Title: Mesoamerican Civilizations
1Mesoamerican Civilizations
- Chronology
- Early Excavations
- Predominant Cultures
2Early Excavations
- Matthew Williams Stirling (1896-1975)
- In 1938, Stirling made an expedition to southern
Mexico to excavate Olmec artifacts. After
discovering colossal heads and taking pictures of
them he sent the photos to the National
Geographic Society. - Later he was advised to apply for grants from the
NGS which he received and was supported by the
NGS and the Smithsonian Institution between 1938
and 1946.
http//www.mnsu.edu/emuseum/information/biography/
pqrst/stirling_matthew.html
3Early Excavations cond
- Dr. Alfonso Caso, a Mexican archaeologist, led
one of the first explorations and restorations of
this archaeological zone. - His project, completed in 18 stages, began in
1931 and finished in 1953. - Based on studies of the architecture of the
buildings, tombs, ceramics, and jewelry, he
determined that the history of Monte Alban could
be divided into distinct epochs based on social
organization, population density, and exchange
systems. In this manner he established 5 epochs
designated as Monte Alban I, II, III, IV and V
http//www.mexonline.com/oaxaca/oxarc101.htm
4Marshall Saville
- Marshall Saville, the first Curator of Mexican
and Central American Archaeology at the AMNH
(1894-1907). - He used the relatively new technology of the
camera to great effect in documenting his
excavations.
http//archaeology.about.com/gi/dynamic/offsite.ht
m?zi1/XJsdnarchaeologyzuhttp3A2F2Fanthro.a
mnh.org2Fanthropology2Fresearch2Farchaeo.htm
5Sonora, Mexico
- The Sonora-Sinaloa Archaeological Survey Project
directed by Gordon F. Ekholm (1937-1940).
http//archaeology.about.com/gi/dynamic/offsite.ht
m?zi1/XJsdnarchaeologyzuhttp3A2F2Fanthro.a
mnh.org2Fanthropology2Fresearch2Farchaeo.htm
6Linda Schele
- Linda Schele was a Mesoamerican scholar who died
in 1998. - She is best know for her work on translations of
Maya hieroglyphs and has written several great
books which include "Maya Glyphs The Verbs"
(Schele 1982), the "Palenque Bodega" book (Schele
and Mathews 1979), "The Blood of Kings" (Schele
and Miller 1986), "A Forest of Kings" (Schele and
Freidel 1990), "Maya Cosmos" (Freidel, Schele,
and Parker 1993), and "The Code of Kings" (Schele
and Mathews 1998).
http//www.famsi.org/research/schele/
7Mesoamerican Chronology
- Contact ca. AD 1500
- Late Post-Classic Period AD 1200-1500
- Early Post-Classic Period AD 900-1200
- -------
- Late Classic Period AD 600-900
- Early Classic Period (Mexico AD 150-650/Maya AD
250-600) - -------
- Late Formative (Pre-Classic) Period 300 BC - AD
300 - Middle Formative (Pre-Classic) Period 900-300 BC
- Early Formative (Pre-Classic) Period
1500/1800-900 BC - -------
- Archaic (Incipient Farming) Period 7000 - 2000
BC - -------
- Early Hunters 11,000 - 7,000 BC
8Early Hunters
- Hunter-Gatherers
- Mobile
- Small groups
- Pre-ceramic, pre-writing
9Archaic
- Early hunter-gatherers transitioning to
horticulture. - Beginning sedentism
- Pottery begins late
10Pre-Classic (Formative)
- Nation States
- Development of cities
- Olmec
- Also Zapotec and early Maya (Late Formative)
11Olmec
- 1939 Matthew Stirling was sent by the Smithsonian
and National Geographic to investigate giant
stone carvings. - Olmec lived in this area between 1500 B.C. and
100 A.D.
12Olmec Area
13Colossal Heads
14Characteristic Traits
- Building of clay pyramids and temple mounds
- Particular sculptural style
- weeping or snarling jaguar/human infant
- were-jaguar
- colossal heads
- basalt monuments
- Fine jade carving
- Basic Mesoamerican civilization
- Artifacts with Olmec traits found in preclassic
horizons throughout Mesoamerica. - Cult of the Jaguar considered a basic Olmec
trait.
15Classic
- Teotihuacan grows to a metropolis and its empire
dominates Mesoamerica. - The greatest era of the cities of the Maya
southern lowlands, such as Tikal, Palenque, and
Copán. - The Classic Era ended earlier in Central Mexico,
with the fall of Teotihuacan around the 7th
century, than it did in the Maya area, which
continued for centuries more. - The late period of continued Maya development is
sometimes known as the Florescent Era.
16Teotihuacan
- Size and Construction
- At its height, around 125,000 people and covering
22 sq kilometers. - More ceremonial centers than any other
prehispanic site. - Planned and laid out along a rectilinear network
of roads and paths. - Avenue of the Dead-major north to south axis.
- East and West Avenues divided the city into
quadrants. - The citadel was at their center.
- In front of this was the great compound.
17Temples and Pyramids
- Constructed with Talud-tablero architecture
- cut stone facing
- Framed panels (tablero)
- sloping basal elements (talud)
- 5000 known structures.
- Pyramid of the Sun
- 212 ft high, 700 ft wide, 35,000,000 cu ft of
fill (equivalent to 10 modern oil tankers). - cave located underneath with sacred objects in
it. - Pyramid of the Moon
- located at the north end of the avenue of the
dead. - Temple of the Feathered Serpent (at the Citadel)
- Residential structures
- apartment compounds
18Pyramid of the Sun
19Maya
- Slow, gradual change.
- Did not develop overnight.
- Due to several factors resource concentration,
population growth, beginnings of cultural
variability, development of ideologies, migration
of ideas from other cultures - Small Kingdoms, No centralized state.
- succession of regional centers
- not really dominant over neighbors
- Productive agriculture
20Mayan Regions
21Palenque
22Uaxactun
23Tikal
24Floating Gardens-Chinampas
25The Mesoamerican Ballgame
- Called tlachtli by the Aztecs, game played with
hard rubber ball. - Spanish document stone rings as goals, but those
dating before 700 A.D. do not have them. - Typically i-shaped courts, balls weighing up to 5
pounds. - ball had to be kept in motion
- could not be hit with hands or feet
- associated with fertility, death, militarism and
sacrifice. - sacrifice of defeated team members documented in
late accounts.
26Ballcourt
27Calendar System
- Calender 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. - 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.
- 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. - Prophesy that this world will end in 2012.
28Collapse of the Maya
- Circa A.D. 800-900
- Monumental architecture ends
- Depopulation of large centers
- Theories
- Drought
- Warfare
29Post-Classic
- Collapse of many of the great nations and cities
of the Classic Era, although some continue, such
as in Oaxaca, Cholula, and the Maya of Yucatán,
such as at Chichen Itza and Uxmal. - This is sometimes seen as a period of increased
chaos and warfare. - The Toltec for a time dominate central Mexico in
the 11th - 13th century, then collapse. - The northern Maya are for a time united under
Mayapan. - The Aztec Empire rises in the 14th century and
seems on the path to asserting a dominance over
the whole region not seen since Teotihuacan, when
Mesoamerica is discovered by Spain and conquered
by the Conquistadors.
30Toltec
31Atlantids from Tula Grande
32The Aztec
- From A.D. 1200 to A.D. 1370 the Basin of Mexico
was occupied by various central Mexican peoples. - Chichimec people settled in the area from the
North and gradually overcame the people living
there at that time. - primarily due to Xolotl, who ruled a somewhat
barbaric horde. - Technically squatted in the area of Tenochtitlan
and were know as the Mixeca but today Aztecs is
more common.
33Basin of Mexico
34Tenochtitlan
35Spanish Arrival Cortes
- Spanish arrive in A.D. 1519 at Vera Cruz.
- March inland to Tenochtitlan
- Received by Moctezuma II, who was then held
captive by Cortes and his men. - Moctezuma II dies, replaced by nephew (dies
almost immediately from small pox), replaced by
another nephew Cuahtemoc. - Cuahtemoc is forced to surrender in AD 1521.