found all over
the world.
"Millions of Maya people live in Central America and
throughout the world. The Maya are not a single entity, a single community, or
a single ethnic group. They speak many languages including Mayan languages
(Yucatec, Quiche, Kekchi and Mopan), Spanish and English. However, the Maya are
an indigenous group tied both to their distant past as well as to events of the
last several hundred years," wrote Richard Leventhal, Carlos Chan Espinosa
and Cristina Coc in the April 2012 edition of Expedition magazine.
Maya origins
While hunters and gatherers had a presence in Central America
stretching back thousands of years, it was in what archaeologists call the
Pre-classic period (1800 B.C. to A.D. 250) that permanent village life really
took off, leading to the creation of early Maya cities.
"Really effective farming, in the sense that densely
inhabited villages were to be found throughout the Maya area, was an innovation
of the Pre-classic period," wrote Yale University Professor Michael Coe in
his book "The Maya" (Thames and Hudson, 2011).
Coe said farming became more effective during this period,
likely because of the breeding of more productive forms of maize and, perhaps
more importantly, the introduction of the "nixtamal" process. In this
process, the maize is soaked in lime, or something similar, and cooked,
something that "enormously increased the nutritional value of corn,"
writes Coe. Maize complemented squash, bean, chili pepper and manioc (or
cassava), which were already being used by the Maya, a 2014 Journal of Archaeological
Science study shows.
During this time, the Maya were
influenced by a civilization to the west of them known as the Olmecs. These
people may have initially devised the long count calendar that the Maya would
become famous for, Coe writes. Additionally, the discovery of a ceremonial site dated to 1000 B.C. at
the site of Ceibal sheds more light on the relationship between the Maya and
Olmecs, suggesting that it was a complex one.
Archaeologists have found that early
Maya cities could be carefully planned. Nixtun-Ch'ich, in Peten, Guatemala, had
pyramids, temples and other structures built using a grid system, a sign of urban planning. It flourished
between 600 B.C. and 300 B.C.
Maya civilization at its peak
Coe writes that the ancient Maya reached a peak between A.D. 250
and 900, a time that archaeologists call the "Classic" period when numerous
Maya cities flourished throughout much of Central America.
The civilization "reached intellectual and artistic heights
which no other in the New World, and few in Europe, could match at the
time," Coe writes. "Large populations, a flourishing economy, and
widespread trade were typical of the Classic …" he said, noting that
warfare was also quite common.
The Maya civilization was influenced
by the city of Teotihuacan, located farther to the west. One of their
early rulers, named Siyaj K'ak, who may have come from Tikal, ascended the throne on Sept. 13, A.D. 379,
according to an inscription. He is depicted wearing feathers and shells and
holding an atlatl (spear-thrower), features associated with Teotihuacan, wrote
researcher John Montgomery in his book "Tikal: An Illustrated History of
the Mayan Capital" (Hippocrene Books, 2001). A stela recently discovered at El Achiotal, a site
near Tikal, also supports the idea that Teotihuacan controlled or heavily
influenced Tikal for a time.
The numerous cities found throughout the Maya world each had
their own individual wonders that made them unique. Tikal, for instance, is
known for its pyramid building. Starting at least as early as A.D. 672, the
city's rulers would construct a twin pyramid complex at the end of every K'atun
(20-year period). Each of these pyramids would be flat-topped, built adjacent
to each other and contain a staircase on each side. Between the pyramids was a
plaza that had structures laid out to the north and south.
Copan, a Maya city in modern-day Honduras, is known for
its "Temple of the Hieroglyphic Stairway." It's a pyramid-like
structure that has more than 2,000 glyphs embellished on a flight of 63 steps,
the longest ancient Maya inscription known to exist and appears to tell the
history of the city's rulers.
The site of Palenque, another famous Maya city, is known for its
soft limestone sculpture and the incredible burial of "Pakal," one of
its kings, deep inside a pyramid. When Pakal died at about age 80, he was
buried along with five or six human sacrifices in a jade-filled tomb (including
a jade funerary mask he wore). His sarcophagus shows the king's rebirth and
depictions of his ancestors in the form of plants. The tomb was re-discovered
in 1952 and is "the American equivalent, if there is one, to King Tut's
tomb," said archaeologist David Stuart in an online National Geographic
lecture.
Not all Maya settlements were
controlled by a king or elite member of society. At Ceren, a Maya village in El Salvador that was buried by
a volcanic eruption 1,400 years ago, archaeologists found that there was no
elite class in control and the village seems to have been managed communally,
perhaps by local elders.
Collapse?
Contrary to popular belief the Maya
civilization did not vanish. It's true that many cities, including Tikal, Copan
and Palenque, became abandoned around 1,100 years ago. Drought, deforestation,
war and climate change have all been suggested as potential causes of this. Drought
may have played a particularly important role as a recent study on minerals from an underwater cave
in Belize shows that a drought ravaged parts of Central America between A.D.
800 and 900.
However, it is important to note that
other Maya cities, such as Chichén Itzá, grew, at least for a time. In fact,
Chichén Itzá has the largest ball court in the Americas, being longer than a
modern-day American football field. The court's rings, through which competing
teams tried to score, rose about 20 feet (6 meters) off the ground, about twice
the height of a modern-day NBA net. The rules for the Maya ball game are not
well understood.
Council Houses, which were gathering places for people
in a community, played an important role in some of the Maya towns and cities
that flourished after the ninth century.
As mentioned earlier, the arrival of the Spanish brought about a
profound change in the Maya world. The diseases they brought decimated the Maya
and the Spaniards forced the Maya to convert to Christianity, even burning
their books. Today, despite the devastation they experienced, the Maya people
live on, numbering in the millions.
Mythical origins
The Maya had a lengthy and complicated mythical origin story
that is recorded by the K'iche Maya (based in Guatemala) in the Popol Vuh, the
"Book of Counsel," wrote Coe in his book. According to the stories,
the forefather gods Tepew and Q'ukumatz "brought forth the earth from a
watery void, and endowed it with animals and plants."
Creating sentient beings proved more difficult, but eventually
humans were created, including the hero twins, Hunahpu and Xbalanque, who
embark in a series of adventures, which included defeating the lords of the
underworld. Their journey climaxed with the resurrection of their father, the
maize god. "It seems clear that this whole mythic cycle was closely
related to maize fertility," Coe writes.
The Maya universe
The late Robert Sharer, who was a
professor at the University of Pennsylvania, noted in his book "Daily Life
in Maya Civilization" (Greenwood Press, 2009) that the ancient Maya
believed that everything "was imbued in different degrees with an unseen
power or sacred quality," call k'uh, which meant
"divine or sacredness."
"The universe of the ancient
Maya was composed of kab, or Earth (the
visible domain of the Maya people), kan, or the sky
above (the invisible realm of celestial deities), and xibalba, or the watery underworld below (the invisible
realm of the underworld deities)," Sharer wrote.
Caves played a special role in Maya religion as they were seen
as entranceways to the underworld. "These were especially sacred and
dangerous places where the dead were buried and special rituals for the
ancestors conducted," wrote Sharer.
Sharer notes that the Maya followed a number of deities, the
most central of which was Itzamnaaj. "In his various aspects, Itzamnaaj
was the lord over the most fundamental opposing forces in the universe — life
and death, day and night, sky and earth," Sharer wrote, noting that
"as lord of the celestial realm" Itzamnaaj was the Milky Way and
could be depicted as a serpent or two-headed reptile.
Other Maya deities included the sun
god K'inich Ajaw, the rain and storm god Chaak and the lightning deity K'awiil,
among many others. The Maya believed that each person had a "life
force," and draining a person's blood in a temple could provide some of
this life force to a god. Recently an arrowhead containing the blood of a
person who may have participated in a blood-letting ceremony was
identified.
In times when water was scarce, Maya
kings and priests would hold incense scattering ceremonies that they believed
could provide wind and rain. A Maya pendant inscribed with 30 hieroglyphs that
archaeologists believe would have been used in these ceremonies was recently
discovered in Belize. Hallucinogenic substances could also be used to
help the Maya contact spirits and seek advice on how to deal with problems or
situations.
Maya religion also included stories
of dangerous creatures such as the sea monster "Sipak." Fossilized
teeth from the extinct shark Carcharodon megalodon were
used as sacred offerings at several Maya sites and recent research suggests that stories involving
"Sipak" were inspired by the fossilized remains of this massive
extinct shark.
Human sacrifices
Sharer wrote that human sacrifices were made on special
occasions. "Among the Maya, human sacrifice was not an everyday event but
was essential to sanctify certain rituals, such as the inauguration of a new
ruler, the designation of a new heir to the throne, or the dedication of an
important new temple or ball court." The victims were often prisoners of
war, he noted.
At Chichén Itzá, victims would be painted blue, a color that appears to have
honored the god Chaak, and cast into a well. Additionally, near the site's ball
court, there is a panel that shows a person being sacrificed. This may depict a
ball-player from either the winning or losing team being killed after a game.
Writing & astronomy
Sharer noted that record keeping was an important part of the
Maya world and was essential for agriculture, astronomy and prophecy. "By
keeping records of the rainy and dry seasons, the Maya could determine the best
times to plant and harvest their crops," Sharer wrote.
Additionally, by "recording the movements of the sky
deities (sun, moon, planets, and stars), they developed accurate calendars that
could be used for prophecy," Sharer wrote.
"With long-term records, the Maya were able to predict
planetary cycles — the phases of the moon and Venus, even eclipses," he
said. "This knowledge was used to determine when these deities would be in
favorable positions for a variety of activities such as holding ceremonies,
inaugurating kings, starting trading expeditions, or conducting wars."
The movements of the planet Venus
appear to have played a particularly important role in Maya religion. Both
the Dresden and Grolier codices contain detailed records of the
movements of the planet. The ancient Maya "were probably doing large-scale
ritual activity connected to the different phases of Venus," said Gerardo
Aldana, a science historian in the department of Chicano studies at the
University of California, Santa Barbara.
Recent research reveals that at least some of the writers of
Maya codices were part of "a specific cohort of ritual specialists called
taaj," wrote a team of researchers in a 2015 American Anthropologist
article. The team studied a room containing murals with inscriptions on them at
the site of Xultun, Guatemala, and found that the writing of codices took place
in the room and that the "taaj" wrote them.
Economy & power
Sharer wrote that while agriculture and food gathering were a
central part of daily life, the Maya had a sophisticated economy capable of
supporting specialists and a system of merchants and trade routes. While the
Maya did not develop minted currency, they used various objects, at different
times, as "money." These included greenstone beads, cacao beans and
copper bells.
"Ultimately, the power of kings
depended on their ability to control resources," Sharer wrote. "Maya
rulers managed the production and distribution of status goods used to enhance
their prestige and power. They also controlled some critical (non-local)
commodities that included critical everyday resources each family needed, like
salt," he said noting that over time Maya rulers managed ever-larger
portions of the economy. The Maya rulers did not rule alone but were served by
attendants and advisers who occasionally appear in Maya art.
Sharer also notes that Maya laborers were subject to a labor tax
to build palaces, temples and public works. A ruler successful in war could
control more laborers and exact tribute on defeated enemies, further increasing
their economic might.
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