Photograph courtesy Alexandre Tokovinine, CMHI/Harvard/Proyecto Aqueologico Holmul
Local King?
This photo mosaic of the recently unearthed Maya frieze in
the city of Holmul was digitally stitched together from hundreds of
high-resolution photos by team member Alexandre Tokovinine, a Maya
epigrapher at Harvard University.
The
frieze depicts three human figures wearing elaborate bird headdresses
and jade jewelry. They are seated cross-legged over the head of a Maya
mountain spirit. A cartouche on their headdresses identifies each of
them by name. The central figure's name is the only readable one: Och
Chan Yopaat, meaning "the storm god enters the sky."
Estrada-Belli
and his team speculate that Och Chan Yopaat may have been the leader
that the Naranjo king, Ajwosaj, established as the ruler of Holmul after
wresting the city back from the Tikal dynasty.
Stuart,
of the University of Texas, said he agreed with this interpretation.
"This frieze features a ruler we've never seen before in the historical
records," he said. "He's the one portrayed in the center, and it's
reasonable to guess he was a local ruler of Holmul, and an ally with the
more powerful kingdom of Naranjo to the south, which in turn had its
political connections to the [Kaanul kingdom]."
Photograph courtesy Francisco Estrada-Belli
Royal Emblem
This close-up view shows a large hieroglyphic emblem that
decorates the side of the building where the Maya frieze was discovered.
The
emblem identifies the building as a royal lineage house that was
probably dedicated to local rulers who were worshipped in the city as
gods, Estrada-Belli explained.
Photograph courtesy Francisco Estrada-Belli
Ritual Inscription
A detail of the section of the inscription that runs along the base of the frieze is shown in this photograph.
The
message includes an unusual Maya verb that means "he put in order,"
followed by the name of an obscure deity that Estrada-Belli and his team
speculate was a local patron god associated with the Kaanul dynasty.
"This
inscription tells us that there were a number of rituals involved in
reestablishing the [Kaanul-affiliated dynasty in Holmul]," Estrada-Belli
said.
"The verb 'to put in order' seems to indicate
that a number of gods, and especially local patron gods, were
reestablished after previously being deposed by [the Tikal] dynasty."
It
wasn't uncommon for Maya city-states to "capture" the local gods of
those they conquered, explained Tulane University's Canuto.
It was a way of saying, "I hold your patron deity in my hand, so you do what I say."
Photograph courtesy Francisco Estrada-Belli
Sacred Offering
An ancestral deity holds a sign in both hands that reads
naaah waaj, or "first tamale"—a reference to a sacred food offering—in
this view of the south side of the frieze.
Photograph courtesy Jesus Lopez
Ancient Burial
Estrada-Belli carefully brushes debris from an adult male
skeleton of a member of the ruling class of Holmul. The body was buried
in a tomb beneath the steps leading to the building that contained the
frieze.
The
Maya routinely built newer structures upon the remains of older ones,
both as a way to save time—since the foundations were already in
place—and to preserve a sense of continuity of purpose, Canuto
explained.
"Buildings were
places where things happened—where people were buried and rituals were
conducted—so they gained a sense of sacredness that was special and had
to be preserved," he said. "So subsequent buildings might have been
later expressions of those same rituals."
The skeleton
and his associated ceramic offering were preserved by large limestone
slabs that kept the tomb free of debris. His incisor and canine teeth
had been drilled and filled with jade beads. The decayed remains of a
wooden mask were found on his chest.
"While we can't be
certain of the identity of this individual, the frieze and inscription
provide many possible names and a ton of historical information
associated with him," Estrada-Belli said.
Photograph courtesy Francisco Estrada-Belli
Big Discovery
Archaeologist Anya Shetler cleans an inscription below an ancient stucco frieze recently unearthed in the buried Maya
city of Holmul in the Peten region of Guatemala. Sunlight from a tunnel
entrance highlights the carved legs of a ruler sitting atop the head of
a Maya mountain spirit.
The enormous
frieze—which measures 26 feet by nearly 7 feet (8 meters by 2
meters)—depicts human figures in a mythological setting, suggesting
these may be deified rulers. It was discovered in July in the buried
foundations of a rectangular pyramid in Holmul.
Maya archaeologist Francisco Estrada-Belli
and his team were excavating a tunnel left open by looters when they
happened upon the frieze. "The looters had come close to it, but they
hadn't seen it," Estrada-Belli said.
According to
Estrada-Belli, the frieze is one of the best preserved examples of its
kind. "It's 95 percent preserved. There's only one corner that's not
well preserved because it's too close to the surface, but the rest of it
isn't missing any parts," said Estrada-Belli, who is affiliated with
Tulane University, Boston University, and the American Museum of Natural
History and who is also a National Geographic Explorer. His excavations at Holmul were supported by the National Geographic Society/Waitt Grants Program.
Maya archaeologist Marcello Canuto agreed, calling the frieze "amazingly and beautifully preserved."
"We often dream of finding things this well preserved, and Francisco did it," said Canuto, who is the director of the Middle American Research Institute at Tulane University in New Orleans; he was not involved in the project.
For example, despite being mostly faded away now, traces of red, blue, green, and yellow paint are still visible on the frieze.
"It
gives you an idea of how intricate and ornate these sites that we are
excavating must have been during their apogee," Canuto said. "These
sites must have been a feast for the eyes when they were inhabited."
David
Stuart, a Maya hieroglyph expert at the University of Texas at Austin,
pointed out that archaeologists think most large Maya temples were
probably decorated with similar sorts of designs.
"But
not all temples were so carefully buried and preserved like this," said
Stuart, who did not participate in the project. "Also, each temple
facade was slightly different and therefore unique in terms of its
detail and message." (Explore an interactive map of key Maya sites .)
Caught Between Two Great Powers
The
section of the temple at Holmul where the frieze was found dates back
to about A.D. 590, which corresponds to the Maya classical era, a period
defined by the power struggles between two major Maya dynasties: Tikal
and Kaanul.
The two kingdoms competed with one another
for resources and for control of other, smaller Maya city-states. Until
now, however, it had been unclear which dynasty Holmul owed its
allegiance to, but an inscription on the newly discovered frieze reveals
that the temple was commissioned by Ajwosaj, ruler of a neighboring
city-state called Naranjo, which archaeologists know from other
discoveries was a vassal city of the Kaanul kingdom.
"We now know that Holmul was under the influence of the Kaanul dynasty," Canuto said.
In
2012, Canuto's team found and deciphered a series of hieroglyphically
inscribed panels at another Maya city of a similar size to Holmul,
called La Corona, which was also under the patronage of the Kaanul kingdom.
Recent
discoveries at sites like La Corona and Holmul are helping reveal how
these sites, despite being relatively small compared with some of their
neighbors, were important players on the region's larger geopolitical
stage.
"We're now beginning to
appreciate how all these hierarchical levels of sites were involved in a
larger political game that put them on [the side of either Tikal or
Kaanul]," Canuto explained. (See "Why the Maya Fell.")
All About Location
Why was Holmul—a minor city that was home to only 10,000 to 20,000 people—so important to the Tikal and Kaanul dynasties?
Previous
work by Estrada-Belli suggests Holmul occupied a strategic position for
both kingdoms. The city lay along the best east-west route between the
Tikal dynasty's capital city, also called Tikal, and the coast. It also
lay along a north-south route between the Kaanul capital city of
Dzibanche and the Guatemalan highlands that did not pass through Tikal
territory.
The Guatemalan highlands contained precious resources such as basalt, obsidian, and jade that were coveted by both kingdoms.
"A [Maya] king without jade was no king at all," Canuto said.
By
controlling Holmul in the east and La Corona in the west, the Kaanul
dynasty was able to effectively access these riches without going
through the capital city of its rival.
Staying Put for Now
The
frieze still lies buried in Holmul where it was initially discovered
because it is too big to move, said lead archaeologist Estrada-Belli.
"We're going to try to preserve it and create a stable environment around it so people can eventually visit it," he said.
"We're
very concerned about its present condition, so we had to re-bury the
entrance tunnel to keep the humidity and climate around it stable."
The find is exciting readers around the web. @JalilCan tweeted, "I keep seeing "Ancient Maya Carvings found..." these Archaeologists NEED TO LEAVE STUFF FOR PEOPLE LIKE ME TO FIND."Other tweeters talked up the struggle between Maya powers hinted at in the frieze, while others remarked at how the carvings used to be brightly colored.
—Ker Than
Source: National Geographic
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