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Mayan Writing & the Long Count Stelae, Codices and Books Calendric Calculations Deciphering Hieroglyphs Maya Long Count Exercise Maya Long Count Exercise Calculate ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Mayan Writing


1
Mayan Writing the Long Count
  • Stelae, Codices and Books
  • Calendric Calculations
  • Deciphering Hieroglyphs
  • Maya Long Count Exercise

2
Stelae, Books and Codices Mayan writing is
depicted in several ways.
  • Stelae
  • carved, vertical glyphs on stone shafts or
    altars.
  • also horizontally on steps, benches
  • sometimes seen on bone, shell or stones.

3
Stelae
Copan Stelae 18 Rabbit, a Copan Ruler, as is
usual in full-figure stelae, carries a ceremonial
bar with dragon heads at either end. From the
dragon heads emerge divine heads.
http//www.misericordia.edu/users/davies/maya/text
a.htm
4
Copan, Stela 4
Stela 4's version of "18 Rabbit." The "18"
numeral, is three lines plus three dots, with
each line equal to 5.The "ubah" sign is included
in the Kawil head through the circle/cross and
the "rabbit" head facing upwards.
5
Erected July 22, 736 A.D.  (9.15.5.0.0) Stela D
is located at the farthest southern point of the
"Grand Courtyard" of Copan. Like Stela A, it was
erected by the ruler "18 Rabbit."18 Rabbit's
face is hidden behind a God-mask.
http//www.misericordia.edu/users/davies/maya/ste
lad.htm
6
Books Popul Vuh
  • Books of the Chilam Balam (Mayan prophet)
  • Book of the Community is a collection of Quiche
    and Cakchiquel people.
  • Thought to have been written by Diego Reynos, a
    converted Indian in the mid 16th century.
  • The manuscript was lost and re-discovered by
    Father Francisco Ximenez in 1857.
  • Father Ximenez found the book in his parish, the
    El Calvario Church, at Chichicastenango,
    Guatemala.
  • The manuscript contains compiled oral histories
    of Maya culture.
  • Original manuscript was written in Quiche
    language using the Latin alphabet.
  • Father Ximenez translated the book into Latin and
    that work is located in the Newberry Library in
    Chicago, the original is lost.

7
Popul Vuh cond
  • This work is considered by many to be a bible of
    the Maya-Quiche outlining the origin of the
    civilization and their cultural traditions and
    mythology.
  • The history of the Quiches down to 1550 is
    presented. Further contained is a collection of
    legends concerning Kukulcan, or Quetzalcoatl.
  • Contains legends of the Quiche Maya and written
    in Latin at an unknown date.
  • Not really a codex but certainly written by a
    historian soon after the conquest.
  • The book contains glyphs of some signs and many
    accounts of myths and legends of the early Maya.

8
Maya codices
  • Codices
  • most elaborate of writing medium, must have
    existed in the thousands, but only a few left.
  • made out of bark paper, or deer skin.
  • prepared from the inner bark of trees, fibers
    soaked in lime and then beaten smooth.
  • once dry it was white-washed with a thin coat of
    limestone or gypsum paste.

9
Classic Codices
  • Wright Codex
  • Pottery Codex
  • rectangular vessel, 10 in. high, Guatemalan.
  • Each side represents page of a codex.
  • Dates between A.D. 600 and 900.

10
Ceren, El Salvador
  • Joya de Ceren, a precolumbian village buried by
    surges and scoria fallfrom the 1658 eruption of
    Loma Caldera, a small vent along NW trending
    fissures associated to San Salvador volcano.
  • In their haste to escape, the villagers left
    behind utensils, textiles, food, ceramics,
    furniture and all of the other accouterments of
    daily life.
  • The village lay hidden until 1976 when it was
    discovered by Payson Sheets, an anthropology
    professor at the University of Colorado in
    Boulder. Sheets almost immediately began
    excavating the site, a process that has continued
    ever since.
  • Codex from Ceren, San Salvador
  • preserved under volcanic ash when Laguna Caldera
    volcano erupted in A.D. 600.
  • located on a bench in a communal building.
  • no text recovered, but painted with kaolin,
    cinnabar and iron pigments.

http//www.theculturedtraveler.com/Heritage/Archiv
es/Joya_Ceren.htm
11
Ceren
12
Ceren
13
Sauna Bath, Ceren
14
The Dresden Codex
  • Best of the codices preserved, is at the Royal
    Library, Dresden, also known as the Dresdensis.
  • Was brought in 1739 to the King of Saxony's
    library in Dresden, where an unknown person sold
    it to the director of the library, Johann
    Christian Goetze.
  • Existence of the codex was made known to the
    world in 1774 when the director published his
    book Peculiarities of the Library of Dresden,
    First Collection.
  • Publicly displayed for the first time in 1834.
    Contains 39 pages of prophecies, ceremonies for
    the new year, and astronomical data. New year's
    ceremonies are depicted as well as a sort of
    agricultural almanac is contained in this codex.
  • The codex was almost destroyed during WWII but
    today is on display at the Dresden Museum.
  • The codex was vigorously studied by a librarian,
    Ernest Forstemann, 1822-1906, who after years of
    work began to break the numerical signs and code.

15
Dresden Codex
  • During the first world war, Martin Meinshausen
    deciphered the famous Calendar of Eclipses.
  • Pages 57 and 58 of this codex provide a perpetual
    lunar calendar of 11,960 days consisting of 405
    months, divided into 69 groups of 177, 178, or
    148 days.
  • An accurate lunar calendar, with accurate
    predictions of solar eclipses. 11,960 divided by
    405 gave the Maya a 29.5308 lunar cycle. Modern
    astronomers compute a lunar calendar at 29.5309
    days.
  • Dates from A.D. 1250-1345.

16
Codex Tro-Cortesiano
  • Incomplete, now in Madrid
  • Drawn on amate paper and is 56 pages long.
  • Sold to the Museum by Pilar Bermudez de Castro.
  • For a considerable time it was thought to be two
    different codices. The first part "Tro", was
    brought to the attention of the abbe Brasseur de
    Bourbourg, who discovered it in the private
    library of Juan Tro y Ortelano, a Professor of
    Paleography and a descendant of Hernan Cortes.
  • According to some sources the second half of the
    name "Cortesian", refers to the professor's
    Spanish ancestry, some however, believe it
    derives from the codex being found in
    Extremadura, where it may have been taken by
    Cortes.

17
Tro-Cortesiano Codex
18
Other Post Classic Codices
  • Codex Peresiano
  • prophesies and ceremonies, possibly of east coast
    origin.
  • dates from the period of Mayapans rule in
    Yucatan, A.D. 1200.
  • Leon de Rosny, a botanist and Japanese language
    expert, found this codex in a wastebasket at the
    National Library of Paris in 1859, it's papers
    blackened by chimney smoke.
  • A small codex of only eleven pages measuring 1.45
    meters long by 22 centimeters wide. Thought to
    have been made in the twelfth or thirteenth
    century.
  • The codex contains information of prophecy and
    history and almanacs dealing with divinity.
  • One complete side of the manuscript details
    eleven successive katuns, or twenty year periods
    of time. It is not known how it came to Paris or
    how long it was there.
  • Grolier Codex
  • found in a dry cave by looters, northern part of
    Chiapas
  • almanac based on planet Venus
  • originally about 20 pages, A.D. 1230

19
http//www.mayavase.com/grol/grolier.html
Codex de Paris http//classes.bnf.fr/dossiecr/gc63
-1.htm
20
Calendric Calculations
  • Maya Calendar
  • Calendar Round
  • Basic unit was a day, not broken down further.
  • two recurring cycles of time 260-day and 365-day
    ran simultaneously making up a period of 52 years.

21
Mayan Calendar Round Sacred Cycle
http//www.hanksville.org/yucatan/mayacal.html
22
Sacred Almanac (Tzokin)
  • 260-day cycle
  • MayaTzokin, AztecTonalpohualli
  • primarily religious and divinatory
  • guidance of daily affairs
  • 20 named days, combined with numbers 1-13, in
    which the exact combination of name and number
    would recur every 260 days.
  • not based on natural phenomenon.

23
What is the Tzolkin?
  • The Tzolkin date is a combination of two "week"
    lengths.
  • While our calendar uses a single week of seven
    days, the Mayan calendar used two different
    lengths of week
  • a numbered week of 13 days, in which the days
    were numbered from 1 to 13
  • a named week of 20 days, in which the names of
    the days were
  • As the named week is 20 days and the smallest
    Long Count digit is 20 days, there is synchrony
    between the two
  • if, for example, the last digit of today's Long
    Count is 0, today must be Ahau if it is 6, it
    must be Cimi.
  • Since the numbered and the named week were both
    "weeks," each of their name/number change daily
    therefore, the day after 3 Cimi is not 4 Cimi,
    but 4 Manik, and the day after that, 5 Lamat.
  • The next time Cimi rolls around, 20 days later,
    it will be 10 Cimi instead of 3 Cimi. The next
    3 Cimi will not occur until 260 (or 13 x 20) days
    have passed.
  • This 260-day cycle also had good-luck or bad-luck
    associations connected with each day, and for
    this reason, it became known as the "divinatory
    year."
  • The "years" of the Tzolkin calendar are not
    counted.
  • When did the Tzolkin Start?
  • Long Count 13.0.0.0.0 corresponds to 4 Ahau. The
    authorities agree on this.

24
Tzolkin
0. Ahau 1. Imix 2. Ik3. Akbal 4. Kan 5. Chicchan
6. Cimi 7. Manik 8. Lamat 9. Muluc 10. Oc 11.
Chuen 12. Eb 13. Ben 14. Ix 15. Men 16. Cib 17.
Caban 18. Etznab 19. Caunac
25
Astronomical Year
  • 365-day cycle
  • MayaHaab, AztecXihuitl)
  • 18 named months of 20 days each, plus 5
    additional days of apprehension and bad luck at
    the end of the year.
  • Days numbered from 0-19, and to return to any
    given date, 52 years would have to pass.

26
The Haab
  • In contrast to the Tzolkin dates, the Haab month
    names changed every 20 days instead of daily so
    the day after 4 Zotz would be 5 Zotz, followed by
    6 Zotz ... up to 19 Zotz, which is followed by
    0 Tzec.
  • The days of the month were numbered from 0 to 19.
    This use of a 0th day of the month in a civil
    calendar is unique to the Maya system it is
    believed that the Mayas discovered the number
    zero, and the uses to which it could be put,
    centuries before it was discovered in Europe or
    Asia.
  • The Uayeb days acquired a very derogatory
    reputation for bad luck known as "days without
    names" or "days without souls," and were observed
    as days of prayer and mourning. Fires were
    extinguished and the population refrained from
    eating hot food. Anyone born on those days was
    "doomed to a miserable life."
  • The names of the month 1.Pop 2.Uo 3.Zip 4.Zotz
    5.Tzec 6.Xul 7.Yaxkin 8.Mol 9.Chen 10.Yax 11.Zac
    12.Ceh 13.Mac 14.Kankin 15.Muan 16.Pax 17.Kayab
    18.Cumku
  • When did the Haab Start?
  • Long Count 13.0.0.0.0 corresponds to 8 Cumku. The
    authorities agree on this.

27
Did the Mayas Think a Year Was 365 Days?
  • Although there were only 365 days in the Haab
    year, the Mayas were aware that a year is
    slightly longer than 365 days, and in fact, many
    of the month-names are associated with the
    seasons Yaxkin, for example, means "new or
    strong sun" and, at the beginning of the Long
    Count, 1 Yaxkin was the day after the winter
    solstice, when the sun starts to shine for a
    longer period of time and higher in the sky.
  • When the Long Count was put into motion, it was
    started at 7.13.0.0.0, and 0 Yaxkin corresponded
    with Midwinter Day, as it did at 13.0.0.0.0 back
    in 3114 B.C.E. The available evidence indicates
    that the Mayas estimated that a 365-day year
    precessed through all the seasons twice in
    7.13.0.0.0 or 1,101,600 days.
  • We can therefore derive a value for the Mayan
    estimate of the year by dividing 1,101,600 by
    365, subtracting 2, and taking that number and
    dividing 1,101,600 by the result, which gives us
    an answer of 365.242036 days, which is slightly
    more accurate than the 365.2425 days of the
    Gregorian calendar.
  • (This apparent accuracy could, however, be a
    simple coincidence. The Mayas estimated that a
    365-day year precessed through all the seasons
    twice in 7.13.0.0.0 days. These numbers are only
    accurate to 2-3 digits. Suppose the 7.13.0.0.0
    days had corresponded to 2.001 cycles rather than
    2 cycles of the 365-day year, would the Mayas
    have noticed?)

28
Zero and the Long Count
  • Numbers represented with a one as a dot and a
    five as a bar.
  • value is determined by its position.
  • No idea when zero invented
  • needed for calculating dates in the past.
  • invented in the Old World-India and Babylonia ca.
    500 B.C.

29
Long Count
  • A starting point in the past as August 13, 3114
    B.C., significance may be mythological such as
    the creation of the three Maya worlds.
  • Time in groups of 20 days
  • kinone day
  • uinal20 days
  • tun360 days
  • katun7200 days
  • baktun144,000 days
  • We translate them as 9.14.8.0.0 which is 9
    baktuns, 14 katuns, 8 tuns, 0 uinals, and 0 kins.

30
When did the Long Count Start?
  • Logically, the first date in the Long Count
    should be 0.0.0.0.0, but as the baktun (the first
    component) are numbered from 1 to 13 rather than
    0 to 12, this first date is actually written
    13.0.0.0.0.
  • The authorities disagree on what 13.0.0.0.0
    corresponds to in our calendar. I have come
    across three possible equivalences
  • 13.0.0.0.0 8 Sep 3114 BC (Julian)
    13 Aug 3114 BC (Gregorian)13.0.0.0.0
    6 Sep 3114 BC (Julian) 11 Aug 3114 BC
    (Gregorian)13.0.0.0.0 11 Nov 3374 BC (Julian)
    15 Oct 3374 BC (Gregorian)
  • Assuming one of the first two equivalences, the
    Long Count will again reach 13.0.0.0.0 on 21 or
    23 December AD 2012 - a not too distant future.

31
Gregorian vs. Julian Calendar
  • The Gregorian Calendar is a revision of the
    Julian Calendar which was instituted in a papal
    bull by Pope Gregory XIII in 1582. The reason for
    the calendar change was to correct for drift in
    the dates of signifigant religious observations
    (primarily Easter) and to prevent further drift
    in the dates.
  • The important effects of the change were
  • Drop 10 days from October 1582, to realign the
    Vernal Equinox with 21 March
  • Change leap year selection so that not all years
    ending in "00" are leap years.
  • Change the beginning of the year to 1 January
    from 25 March

32
Deciphering Maya Hieroglyphics
  • It is the combination of imagery and hieroglyphs
    wich gives patterns meaning.
  • no list of signs with meaning for each.
  • no real alphabet.
  • Maya inscriptions thought to relate only to
    calendrics and astronomy because they were the
    first to be deciphered.

33
Mayan Epigraphers
  • Today epigraphers recognize the writing as a
    political or dynastic theme.
  • Researchers such as Yuri Knorosov, Tatiana
    Proskouriakoff, and Heinrich Berlin.
  • Knorosov-combining signs (consonant plus vowel)
    words were formed phonetically.
  • Berlin-emblem glyphs stood for centers, regions,
    or dynasties.
  • Proskouriakoff-dates corresponded to historical
    events of rulers and their families at Pedras
    Negras.
  • Linda Schele Breaking the Maya Code
  • dates on stelae and in codices are associated
    with events in rulers lives. assumption to the
    throne is dated then bloodletting or other
    rituals and their corresponding dates.
  • Still about 1/3 cannot be deciphered.

34
Maya Long Count Exercise
  1. Calculate the year that the New World was
    discovered in Mayan long count.
  2. What year did WWI begin in Mayan long count?
  3. Write the year of your birth in Mayan long count.
  4. In what year did you graduate high school as
    calculated by the Mayan long count?

35
Conversion
  • Gregorian to Mayan
  • http//www.pauahtun.org/cgi-bin/gregmaya.py
  • Long Count to Gregorian
  • http//www.pauahtun.org/cgi-bin/mayagreg.py
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