Maya Civilization - History.
Publié le 02/05/2013
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destruction was directed mostly at temples in the ceremonial precincts; it had little or no impact on the economy or population of a city as a whole.
Some city-states didoccasionally conquer others, but this was not a common occurrence until very late in the Classic period when lowland civilization had begun to disintegrate.
Until thattime, the most common pattern of Maya warfare seems to have consisted of raids employing rapid attacks and retreats by relatively small numbers of warriors, most ofwhom were probably nobles.
Lowland Maya centers were true cities with large resident populations of commoners who sustained the ruling elites through payments of tribute in goods and labor.They built temples, palaces, courtyards, water reservoirs, and causeways.
Walls, floors, and other surfaces in a lowland Maya city were smoothly covered with red orcream-colored limestone stucco, which shone brilliantly in the tropical sun.
Sculptors carved stelae, which recorded information about the rulers, their family and politicalhistories, and often included exaggerated statements about their conquests of other city-states.
A Society and Economy
Classic Maya kings carried the title k’ul ahau (supreme and sacred ruler).
In the latter part of the Classic period, kings were assisted in governing by a hereditary ruling council.
The power of the king existed as both a political and religious authority in this period.
In contrast, the king’s religious power declined during the Postclassicperiod ( AD 900 to 1521) because the institution of priesthood appeared.
Merchants were important to Maya society because of the significance of trade.
Principal interior trade routes connected all the great Classic lowland centers andcontrolled the flow of goods such as salt, obsidian, jade, cacao, animal pelts, tropical bird feathers, and luxury ceramics.
In the early Classic period Teotihuacán incentral Mexico emerged as the greatest city in Mesoamerica, an area that included modern Mexico and most of Central America.
The religious and political power ofTeotihuacán radiated throughout Mesoamerica.
One result of Teotihuacán’s influence was a highly integrated network of trade in which the Maya participated.
Highland Maya from the southern region carried obsidian for tools and weapons; grinding stones; jade; green parrot and quetzal feathers; a tree resin called copal toburn as incense; and cochineal, a red dye made from dried insects.
Those from the lowlands brought jaguar pelts, chert (flint), salt, cotton fibers and cloth, balche,wax, honey, dried fish, and smoked venison.
People either bartered goods directly or exchanged them for cacao beans, which were used as a kind of currency.
Wealthacquired from trade enabled the upper classes to live in luxury, although there was little improvement in the lives of the lower classes.
A Maya nobleman wore an embroidered cotton loincloth trimmed with feathers; a robe of cotton, jaguar skin, or feathers; sandals; and an elaborate feather headdressthat was sometimes as large as himself.
His head had been fashionably elongated by being pressed between boards when he was a few days old, and his eyes hadpurposely been crossed in childhood by having objects dangled before them.
His nose was built up with putty to give it an admired beak shape, and his ears and teethwere inlaid with jade.
A noblewoman wore a loose white cotton robe that was often embroidered.
Her head was also elongated, and she filed her teeth to points.
Nobles lived in houses of cut stone with plastered walls that often bore brightly painted murals.
In the living room nobles gave banquets of turkey, deer, duck,chocolate, and balche.
The guests were expected to bring gifts and to give a banquet in return.
A dead noble was buried in a stone vault with jade and potteryornaments, and occasionally with human sacrifices, which were provided to serve him in the afterlife.
Most of the Maya people were village farmers who gave two-thirds of their produce and much of their labor to the upper classes.
Commoner men wore plain cottonloincloths and simple tunics.
Women wore woven cotton blouses and skirts or loose-fitting sack dresses with simple embroidered patterns.
Women and girls wore theirhair long and took care that it was always combed and arranged attractively.
Different hairstyles signaled the marital status of women.
Both men and women tattooedtheir bodies with elaborate designs.
At the bottom of Maya society were slaves who were convicted criminals, poor commoners who sold themselves into bondage, captives of war, or individuals acquired bytrade.
Slaves performed menial tasks for their owners and they were often sacrificed when their owners died so that they could continue to serve in the afterlife.
B Religion
The Maya cosmos comprised a wide range of diverse and varied supernatural beings or deities.
The chief god, Hunab Ku, the creator of the world, was considered too far above men to figure in worship.
He was more important in his manifestation as Itzamna, a sky deity considered lord of the heavens and lord of day and night who brought rain and patronized writing and medicine.
He was worshiped especially by the priests, and he appears to have been the patron deity of the royal lineages.Closer to the common people were Yum Kaax, the maize deity, and the four Chacs, or rain gods, each associated with a cardinal direction and with its own special color. Women worshiped Ix Chel, a rainbow deity associated with healing, childbirth, and weaving.
All the Maya revered Ixtab, goddess of suicide, and thought that suicides went to a special heaven.
The Maya also recognized the gods who controlled each day, month, and year.
See also Pre-Columbian Religions.
The Maya performed many rituals and ceremonies to communicate with their deities.
At stated intervals, such as the Maya New Year in July, or in emergencies—such asfamine, epidemics, or a great drought—the people gathered in ritual plazas to honor the gods.
They hung feathered banners in doorways all about the plaza.
Groups ofmen or women in elaborate feathered robes and headdresses, with bells on their hands and feet, danced in the plaza to the music of drums, whistles, rattles, flutes,and wood trumpets.
Worshipers took ritual steam baths and drank intoxicating balche.
Participants often ingested other hallucinogenic drugs, such as mushrooms, andthey smoked a very strong form of tobacco with hallucinogenic effects.
Young Maya nobles played a sacred ball game on specially constructed courts.
Without usingtheir hands, players tried to knock a rubber ball through one of the vertical stone rings built into the walls of the court.
On special occasions players who lost the gamewould be sacrificed to the gods.
Many ceremonies focused on sacrifices to gain the favor of the gods.
The sacrifices took place on the great stone pyramids that rose above the plazas, with stairsleading to a temple and altar on top.
The temple, a resting place for the god, was deeply carved or painted with designs and figures and was topped with a carvedvertical slab of stone called a roof comb.
Some had distinctive corbeled arches, in which each stone extended beyond the one beneath it until the two sides of the archwere joined by a single keystone at the top.
Before the altar, smoke rose from copal incense burning in pottery vessels.
Worshipers sometimes gave the gods simple offerings of corn, fruit, game, or blood, which a worshiper obtained by piercing his own lips, tongue, or genitals.
For majorfavors they offered the gods human sacrifice, usually children, slaves, or prisoners of war.
A victim was painted blue and then ceremonially killed on top of the pyramid,either by being shot full of arrows or by having his arms and legs held while a priest cut open his chest with a sacrificial flint knife and tore out his heart as an offering.Captured rulers were sometimes ritually sacrificed by decapitating them with an axe.
C Science and Writing
Although Maya builders possessed many practical skills, the most distinctive Maya achievements were in abstract mathematics and astronomy.
One of their greatestintellectual achievements was a pair of interlocking calendars, which was used for such purposes as the scheduling of ceremonies.
One calendar was based on the sunand contained 365 days.
The second was a sacred 260-day almanac used for finding lucky and unlucky days.
The designation of any day included the day name andnumber from both the solar calendar and the sacred almanac.
The two calendars can be thought of as two geared wheels that meshed together at one point along therim, with the glyphs for the days of the sun calendar on one wheel and the glyphs for the days of the sacred almanac on the other.
With each new day the wheels were.
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