Museum Entrance - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

Museum Entrance

Description:

Welcome to the Mayan Museum Museum Entrance Press for Curator Food Room Writing Room Religion Room Room 2 Mayan Religion Museum Entrance Room 3 Mayan Food Museum ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:197
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 23
Provided by: JohnY45
Category:
Tags: entrance | guava | museum

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Museum Entrance


1
Museum Entrance
Welcome to the Mayan Museum
2
Room 2
Mayan Religion
3
Room 3
Mayan Food
4
Room 4
Mayan Writing
5
Artifact 1 Chichen Itza
  • Chichen Itza is perhaps the most famous of all
    the Mayan cities. It served as the capital of the
    second great Mayan empire (1,000 to 1,450 A.D.).
    Chichen Itza means at the mouth of the well of
    the Itza. The city got its water from two large
    sink holes called cenotes. They were extremely
    important because there are no rivers that run
    through the northern Yucatan where Chichen Itza
    is. The Temple of Kukulcan is a four sided, step
    pyramid with stairways going up all four sides.
    Each stairway has 91 steps totaling 364 when all
    four sides are counted. The top of the pyramid is
    the final step making 365, the number of days in
    a year.

Image acquired at http//www.creighton.edu/langla
b/classes/spn202fs05/mexico2/chichenitza.jpg
Return to Room
6
Artifact 2 Copan
  • Settlement in the area of Copan may have begun as
    early as 2,000 B.C. As the city developed Mayan
    art and astronomy flourished. While the buildings
    at Copan were not as large the buildings in other
    Mayan cities, the detail and elegant carvings on
    the buildings are astounding. Some of the stone
    carvings even give the names of former rulers of
    Copan Smoke Jaguar, 18 Rabbit, Squirrel, Leaf
    Jaguar, Dawn, and Smoke Monkey. Yax-Kuk-Mo began
    the first of the ruling dynasties in Copan at
    about 160 A.D. From 465 A.D. to 800 A.D. Copan
    was at its height of science, art, and culture.

Image acquired at http//www.latinamericanstudies
.org/maya/old-copan.gif
Return to Room
7
Artifact 3 Tikal
  • Tikal was occupied between 800 B.C. and 900 A.D.
    At its height, about 700 A.D., it was home to
    more than 60,000

people. The city once covered an area of 23
square miles and was made up of more than 10,000
structures from grand temples to huts. The
central part of this city was the Great Plaza.
This plaza was surrounded by five grand temples,
seventy stelae (stone monuments covered with
carved glyphs), and rows of alters. This place is
so amazing it was used as the set for a rebel
base in the film Star Wars.
Image acquired at http//www.authenticmaya.com/im
ages/ancient-tikal.gif
Return to Room
8
Artifact 4 Tulum
  • Tulum, which means wall in Maya, once was
    called Zama, which means the place of the
    dawning sun. The city is unique because it is
    enclosed by walls on three sides, with 40 foot
    cliffs dropping to the Caribbean Sea on the forth
    side. This city reached its height between 1,000
    A.D. and 1,600 A.D. During this time it served as
    a central port for Mayan trade. The city has one
    main building called El Castillo and other
    smaller structures adorned with interesting
    carvings of faces on the corners. Tulum was the
    only Mayan city that was thriving when the
    Spanish Conquistadors arrived in Mexico.

Image acquired at http//www.ecotravelmexico.com/
imagenes/tulum.jpg
Return to Room
9
Artifact 5 Itzamna
  • Itzamna is the Mayan god of creation and the
    founder of the Mayan religion. He ruled the
    heavens and was thought to be the one who began
    the Mayan culture. He was believed to have
    invented the Mayan math and writing systems, and
    taught the Mayans the use of the calendar. He was
    depicted as a large jaw, toothless, cross-eyed
    old man and was considered to be the chief of the
    Mayan gods. He was the lord of all the heavens
    during both day and night.

Return to Room
Image acquired at http//sanghavedanta.com/macanc
he/index.php?optioncom_contenttaskviewid15It
emid39
10
Artifact 6 Chac
  • Chac was the Mayan god of fertility, rain, and
    lighting. He is one of the oldest Mayan gods. The
    Mayan people believed when time began, Chac
    struck a sacred stone with his axe, and the first
    ear of maize sprung out. Worshipping him was done
    primarily at sources of fresh water and sacred
    wells. The Mayan depicted him with his body
    covered with the scales of a reptile. The Mayan
    city of Chichen Itza was a center of worship for
    his followers. Frogs were associated with Chac,
    because they croak when rain is coming.

Return to Room
Image acquired at http//www.windows.ucar.edu/tou
r/link/mythology/images/chac_maya_jpg_image.html
11
Artifact 7 Yum Kax
  • Yum Kax was the god of Mayan agriculture and
    Maize. He was usually depicted as a young man
    with a very sloped forehead, holding a pot of
    maize and looking very unhappy. While he was
    powerful, his power was limited by the powers of
    the other gods who controlled rain, drought, and
    famine. In Mayan myths he is constantly getting
    into fights with these other gods.

Return to Room
Image acquired at http//www.polapa.com/tienda/im
agenes/60-62verdes.jpg
12
Artifact 8 Ek Chuah
  • Ek Chuah was the Mayan scorpion god, the god of
    war, the god of traveling merchants, and the god
    of cacao planters. Cacao seeds were a form of
    currency in the Mayan empire this is why he was
    the god of both cacao planters (those who grew
    the valuable crop) and traveling merchants (those
    who had goods to sell in exchange for the seeds).
    Mayan travelers and merchants use to carry
    incense that they would burn each night they were
    traveling and pray to Ek Chuah to bring them
    home safe. Chuah means "black" in Maya. Ek Chuah
    usually had some black on his face. His name
    hieroglyph is an eye with a black ring around it.

Image acquired at http//library.thinkquest.org/C
004577/religion6.php3
Return to Room
13
Artifact 9 Mayan Diet
  • The Maya ate wild animals they caught like fish,
    turtles, ducks, deer, dogs, turkeys, parrots,
    eagles, foxes, rabbits, armadillo, monkey,
    iguana, wild boar, and alligators. They also ate
    fruit like banana, pineapple, guava, watermelon,
    and mangos. In addition to corn, the Maya grew
    beans, squash, pumpkin, chili peppers, tomatoes,
    and sweet potatoes. This variety of food gave the
    Maya a good balanced diet.

Image acquired at http//www.civilization.ca/civi
l/maya/mmj01eng.html
Return to Room
14
Artifact 10 Cacao
  • The Maya would harvest the pineapple size fruit
    of the cacao tree. Inside this fruit is 20 to 60
    seeds or beans. The seeds are what the Mayas
    used to make The Drink of the Gods. They used
    these coco beans to make many chocolate drinks.
    They even had a cacao god, Ek Chuah. The cacao
    bean were sometimes considered more valuable than
    gold to the Maya.

Image acquired at http//recipes.howstuffworks.co
m/chocolate.htm
Return to Room
15
Artifact 11 Bug Tacos
  • The ancient Maya filled their tacos with
    caterpillars, worms, ants, and even crickets.
    Because the Maya had so few domesticated animals,
    insects, which are high in protein, were a big
    part of the Maya diet. They also ate flies,
    beetles, ant eggs, wasps, and grasshoppers.

Image acquired at http//www.mayankids.com/mmkpeo
ple/mkbugtaco.htm
Return to Room
16
Artifact 12 Maize
  • Maize was the single most important crop produced
    by the Maya. It has been estimated that ¾ of the
    food eaten by the Maya was maize in some form or
    another. Maize was commonly dried, processed, and
    ground then it was used to make tortillas. For
    the Maya, the tortilla proved to be a way to wrap
    and hold other types of food while eating. It
    also was a great way to take their food out with
    them when working in the fields or on some
    community project all day. The Maya even had a
    god of maize, Yum Kaax, who they prayed and offer
    sacrifices to.

Image acquired at http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Im
ageZea_mays.jpg
Return to Room
17
Artifact 13 Mayan Writing
  • The Maya developed an original form of
    hieroglyphic writing. Each picture or symbol
    represented a different word or idea.
    Hieroglyphics are found on many of the Mayan
    buildings, on Codices (Mayan books), and on large
    stone monuments called stela. Stela are stone
    carvings the Maya used to record important events
    on. The Maya were the only culture to have
    developed a writing system in the Ancient
    Americas.

Image acquired at http//www.civilization.ca/civi
l/maya/images/maycrv3b.gif
Return to Room
18
Artifact 14 Mayan Numbers
  • The Maya developed an original numeric system
    that allowed them to study the stars, develop a
    very accurate calendar, and to build their large
    and complex buildings. Our number system uses 10
    as a base the Mayan number system uses 20. Their
    system is also unique because it only uses three
    symbols (a dot, a bar, and a shell). The dot
    represents 1, the bar 5, and the shell 0. By
    arranging these symbols in the correct order, the
    Maya could represent any number.

Image acquired at http//concise.britannica.com/e
bc/art-441/The-Mayan-number-system-which-is-base-2
0-with-simple
Return to Room
19
Artifact 15 Mayan Codices
  • The Maya had books called Codices. These books
    were made out of long strips of the inner bark of
    fig trees. This bark was folded into sections to
    make the pages of the book. The Maya would write
    in these codices with turkey feather quills,
    thorns from cactus, chips of bone, and animal
    hair brushes. Each hieroglyph was outlined in a
    black ink made from coal and then colored in. All
    but four codices were burned by the Spanish when
    they conquered the Maya.

Return to Room
Image acquired at http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ma
ya_codices
20
Artifact 16 Mayan Calendar
  • The Mayan Calendar was very accurate. It is made
    up of three rings that have interlocking points
    that are used to tell the Mayan date. The Mayan
    tracked a 365 day solar year and a 260 day Sacred
    Count Calendar. The Sacred Count Calendar
    involved a new day name for every set of 13 days
    that passed. The 365 day Solar Calendar involved
    a new month name for every set of 19 days that
    passed. It also included the Long Count Calendar
    that ends on Sunday, December 23, 2012.

Image acquired at http//www.calendariomaya.com/i
mages/Tzolkin.gif
Return to Room
21
Artifact 17 Title
  • Add text here

Image acquired at Place URL here
Return to Room
22
John Yoder
  • John Yoder is a 4th grade teacher at Paradise
    PDS. He has a B.A. in Communications and a M.A.
    in Curriculum and Instruction. He has been
    teaching for 3 years.
  • Contact John Yoder

Return to Room
Note Virtual museums were first introduced by
educators at Keith Valley Middle School in
Horsham, Pennsylvania. This template was designed
by Dr. Christy Keeler based on one of the sample
virtual museums provided by the Keith Valley
staff at ISTEs NECC 2005. Contact Dr. Keeler for
more information on using this template.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com