The
Maya is a
Mesoamerican civilization, noted for the only known fully
developed
written language of the
pre-Columbian Americas, as well as its
art,
architecture, and mathematical and
astronomical systems. Initially established during the
Preclassic period (c. 2000 BC to 250
AD), many Maya cities reached their highest state development
during the
Classic period
(c. 250 AD to 900 AD), and continued throughout the Postclassic
period until the
arrival of the Spanish. At
its peak, it was one of the most densely populated and culturally
dynamic societies in the world.
The Maya civilization shares many features with other Mesoamerican
civilizations due to the high degree of interaction and
cultural diffusion that characterized the
region. Advances such as writing,
epigraphy, and the
calendar did not originate with the Maya;
however, their civilization fully developed them.
Maya influence can be
detected from Honduras
, Guatemala
, El
Salvador
and to as
far as central Mexico
, more than
1000 km (625 miles) from the Maya area. Many
outside influences are found in
Maya art
and architecture, which are thought to result from trade and
cultural exchange rather than direct external conquest.The
Maya peoples never disappeared, neither at the
time of the Classic period decline nor with the arrival of the
Spanish conquistadores and the subsequent
Spanish colonization of the
Americas. Today, the Maya and their descendants form sizable
populations throughout the Maya area and maintain a distinctive set
of traditions and beliefs that are the result of the merger of
pre-Columbian and post-Conquest ideas and cultures.
Many Mayan languages continue to be spoken as
primary languages today; the Rabinal
Achí, a play written in the Achi' language,
was declared a Masterpiece
of the Oral and Intangible Heritage of Humanity by UNESCO
in
2005.
Geographical extent
Extent of the Maya civilization
The geographic extent of the Maya civilization, known as the Maya
area, extended throughout the southern Mexican states of
Chiapas
,
Tabasco
, and the
Yucatán
Peninsula
states of
Quintana Roo
,
Campeche
and
Yucatán
.
The Maya
area also extended throughout the northern Central American region, including the
present-day nations of Guatemala
, Belize
, El Salvador
and western Honduras
.
As the
largest sub-region in Mesoamerica, it encompassed a vast and varied
landscape, from the mountainous regions of the Sierra Madre to the semi-arid plains of
northern
Yucatán
. Climate in the Maya region can vary
tremendously, as the low-lying areas are particularly susceptible
to the hurricanes and tropical storms that frequent the Caribbean
.
The Maya area is generally divided into three loosely defined
zones: the southern Maya highlands, the southern (or central) Maya
lowlands, and the northern Maya lowlands. The southern Maya
highlands include all of elevated terrain in Guatemala and the
Chiapas highlands. The southern
lowlands lie just north of the highlands, and incorporate the
Mexican states of Campeche and Quintana Roo and northern Guatemala,
Belize and El Salvador. The northern lowlands cover the remainder
of the Yucatán Peninsula, including the
Puuc
hills.
History
Preclassic
The Maya area was initially inhabited around the 10th century BC.
Recent discoveries of Maya occupation at Cuello in Belize have been
carbon dated to around 2600 BC. This level of occupation included
monumental structures. The Maya calendar, which is based around the
so-called
Mesoamerican
Long Count calendar, commences on a date equivalent to 11
August, 3114 BC. However, according to "accepted history" the first
clearly “Maya” settlements were established in approximately 1800
BC in
Soconusco region of the Pacific Coast.This period,
known as the Early Preclassic, was characterized by
sedentary communities and the introduction of
pottery and fired
clay
figurines.
Important
sites in the southern Maya lowlands include Nakbe
, El Mirador
, Cival, and San Bartolo. In the Guatemalan
Highlands Kaminal
Juyú
emerges around 800 BC. For many centuries it
controlled the
Jade and
Obsidian sources for the Petén and Pacific
Lowlands.
The important early sites of Izapa
, Takalik Abaj
and Chocolá at around
600 BC were the main producers of Cacao. Mid-sized Maya communities also began to
develop in the northern Maya lowlands during the Middle and Late
Preclassic, though these lacked the size, scale, and influence of
the large centers of the southern lowlands.
Two important
Preclassic northern sites include Komchen
and Dzibilchaltun
. The first written inscription in Maya
hieroglyphics also dates to this period (c. 250 BC).
There is
disagreement about the boundaries which differentiate the physical
and cultural extent of the early Maya and neighboring Preclassic
Mesoamerican civilizations, such as the Olmec
culture of the Tabasco lowlands and the Mixe-Zoque– and Zapotec–speaking peoples of Chiapas and
southern Oaxaca
,
respectively. Many of the earliest significant inscriptions
and buildings appeared in this overlapping zone, and evidence
suggests that these cultures and the formative Maya influenced one
another. Takalik Abaj, in the Pacific slopes of Guatemala, is the
only site where Olmec and then Maya features have been found.
Classic
The Classic period (c. 250–900 AD) witnessed the peak of
large-scale construction and
urbanism, the
recording of monumental inscriptions, and a period of significant
intellectual and artistic development, particularly in the southern
lowland regions. They developed an agriculturally intensive,
city-centered empire consisting of numerous independent
city-states.
This includes the well-known cities of
Tikal
, Palenque
, Copán
and Calakmul
, but also the lesser known Dos Pilas
, Uaxactun
, Altun
Ha
, and Bonampak
, among others. The Early Classic
settlement distribution in the northern Maya lowlands is not as
clearly known as the southern zone, but does include a number of
population centers, such as Oxkintok
, Chunchucmil
, and the early occupation of Uxmal
.
The most notable monuments are the
stepped pyramids they built in their
religious centers and the accompanying palaces of their rulers. The
palace at
Cancuen is the largest in the Maya
area, though the site, interestingly, lacks pyramids. Other
important archaeological remains include the carved stone slabs
usually called
stelae (the Maya
called them
tetun, or "tree-stones"), which depict rulers
along with hieroglyphic texts describing their genealogy, military
victories, and other accomplishments.
The Maya
civilization participated in long distance trade with many of the
other Mesoamerican cultures, including Teotihuacan
, the Zapotec
and other groups in central and gulf-coast Mexico, as well as with
more distant, non-Mesoamerican groups, for example the Tainos in the Caribbean. Archeologists have
also found gold from Panama
in the
Sacred
Cenote
of Chichen
Itza
. Important trade goods included
cacao,
salt,
sea shells,
jade and
obsidian.
The Maya collapse
For reasons that are still debated, the Maya centers of the
southern lowlands went into decline during the 8th and 9th
centuries and were abandoned shortly thereafter. This decline was
coupled with a cessation of monumental inscriptions and large-scale
architectural construction. Although there is no universally
accepted theory to explain this “collapse,” current theories fall
into two categories: non-ecological and ecological.
Non-ecological theories of Maya decline are divided into several
subcategories, such as overpopulation, foreign invasion, peasant
revolt, and the collapse of key trade routes. Ecological hypotheses
include environmental disaster, epidemic disease, and climate
change. There is evidence that the Maya population exceeded
carrying capacity of the
environment including exhaustion of
agricultural potential and overhunting of
megafauna. Some scholars have recently
theorized that an intense 200 year drought led to the collapse of
Maya civilization. The drought theory originated from research
performed by physical scientists studying lake beds, ancient
pollen, and other data, not from the archaeological
community.
Postclassic period
During the succeeding Postclassic period (from the 10th to the
early 16th century), development in the northern centers persisted,
characterized by an increasing diversity of external influences.
The Maya
cities of the northern lowlands in Yucatán continued to flourish
for centuries more; some of the important sites in this era were
Chichen
Itza
, Uxmal
, Edzná
, and Coba
.
After the
decline of the ruling dynasties of Chichen and Uxmal, Mayapan
ruled all of Yucatán until a revolt in 1450.
(This city's name may be the source of the word "Maya", which had a
more geographically restricted meaning in
Yucatec and colonial Spanish and only grew
to its current meaning in the 19th and 20th centuries). The area
then degenerated into competing
city-states until the
Yucatán was conquered by the
Spanish.
The
Itza Maya,
Ko'woj,
and Yalain groups of Central Peten survived the "Classic Period
Collapse" in small numbers and by 1250 reconstituted themselves to
form competing city-states.
The Itza maintained their capital at
Tayasal
(also known as Noh Petén), an archaeological site
thought to underlay the modern city of Flores, Guatemala
on Lake Petén Itzá
. It ruled over an area extending across the
Peten Lakes region, encompassing the community of
Eckixil on Lake Quexil. The Ko'woj had their capital
at
Zacpeten. Postclassic Maya states also
continued to survive in the southern highlands. One of the Maya
nations in this area, the
K'iche' Kingdom of Q'umarkaj,
is responsible for the best-known Maya work of
historiography and mythology, the
Popol Vuh.
Other highland kingdoms included the
Mam based at Huehuetenango
, the Kaqchikel
based at Iximché
, the Chajomá based at
Mixco Viejo and the Chuj, based at San Mateo
Ixtatán
.
Colonial period
Shortly
after their first expeditions to the region, the Spanish initiated
a number of attempts to subjugate the Maya and establish a colonial
presence in the Maya territories of the Yucatán
Peninsula
and the Guatemalan highlands. This campaign,
sometimes termed "The Spanish Conquest of Yucatán," would prove to
be a lengthy and dangerous exercise for the
conquistadores from the outset, and it
would take some 170 years before the Spanish established
substantive control over all Maya lands.
Unlike the
Aztec and
Inca Empires, there was no single Maya political
center that, once overthrown, would hasten the end of collective
resistance from the indigenous peoples. Instead, the conquistador
forces needed to subdue the numerous independent Maya polities
almost one by one, many of which kept up a fierce resistance. Most
of the
conquistadores were motivated by the prospects of
the great wealth to be had from the seizure of precious metal
resources such as
gold or
silver; however, the Maya lands themselves were poor
in these resources.
This would become another factor in
forestalling Spanish designs of conquest, as they instead were
initially attracted to the reports of great riches in central
Mexico or Peru
.
The Spanish Church and government officials destroyed Maya texts
and with them the knowledge of Maya writing, but by chance three of
the pre-Columbian books dated to the post classic period have been
preserved.
The last Maya states, the Itza polity of Tayasal
and the Ko'woj city of
Zacpeten, were continuously occupied and
remained independent of the Spanish until late in the 17th
century. They were finally subdued by the Spanish in
1697.
Political structures
A typical Classic Maya
polity was a small
hierarchical state (
ajawil,
ajawlel, or
ajawlil) headed by a hereditary ruler
known as an
ajaw (later
k’uhul
ajaw). Such kingdoms were usually no more than a capital city
with its neighborhood and several lesser towns, although there were
greater kingdoms, which controlled larger territories and extended
patronage over smaller polities. Each kingdom had a name that did
not necessarily correspond to any locality within its territory.
Its identity was that of a political unit associated with a
particular ruling dynasty.
For instance, the archaeological site of
Naranjo
was the capital of the kingdom of Saal. The
land (chan ch’e’n) of the kingdom and its capital were called
Wakab’nal or Maxam and were part of a larger geographical entity
known as Huk Tsuk. Interestingly, despite constant warfare and
eventual shifts in regional power, most kingdoms never disappeared
from the political landscape until the collapse of the whole system
in the 9th century AD. In this respect, Classic Maya kingdoms are
highly similar to late Post Classic polities encountered by the
Spaniards in Yucatán and Central Mexico: some polities could be
subordinated to hegemonic rulers through conquests or dynastic
unions and yet even then they persisted as distinct entities.
Mayanists have been increasingly accepting a "court paradigm" of
Classic Maya societies which puts the emphasis on the centrality of
the royal household and especially the person of the king. This
approach focuses on Maya monumental spaces as the embodiment of the
diverse activities of the royal household. It considers the role of
places and spaces (including dwellings of royalty and nobles,
throne rooms, temples, halls and plazas for public ceremonies) in
establishing power and social hierarchy, and also in projecting
aesthetic and moral values to define the wider social realm.
Spanish sources invariably describe even the largest Maya
settlements as dispersed collections of dwellings grouped around
the temples and palaces of the ruling dynasty and lesser nobles.
None of the Classic Maya cities shows evidence of economic
specialization and commerce of the scale of Mexican
Tenochtitlan. Instead, Maya cities could be
seen as enormous royal households, the locales of the
administrative and ritual activities of the royal court. They were
the places where privileged nobles could approach the holy ruler,
where aesthetic values of the high culture were formulated and
disseminated, where aesthetic items were consumed. They were the
self-proclaimed centers and the sources of social, moral, and
cosmic order.
The fall of a royal court as in the
well-documented cases of Piedras Negras
or Copan
would cause
the inevitable "death" of the associated settlement.
Art

200 px
Many consider Maya
art of their
Classic
Era (c. 250 to 900 AD) to be the most sophisticated and
beautiful of the ancient New World . The carvings and the
reliefs made of
stucco at
Palenque and the
statuary of Copán are
especially fine , showing a grace and accurate observation of the
human form that reminded early archaeologists of Classical
civilizations of the Old World , hence the name bestowed on this
era.
We
have only hints of the advanced painting of the classic Maya;
mostly what have survived are funerary
pottery and other Maya ceramics, and a
building at Bonampak
holds ancient murals that
survived by chance. A beautiful turquoise blue color that has
survived through the centuries due to its unique chemical
characteristics is known as Maya Blue or Azul
maya, and it is present in Bonampak
, Tajín
Cacaxtla
, Jaina, and even in some Colonial Convents.
The use of Maya Blue survived until the 16th century when the
technique was lost. Some
Pre Classic murals have been
recently discovered at
San
Bartolo, and are by far the finest in style and iconography,
regarded as the
Sistine Chapel of the Maya. With the
decipherment of the Maya script it was
discovered that the Maya were one of the few civilizations where
artists attached their name to their work.
Architecture
Maya architecture spans many thousands of years; yet, often the
most dramatic and easily recognizable as Maya are the stepped
pyramids from the
Terminal
Pre-classic period and beyond. There are also cave sites that
are important to the Maya.
These cave sites include Jolja Cave, the cave site at Naj Tunich, the Candelaria Caves
, and the Cave of the
Witch. There are also cave-
origin myth among the Maya. Some cave sites
are still used by the modern Maya in the
Chiapas highlands.
It has been suggested that temples and pyramids were remodeled and
rebuilt every fifty-two years in synchrony with the
Maya Long Count Calendar. It appears now that
the rebuilding process was often instigated by a new ruler or for
political matters, as opposed to matching the calendar cycle.
However, the process of rebuilding on top of old structures is
indeed a common one.
Most notably, the North Acropolis
at Tikal seems to be the sum total of 1,500 years
of architectural modifications. In Tikal
and Yaxhá
, there are the Twin Pyramid complexes
(seven in Tikal and one in Yaxhá, that commemorate the end of a
Baktún). Through observation of the numerous
consistent elements and stylistic distinctions, remnants of Maya
architecture have become an important key to understanding the
evolution of their ancient civilization.
Urban design

North Acropolis, Tikal,
Guatemala
As Maya cities spread throughout the varied geography of
Mesoamerica, site planning appears to have been minimal. Maya
architecture tended to integrate a great degree of natural features
, and their cities were built somewhat haphazardly as dictated by
the topography of each independent location.
For instance, some
cities on the flat limestone plains of the
northern Yucatán grew into great sprawling municipalities, while
others built in the hills of Usumacinta
utilized the natural loft of the topography to
raise their towers and temples to impressive heights.
However, some semblance of order, as required in any large city,
still prevailed.
Classic Era Maya urban design could easily be described as the
division of space by great monuments and causeways. Open public
plazas were the gathering places for people and the focus of urban
design, while interior space was entirely secondary. Only in the
Late Post-Classic era did the great Maya cities develop into more
fortress-like defensive structures that lacked, for the most part,
the large and numerous plazas of the Classic.
At the onset of large-scale construction during the Classic Era, a
predetermined axis was typically established in a cardinal
direction. Depending on the location of natural resources such as
fresh-water wells, or
cenotes, the
city grew by using
sacbeob
(causeways) to connect great plazas with the numerous platforms
that created the sub-structure for nearly all Maya buildings. As
more structures were added and existing structures re-built or
remodeled, the great Maya cities seemed to take on an almost random
identity that contrasted sharply with other great Mesoamerican
cities such as Teotihuacan and its rigid grid-like construction.

Ballcourt at Tikal, Guatemala
At the heart of the Maya city were large plazas surrounded by the
most important governmental and religious buildings, such as the
royal
acropolis, great pyramid temples and
occasionally
ball-courts.
Though city layouts evolved as nature dictated, careful attention
was placed on the directional orientation of temples and
observatories so that they were constructed in accordance with Maya
interpretation of the orbits of the heavenly bodies. Immediately
outside of this ritual center were the structures of lesser nobles,
smaller temples, and individual shrines; the less sacred and less
important structures had a greater degree of privacy. Outside of
the constantly evolving urban core were the less permanent and more
modest homes of the common people.
Building materials
A surprising aspect of the great Maya structures is their lack of
many advanced technologies seemingly necessary for such
constructions. Lacking draft animals necessary for wheel-based
modes of transportation, metal tools and even pulleys, Maya
architecture required abundant manpower. Yet, beyond this enormous
requirement, the remaining materials seem to have been readily
available. All stone for Maya structures appears to have been taken
from local quarries. They most often used
limestone which remained pliable enough to be
worked with stone tools while being quarried and only hardened once
removed from its bed. In addition to the structural use of
limestone, much of their mortar consisted of crushed, burnt and
mixed limestone that mimicked the properties of cement and was used
as widely for stucco finishing as it was for mortar. Later
improvements in quarrying techniques reduced the necessity for this
limestone-stucco as the stones began to fit quite perfectly, yet it
remained a crucial element in some
post
and lintel roofs. In the case of the common Maya houses, wooden
poles,
adobe and thatch were the primary
materials; however, instances of what appear to be common houses of
limestone have been discovered as well. Also notable throughout
Maya architecture is the
corbel arch
(also known as a "false arch"), which allowed for more open-aired
entrances. The corbelled arch improved upon pier/post and lintel
doorways by directing the weight off of the lintel and onto the
supporting posts.
Notable constructions
- Ceremonial platforms were commonly limestone
platforms of typically less than four meters in height where public
ceremonies and religious rites were performed. Constructed in the
fashion of a typical foundation platform, these were often accented
by carved figures, altars and perhaps tzompantli, a stake used to display the
heads of victims or defeated Mesoamerican ballgame opponents.
- Palaces were large and often highly decorated,
and usually sat close to the center of a city and housed the
population's elite. Any exceedingly large royal palace, or one
consisting of many chambers on different levels might be referred
to as an acropolis. However, often these were one-story and
consisted of many small chambers and typically at least one
interior courtyard; these structures appear to take into account
the needed functionality required of a residence, as well as the
decoration required for their inhabitants stature.
- E-Groups are specific
structural configurations present at a number of centers in the
Maya area. These complexes are oriented and aligned according to
specific astronomical events (primarily the sun’s solstices and equinoxes) and
are thought to have been observatories.
These structures are usually accompanied by iconographic reliefs that
tie astronomical observation into general Maya mythology.
The
structural complex is named for Group E at Uaxactun
, the first documented in Mesoamerica.
- Pyramids and temples. Often the most important
religious temples sat atop the towering Maya pyramids, presumably
as the closest place to the heavens. While recent discoveries point
toward the extensive use of pyramids as tombs, the temples
themselves seem to rarely, if ever, contain burials. Residing atop the
pyramids, some of over two-hundred feet, such as that at El Mirador
, the temples were impressive and decorated
structures themselves. Commonly topped with a roof comb, or superficial grandiose wall, these
temples might have served as a type of propaganda. As they were
often the only structure in a Maya city to exceed the height of the
surrounding jungle, the roof combs atop the temples were often
carved with representations of rulers that could be seen from vast
distances.
- Observatories. The Maya were keen astronomers
and had mapped out the phases of celestial objects, especially the
Moon and Venus. Many temples have doorways and
other features aligning to celestial events. Round temples, often
dedicated to Kukulcan, are perhaps those
most often described as "observatories" by modern ruin tour-guides,
but there is no evidence that they were so used exclusively, and
temple pyramids of other shapes may well have been used for
observation as well.
- Ball courts. As an integral aspect of the
Mesoamerican lifestyle, the courts for their ritual ball-game were
constructed throughout the Maya realm and often on a grand scale.
Enclosed on two sides by stepped ramps that led to ceremonial
platforms or small temples, the ball court itself was of a capital
"I" shape and could be found in all but the smallest of Maya
cities.
Writing and literacy
Writing system
The Maya
writing system (often called
hieroglyphs from a
superficial resemblance to the
Ancient
Egyptian writing) was a combination of
phonetic symbols and
logograms. It is most often classified as a
logographic or (more properly) a
logosyllabic writing system, in which
syllabic signs play a significant role. It is the
only writing system of the Pre-Columbian New World which is known
to completely represent the spoken language of its community. In
total, the script has more than a thousand different
glyphs, although a few are variations of the same sign
or meaning, and many appear only rarely or are confined to
particular localities. At any one time, no more than around 500
glyphs were in use, some 200 of which (including variations) had a
phonetic or syllabic interpretation.
The earliest inscriptions in an identifiably-Maya script date back
to 200–300 BC. However, this is preceded by several other writing
systems which had developed in
Mesoamerica, most notably that of the
Zapotec, and (following the 2006 publication
of research on the recently-discovered
Cascajal Block), the
Olmecs. There is a pre-Maya writing known as "
Epi-Olmec script" (post Olmec) which some
researchers believe may represent a transitional script between
Olmec and Maya writing, but the relationships between these remain
unclear and the matter is unsettled.
On January 5, 2006,
National
Geographic
published the findings of Maya writings that could
be as old as 400 BC, suggesting that the Maya writing system is
nearly as old as the oldest Mesoamerican writing known at that
time, Zapotec. In the succeeding centuries the Maya
developed their script into a form which was far more complete and
complex than any other that has yet been found in the
Americas.
Since its inception, the Maya script was in use up to the arrival
of the Europeans, peaking during the Maya Classical Period (c. 200
to 900). Although many Maya centers went into decline (or were
completely abandoned) during or after this period, the skill and
knowledge of Maya writing persisted amongst segments of the
population, and the early Spanish conquistadors knew of individuals
who could still read and write the script. Unfortunately, the
Spanish displayed little interest in it, and as a result of the
dire impacts the conquest had on Maya societies, the knowledge was
subsequently lost, probably within only a few generations.
At a rough estimate, in excess of 10,000 individual texts have so
far been recovered, mostly inscribed on stone
monuments,
lintels,
stelae and ceramic pottery. The Maya also produced
texts painted on a form of
paper manufactured
from processed tree-bark, in particular from several species of
strangler
fig trees such as
Ficus
cotinifolia and
Ficus padifolia. This paper, common
throughout Mesoamerica and generally now known by its
Nahuatl-language name
amatl, was typically bound as a single continuous
sheet that was folded into pages of equal width,
concertina-style, to produce a
codex that could be written on both sides. Shortly
after the conquest, all of the codices which could be found were
ordered to be burnt and destroyed by zealous Spanish
priests, notably
Bishop
Diego de Landa. Only three reasonably intact examples of
Maya codices are known to have survived
through to the present day. These are now known as the Madrid,
Dresden, and Paris codices. A few pages survive from a fourth, the
Grolier codex, whose authenticity is sometimes disputed, but mostly
is held to be genuine. Further archaeology conducted at Maya sites
often reveals other fragments, rectangular lumps of plaster and
paint chips which formerly were codices; these tantalizing remains
are, however, too severely damaged for any inscriptions to have
survived, most of the organic material having decayed.
The decipherment and recovery of the now-lost knowledge of Maya
writing has been a long and laborious process. Some elements were
first deciphered in the late 19th and early 20th century, mostly
the parts having to do with
numbers,
the Maya calendar, and astronomy. Major breakthroughs came starting
in the 1950s to 1970s, and accelerated rapidly thereafter. By the
end of the 20th century, scholars were able to read the majority of
Maya texts to a large extent, and recent field work continues to
further illuminate the content.
In reference to the few extant Maya writings,
Michael D. Coe, a
prominent linguist and epigrapher at
Yale
University
,
stated:
- "[O]ur knowledge of ancient Maya thought must represent
only a tiny fraction of the whole picture, for of the thousands of
books in which the full extent of their learning and ritual was
recorded, only four have survived to modern times (as though all
that posterity knew of ourselves were to be based upon three prayer
books and 'Pilgrim's Progress')." (Michael D. Coe, The
Maya, London: Thames and Hudson, 4th ed., 1987, p. 161.)
Most surviving pre-Columbian Maya writing is from stelae and other
stone inscriptions from Maya sites, many of which were already
abandoned before the Spanish arrived. The inscriptions on the
stelae mainly record the dynasties and wars of the sites' rulers.
Also of note are the inscriptions that reveal information about the
lives of ancient
Maya women. Much of the
remainder of Maya hieroglyphics has been found on funeral pottery,
most of which describes the afterlife.
Writing tools
Although the archaeological record does not provide examples, Maya
art shows that writing was done with brushes made with animal hair
and
quills. Codex-style writing was usually
done in black ink with red highlights, giving rise to the Aztec
name for the Maya territory as the "land of red and black".
Scribes and literacy
Scribes held a prominent position in Maya courts. Maya art often
depicts rulers with trappings indicating they were scribes or at
least able to write, such as having pen bundles in their
headdresses. Additionally, many rulers have been found in
conjunction with writing tools such as shell or clay inkpots.
Although the number of logograms and syllabic symbols required to
fully write the language numbered in the hundreds, literacy was not
necessarily widespread beyond the elite classes. Graffiti uncovered
in various contexts, including on fired bricks, shows nonsensical
attempts to imitate the writing system.
Mathematics

Maya numerals
In common with the other Mesoamerican civilizations, the Maya used
a
base 20 (vigesimal) and base 5 numbering
system (see
Maya numerals). Also, the
preclassic Maya and their neighbors independently developed the
concept of
zero by 36 BC .
Inscriptions show them on occasion working with sums up to the
hundreds of millions and dates so large it would take several lines
just to represent it. They produced extremely accurate astronomical
observations; their charts of the movements of the moon and planets
are equal or superior to those of any other civilization working
from naked eye observation.
In common with the other Mesoamerican civilizations, the Maya had
measured the length of the solar year to a high degree of accuracy,
far more accurately than that used in Europe as the basis of the
Gregorian Calendar. They did not
use this figure for the length of year in their
calendars, however; the calendars they used
were crude, being based on a year length of exactly 365 days, which
means that the calendar falls out of step with the seasons by one
day every four years. By comparison, the
Julian calendar, used in Europe from Roman
times until about the 16th Century, accumulated an error of only
one day every 128 years. The modern
Gregorian calendar is even more accurate,
accumulating only a day's error in approximately 3257 years.
Astronomy
Uniquely, there is some evidence to suggest the Maya appear to be
the only pre-telescopic civilization to demonstrate knowledge of
the
Orion Nebula as being fuzzy, i.e.
not a stellar pin-point. The information which supports this theory
comes from a folk tale that deals with the Orion constellation's
area of the sky. Their traditional
hearths
include in their middle a smudge of glowing fire that corresponds
with the Orion Nebula. This is a significant clue to support the
idea that the Maya detected a diffuse area of the sky contrary to
the pin points of stars before the telescope was invented.
Many
preclassic sites are oriented with the Pleiades and Eta Draconis, as seen in La Blanca, Ujuxte, Monte Alto, and Takalik Abaj
.
The Maya were very interested in
zenial passages, the time when the
sun passes directly overhead.
The latitude of most of their cities being below the
Tropic of
Cancer
, these zenial passages would occur twice a year
equidistant from the solstice. To
represent this position of the sun overhead, the Maya had a god
named
Diving God.
The
Dresden Codex contains the highest
concentration of astronomical phenomena observations and
calculations of any of the surviving texts (it appears that the
data in this codex is primarily or exclusively of an astronomical
nature). Examination and analysis of this codex reveals that
Venus was the most important astronomical
object to the Maya, even more important to them than the sun.
Religion
Like the Aztec and Inca who came to power later, the Maya believed
in a cyclical nature of time. The rituals and ceremonies were very
closely associated with celestial and terrestrial cycles which they
observed and inscribed as separate calendars. The Maya priest had
the job of interpreting these cycles and giving a prophetic outlook
on the future or past based on the number relations of all their
calendars. They also had to determine if the "heavens" or celestial
matters were appropriate for performing certain religious
ceremonies.
The Maya practiced human sacrifice. In some Maya rituals people
were killed by having their arms and legs held while a priest cut
the person's chest open and tore out his heart as an offering. This
is depicted on ancient objects such as pictorial texts, known as
codices. It is believed that children
were often offered as sacrificial victims because they were
believed to be pure.
Much of the Maya religious tradition is still not understood by
scholars, but it is known that the Maya, like most pre-modern
societies, believed that the
cosmos has three
major planes, the
underworld, the sky,
and the Earth.
The Maya
underworld is reached through caves
and ball courts. It was thought to be dominated by the aged Maya
gods of death and
putrefaction. The Sun
(
Kinich Ahau) and Itzamna, an aged god,
dominated the Maya idea of the sky. Another aged man,
god L, was one of the major deities of the
underworld.
The night sky was considered a window showing all supernatural
doings. The Maya configured
constellations of gods and places, saw the
unfolding of narratives in their seasonal movements, and believed
that the intersection of all possible worlds was in the night sky
.
Maya gods were not separate entities like
Greek gods. The gods had affinities and
aspects that caused them to merge with one another in ways that
seem unbounded. There is a massive array of supernatural characters
in the Maya religious tradition, only some of which recur with
regularity. Good and evil traits are not permanent characteristics
of Maya gods, nor is only "good" admirable. What is inappropriate
during one season might come to pass in another since much of the
Maya religious tradition is based on
cycles and not permanence.
The life-cycle of
maize lies at the heart of
Maya belief. This philosophy is demonstrated on the belief in the
Maya maize god as a central religious
figure. The Maya bodily ideal is also based on the form of this
young deity, which is demonstrated in their artwork. The Maize God
was also a model of courtly life for the Classical Maya.
It is sometimes believed that the multiple "gods" represented
nothing more than a mathematical explanation of what they observed.
Each god was literally just a number or an explanation of the
effects observed by a combination of numbers from multiple
calendars. Among the many types of
Maya
calendars which were maintained, the most important included a
260-day cycle, a 365-day cycle which approximated the
solar year, a cycle which recorded
lunation periods of the Moon, and a cycle which
tracked the
synodic period of
Venus.
Philosophically, the Maya believed that knowing the past meant
knowing the cyclical influences that create the present, and by
knowing the influences of the present one can see the cyclical
influences of the future.
Even in the 19th century, there was Maya influence in the local
branch of Christianity followed in
Chan
Santa Cruz.
Among the K'iche' in the western highlands of Guatemala
these same nine months are replicated, until this
very day, in the training of the ajk'ij, the keeper of the
260-day-calendar called ch'olk'ij.
Agriculture
The ancient Maya had diverse and sophisticated methods of food
production. It was formerly believed that
shifting cultivation (swidden)
agriculture provided most of their food but it is now thought that
permanent raised fields, terracing, forest gardens, managed
fallows, and wild harvesting were also crucial to supporting the
large populations of the Classic period in some areas. Indeed,
evidence of these different agricultural systems persist today:
raised fields connected by canals can be seen on aerial
photographs, contemporary rainforest species composition has
significantly higher abundance of species of economic value to
ancient Maya, and pollen records in lake
sediments suggest that corn, manioc,
sunflower seeds, cotton, and other crops have
been cultivated in association with the
deforestation in Mesoamerica since at least
2500 BC.
Contemporary
Maya peoples still
practice many of these traditional forms of agriculture, although
they are dynamic systems and change with changing population
pressures, cultures, economic systems, climate change, and the
availability of synthetic fertilizers and pesticides.
Rediscovery of the Pre-Columbian Maya
Spanish clergy and administrators dating to the 16th century were
largely familiar with ancient Maya sites, writing and calendar
systems. Published writings of 16th century
Bishop Diego de Landa and writings of
18th century Spanish officials spurred serious investigations of
Maya sites by the late 18th century. In 1839 United States traveler
and writer
John Lloyd Stephens,
familiar with earlier Spanish investigations, visited Copán,
Palenque, and other sites with English architect and draftsman
Frederick Catherwood. Their
illustrated accounts of the ruins sparked strong popular interest
in the region and the people, and they have once again regained
their position as a vital link in Mesoamerican heritage.
However, in many locations, Maya ruins have been overgrown by the
jungle, becoming dense enough to hide structures just a few meters
away. To help find ruins, researchers have turned to satellite
imagery. The best way to find them is to look at the visible and
near-infrared spectra. Due to their limestone construction, the
monuments affected the chemical makeup of the soil as they
deteriorated. Some moisture-loving plants stayed away, while others
were killed off or discolored. The effects of the limestone ruins
are still apparent today to some satellite sensors.
Much of
the contemporary rural population of the Yucatán
Peninsula
, Chiapas
(both in
Mexico), Guatemala
and Belize
is Maya by
descent and primary language.
Maya sites
There are hundreds of significant Maya sites, and thousands of
smaller ones. The largest and most historically important include:
See also
Footnotes
-
http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v260/n5552/abs/260579a0.html
- http://ambergriscaye.com/pages/mayan/mayasites.html
- See, for example, Drew (2004), p.6.
- HISTORY OF WRITING and RELIGION
- See Coggins (1992).
- University of Florida study: Maya politics likely played
role in ancient large-game decline, Nov. 2007
- Love 2007, p.305. Sharer 2006, pp.621, 625.
- "The Ancient Maya", Robert J. Sharer, Loa P. Traxler
Contributor Loa P. Traxler, p126, Stanford University Press, 2006,
ISBN 0804748179
- Both terms appear in early Colonial texts (including Papeles de
Paxbolón) where they are used as synonymous to Aztec and Spanish
terms for supreme rulers and their domains – tlahtoani
(Tlatoani) and
tlahtocayotl, rey or magestad and reino, señor and señorío or
dominio.
- Skidmore (2006).
- The following year saw the publication of research on a tablet
containing some 62 glyphs that had been found near the
Olmec center of
San Lorenzo Tenochtitlán,
which was dated by association to approximately 900 BC. This would
make this putative Olmec script (see Cascajal Block) the oldest known for
Mesoamerica; see Skidmore (2006, passim)
- Miller and Taube (1993, p.131)
- As interpreted by .
- Demarest, Arthur. Ancient Maya: The Rise and Fall of a
Rainforest Civilization. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,
2004 pg. 32-33.
References
Further reading
External links