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Most historians claim the Mayas are decedents of the Olmeca, and that at
some point close to the year 2000 BC a group of these Olmecas settled
near what is now known as Yucatán. There they flourished until the
year 1697 AD when the last of the Mayas where eliminated by the Spanish
soldiers.
In the interval of time between the two dates the Mayas filled the region
with their stone built cities, their towering pyramids (sometimes reaching over 70 meters),
and their sackbe paths, which intercommunicated many of their cities.
They developed writing and numeric systems, they studied the stars and came
up with an advanced calendar system that some consider superior to our own.
The Mayas where without a doubt one of the most important cultures of pre-Hispanic
America, their numerous cities stretched from the coasts of Yucatán
down to Guatemala and Chiapas. At one point in time there where over 3 million
Mayas living in this area, but by the time the Europeans came, their numbers
had reduced drastically due to wars and calamities.
Tragically there is much still unknown about the Mayas because most of their
books and writings where burned by Fray Diego de Landa during the conquest.
Most of what we now know about them has been extracted from the three codices
that still remain.
This website is intended to help you learn a little about this amazing culture
and to form a web community in which everyone interested can share their
thoughts, questions, and knowledge. After doing some research in the site
you can go down to the "interactive" section and take the quiz
to see how much your knowledge about the Mayas has grown.
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The Mayas where not big empire builders, their cities coexisted independent
in many ways from each other, tough they did have commerce trades and
some disperse wars.
They occupied three separate areas of Mesoamerica (South, Central, and
North), all tough many investigators don't consider the southern civilization
as real Mayas; this is because they lack many of the characteristic Mayan
traits. Some books even ignore this area all together as being associated
with the Mayas.
On the other hand, since the Central and Northern areas are not separated
by any natural barriers, they both flourished more or less together and
both have all the characteristic Maya traits, like agricultural features,
hieroglyphic writing, the long count with all it's complexities and others.
On this section you can find a brief summary of some of the mayor Maya
cities.
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 This
great capital was one of the largest and most important cities of the Maya
era. Its name means "the wells of Itzá" referring to the two large cenotes
at the site. This cenotes allowed the city to grow and prosper since they
where a very important source of water during the dry seasons. There's
also sufficient archaeological evidence to
suggest that Chichén Itzá was also a vital northern trade center.
One of the most important buildings of the site, called the
"Castillo", is located on the northern part of Chichén. It's a flat
temple, placed on a very high large platform with four stairways. It also
has four doorways, but the northern doorway is wider than the others. The
Castillo has a total of 365 steps, symbolizing the 365-day journey of the
Earth around the Sun.
Northwest of the Castillo is the Great Ball
Court, the largest in Mesoamerica, measuring 545 by 225 feet, with a
playing alley 440 by 110 feet. Two parallel walls define the playing alley, each with a single stone ring. The
purpose of the game was to get a rubber ball to pass trough one of the
rings using only the hip, elbows, shoulders, and feet. When an important
game took place it was customary to sacrifice the captain of the loosing
team.
Another very intriguing building at the site is the one
called "Caracol". This round building constructed over two large
platforms, has a round stairway leading two a small room with
square-shaped holes in the sealing. This means that the building was most
probably an observatory the Mayas used to aid them in their advanced
astronomical calculations.
The two large cenotes were essential to
Chichén's power and prosperity. The city drew its drinking water from the
centrally located Xtoloc Cenote. The other one was sacred, and was used to
give offering to the gods. Many remains have been retrieved from the
cenote, like gold plates, masks collar, jade ornaments and also some human
bones and skulls that support the theory that many sacrifices were done in
this cenote.
Chichén Itzá was no doubt, one of the most important
cities of the area. Many religious pilgrimages were made from all over
Maya land to make offerings to its sacred cenote. Evidence found at the
site also suggests that Chichén was also of vital importance to the Maya's
commerce trades. espanol/turismo/guatemala/servicios/agencia

Palenque was the first discovered of all the Mayan cities. It's also one
of the best conservated. Palenque was designed by the best architects
of all the Maya land, and also by the best writers, as we can appreciate
by all the beatiful hieroglyphic texts trough out the site.
Two of Palenque's most important buildings are the Temple of the Inscriptions,
which houses the unique burial chamber of King Pacal, and the multiroom
Palace, with its unique four-story tower. North of the Palace is a plaza
with a small ball court on its east side. The north side of the plaza
is bounded by a series of small temples, including the Temple of the Count,
named after Count Frederick Waldeck, who lived and studied here in the
19th century.
Below
the temple of the inscriptions is a path leading downward to the door
of another small chamber, right outside this door the bones of five sacrificed
men and one woman were found. Placed in the center of the chamber was
a very beautiful sarcophagus carved with hieroglyphics that record Pacal's
life and his ancestors. On the walls of this chamber nine stucco figures
of the Bolontiku, the nine lords of the Maya underworld Xibalba, were
found.
Three of the most important buildings of the site are located around a
very large court: The temple of the cross to the north, the largest of
the three represent all that is supernatural and the origins of men. The
temple of the sun, to the west, has the most complete exterior of them
all, its designs are quite breathtaking. Finally to the east is the temple
of the "Foliated Cross", the final of the three central buildings in this
group, has one of the most complete remnants of a doorsill in the Maya
region. One can still view the red and green pigments on the decorative
designs of the sill, which provide a glimpse of what the site may have
looked like while still in use.
Other groups of buildings exist along the northwest-to-southeast ridge,
south of where the main complex is located. There are various temples
along the waterfalls that follow the path of the stream that divides the
center of the site, as well as complexes overlooking the entire site from
bases higher on the hillside. Not much is known about these aspects of
the Palenque site.
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