The Maya and More: Mesoamerican Tour Vocabulary

Maya Pots Source Map

 

 

Mesoamerica

Mesoamerica extends from central Mexico through Belize, Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras, Nicaragua, and northern Costa Rica.  It was home to Pre-Columbian civilizations (pre-1492), including the Olmec, Maya, and Aztec.

 

 

 

Image of a carved stone face
HM523 – Olmec stone “yugito”

Olmec

The Olmec inhabited the coast of Veracruz and western Tabasco on the Gulf of Mexico, first rising to power in approximately 1600 BCE to 400 BCE.

Our knowledge of the Olmec comes through archaeological research.  It is thought that the Olmec laid the foundation for the civilizations that followed, including ritual bloodletting and the ballgame.  They built the first major cities and earliest Mesoamerican pyramid.  It is not known what caused their civilization to collapse around 400 BCE, but they were succeeded by other Mesoamerican civilizations that drew upon their foundations.

 

Image of a ceramic bird head wiht a human face in the mouth
HM1171 – Maya bird head censer

Maya

The ancient Maya lived in what is now Mexico, Belize, Guatemala, El Salvador, and Honduras starting as early as 2600 BCE.  The Classic Maya period began around 250 BCE, by which time the Maya had risen to power and extended their influence throughout the Yucatan, creating a highly developed a writing system, art, architecture, mathematics, and calendar system, based on astronomical observation.

Despite the fall of the Maya Empire around 900 CE, to this day the Maya continue to live in this region blending Pre-Columbian cultural traditions with post-conquest traditions.

 

Image of a small ceramic building
HM501 – Aztec ceramic temple model

 

Aztec

The Aztec Empire flourished between 1345 and 1521 CE.  Their empire stretched across what is today central and southern Mexico.  In 1521, Spanish conquistadors led by Hernán Cortés overthrew the Aztec Empire and captured the center of the Empire, Tenochtitlan.

 

 

UNESCO Convention 1970

The United Nations Convention on the Means of Prohibiting and Preventing the Illicit Import, Export and Transfer of Ownership of Cultural Property 1970 was implemented to combat the illegal international trade in objects of art and culture.  When archaeological artifacts are removed from cultural sites, their context is lost along with important cultural information.

Image of a carved stone stele
HM611 – Maya stele

 

Stele or Stela

Stela are carved stone monuments created for dedication, commemoration, and demarcation.  Around the world, cultures erect stelae.  The Maya stela on exhibit in the Hudson Museum depicts a Mayan ruler-king and references two dates.

 

image of an obsidian disk
HM775 – Mexican obsidian ear spool

Ear Spools and Ear Flares

Body modification was a common practice among Pre-Columbian civilizations to set the elite apart from the lower classes.  It also served to appease the gods and rulers, and reflected aesthetics ideals of beauty in Pre-Columbian culture.  Starting from ages four through seven, the Mayans would use ear spools and flares to slowly stretch holes in the ear lobes as an individual passed important milestones in their life.  Ear spools and flares were often made from obsidian, shell, ceramic, and stone.

 

 

Maya Headdresses

Maya headdresses were often decorated with exotic feathers and materials, with the size, quality, and design depending on the social status of the wearer.  Royalty would wear the most colorful and highest quality headdresses—such as the headdress worn by the ruler-warrior depicted on the stela in the Hudson Museum.

 

image of a stone slab carved with Maya glyphs
HM648 – Maya glyph panel

Maya Glyphs

The Mayan used glyphs in the form of humans, animals, and abstract designs to represent combinations of consonants and vowels, words, numbers, and concepts.  They were arranged in grid-like squares containing several combined glyphs.  Each square could contain up to five glyphs, comprised of a central glyph, and four more connected on top, bottom, and sides of the central glyph.  Architectural elements, such as stelae, codices, and ceramic vessels often feature glyphs.

 

Maya City-State

The Mayan Empire was comprised of smaller city-states that were connected by complex trading networks and political structures.  Examples of Maya city-states include Copán, Tikal, and Palenque.  The Mayan Empire collapsed around 900 CE, and many city-states were abandoned at that time.

 

Katun

A katun or k’atun is unit of time in the Maya Calendar system, equivalent to 7200 days, or just under 20 years.  It is the 2nd  digit on the normal Maya Long Calendar Date.  The Long Calendar dates were expressed using baktun (equivalent to 144,000 days), katun, tun (360 days), uinal (140 days), and k’in (4 days).

 

HM3666 – Maya ceramic figure with flute

Tomb Figures

In West Mexico in what is today the states of Nayarit, Jalisco, and Colima, a distinct burial tradition using shaft tombs flourished from roughly 300 BCE to 400 CE.  The shaft tombs were rectangular vertical shafts several meters deep that opened up into chambers containing human remains and grave offerings, including the ceramic tomb figures vessels.  Very few of these tombs have been scientifically excavated and what we know of these cultures is information gleaned from looted grave offerings.

 

For more information, please visit our Images for Eternity online exhibit.

 

Image of ceramic figure with bumps all over their skin
HM3850 – Jalisco ceramic figure with skin lesions
Image of ceramic figure
HM3894 – Nayarit ceramic figure
Image of ceramic figure with pan flute
HM3669 – Colima ceramic figure with pan flute

 

Colima [1], Nayarit [2], and Jalisco [3] are states in West Mexico and were home to Pre-Columbian cultures.

 

 

Scarification

Scarification and tattooing were common practices done by puncturing the skin to create permanent scars or deigns.  These body modification traditions were used by the Olmec, Maya, and Aztec, as well as the civilizations of West Mexico.  Similar to other forms of body modification, scarification was considered to be aesthetically pleasing and a way of appeasing the gods.

 

Cranial Deformation and Shaping

Cranial deformation or head shaping was another form of body modification widely practiced by ancient Mesoamerican cultures as a form of differentiation and manifestation of elite social status.  The Maya would bind an infant’s head (when the skull is more malleable) between boards for several days to flatten the frontal bones, creating a conical head shape.

 

Image of a small black object
HM795 – Aztec obsidian lip plug

Lip Plugs

Labret, or lip plugs, were worn by Aztec nobility and warrior classes.  Among the Aztec military, lip plugs were seen as signs of achievement and it was punishable by death to wear a lip plug one had not earned. Only the nobility, including priests and the ruler, were allowed to wear lip plugs made from gold or precious stones.

 

 

Bloodletting

To appease the gods, ensure abundant rainfall, bountiful harvest, and community prosperity, bloodletting and human sacrifice were common Pre-Columbian religious practices.  Blood offerings were made by piercing parts of the body with ritual implements.

 

Cacao

The cocoa bean, or cacao, is the dried and fermented seed of the cacao plant’s fruit, from which chocolate is made.  It is thought that the Olmec domesticated the cacao tree.  The Mayans considered cacao to be a sacred food reserved for the elite and used it in special rituals.  It was served in highly decorated cylinder vases that were often featured as grave goods in tombs.