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Tulum, these
cliff-side ruins create a dramatic vision, keeping quite watch over the
white sandy beaches and blue Caribbean sea below.
The name "Tulum" comes
from the Yucatec word for fence, trench or wall, and was given to the
site in recent times because of the wall surrounding it. It is likely
that the city's original name was "Zama" or "place of the dawn". This
is an ideal name for the city. Sunrise in the eastern horizon over the
ancient city is an unforgettable vision.
Tulum is the only
walled city the Maya ever built on the Caribbean coast. Unique among
other Mayan cities, Tulum was still a thriving trading community when
first visited by the Spanish. Spanish sailors were very impressed with
Tulum and reported it to be as big as Seville.
Tulum remained occupied
by the Maya for several decades after the conquest. The city was
reoccupied in 1890-1910 by a sect of the "Talking Cross Maya", who held
rituals in the temples of the "Castillo".
Tulum Ruins are
open all week. 8:00 AM to 5:00 PM - Sundays Free
Bilingual guides are
available near the entrance to the ruins. They are very knowledgeable
and definitely enrich any visit to the ruins.
Mayan History
The Mayas created one of the great cultures of
Mesoamerica during the pre-Hispanic era, building ceremonial centers
where they developed mathematics, astronomy and the calendar,
hieroglyphic writing, architecture and various aspects of art and
culture. The Mayas occupied a wide area with such geographically diverse
features as the mountains of Central America, the Peten region of
Guatemala and the limestone plains of the Yucatan Peninsula. Their
territory stretched over what are now the states of Campeche, Quintana
Roo, Yucatan, Tabasco and eastern Chiapas in Mexico, most of Guatemala,
Belize and the west of Honduras and El Salvador. As a result, their
cultural traits were similar, but show local variations.
In ancient times the
Mayas were divided into groups having similar physical characteristics,
speaking languages that belonged to the same linguistic stock and
sharing a common historical tradition. Research by experts has shown
that around 2500 B.C. a group speaking Proto-Maya lived in what is now
Huehuetenango, Guatemala. In time, this ancestral language split up into
the different Mayance languages, and migration of the groups eventually
led to the definition of the area where the Maya culture developed.
These migrations not
only caused separation into different groups but also brought them into
contact with the members of other cultures. This explains why experts
have different opinions about the origins of the Maya culture. Some
assert that it arose in the mountains of Guatemala, where they began to
grow maize, and later moved to the north and west, without denying the
possibility of influence from other cultures including Olmec as one of
the most important. Others believe that it originated in northern
Tabasco and southern Veracruz where the groups that would later form the
Maya culture came into contact with the Olmecs in about the 10th
century.
The Maya culture
The Olmec culture is
often called the "Mother Culture" since various ideas were taken from it
that were used in the later development of other great cultures, and its
influence stretched from its home on the Gulf Coast to different regions
of Mesoamerica. The Mayas adopted and adapted several features of Olmec
culture, including architectural elements and the basic number and
calendar system that would later become the accurate Maya calendar.
Maya chronology is
similar to that of the rest of Mesoamerica but is more precise because
explorations of the area have produced complete sequences of pottery,
and the deciphering of time hieroglyphs has made it possible to
correlate it with our own calendar.
At the beginning (500
B.C. to 325 A.D.), although the typically Maya was beginning to appear,
particularly in the clay figurines of humans that show their
characteristic physical features, Olmec influence is still present, as
can be seen in the decoration on some of their first buildings.
From 325 A.D. Maya
culture began to develop and spread; external influences disappeared,
the typical corbel arch was used in buildings and important dates
referring to history and myths were recorded in hieroglyphs. Culture and
art reached their peak between 625 and 800 in such areas as the
calendar, astronomy, architecture, sculpture and pottery; numerous
cities and ceremonial centers were founded.
All this splendor came
to an end between 800 and 925 A.D. for reasons as yet undetermined,
although possible ones are the exhaustion of agricultural land, changes
in climate and a rebellion of the lower classes against their rulers.
Maya culture slipped into decline; both cities and ceremonial centers
were practically abandoned and in time covered by vegetation.
For the next 50 years
only isolated groups remained in the area. Their cultural level was low
since all those who understood the calendar and the keepers of various
types of knowledge were gone. With them, Maya culture proper had
disappeared: a period followed that shows other cultural influences.
From 976 to 1200 A.D.
the Maya tradition became mixed with the Toltec, originating from
central Mexico, and the cult of Quetzalcoatl began -- the Toltec god
called Kukulcan on the Peninsula. Toltec influence is also evident in
buildings and decoration as art began to imitate what there had been at
Tula, but modified by Maya artists. At this same time, ties were created
between the governing families of different cities, for example the one
between the Xiu of Uxmal, the Itza of Chichen and the Cocom of Mayapan
around 1000 A.D. Little by little Mayapan was gaining supremacy and
between 1200 and 1540 there were conflicts between towns governed by
families of Nahua origin and those ruled by Mayas. As a result, in about
1441 the Xiu of Uxmal attacked Mayapan and massacred the Cocom, which
finally divided the population and impoverished their culture. Although
the Mayas tried to reinstate their former tradition they only succeeded
in bringing back the use of their language, and when the Spanish arrived
on the Peninsula they found a people that had lost its luster.
The pre-Hispanic Mayas
were one of the most amazing civilizations of their times, with clearly
defined social strata. The elite devoted themselves to trade, war and
religion. Architects, who belonged to the same rank, planned buildings
while stonemasons were in a socially inferior class along with
governors' servants and the different craftsmen.
Finally, the lowest
class was composed of farmers, who grew mainly maize, beans and squash
together with yucca, manioc and sweet potato.
Priests were very
important as they directed ceremonies and rites to honor the gods and
seek their favors. Among the most important deities where the creator,
Hunab Ku; the god of Rain, Chaac; the lord of the
Heavens, Itzamna; the god of Wind, Ik; the patron of
Cacao and War, Ek Chuak; the goddess of the Moon and
Childbirth, Ixchel; and the god of Death, Ah Puch.
Astronomers, who
devoted their time to finding harmony in the universe and its recurring
cycles of time, had to make complicated calculations to predict natural
events and connect them with the fate of the population; scribes
recorded history, religion and mythology using a complicated system of
hieroglyphs, while painters and sculptors depicted both mythical and
religious subjects as well as the deeds of governors. In architecture,
characteristic elements were combined to produce the different styles of
Peten, Palenque, Rio Bec, Chenes, Puuc and finally Maya-Toltec.
Their numerical system
was vigesimal; symbols were given a value according to position and the
concept of zero existed. Three symbols were used in writing numbers: a
dot for one, a bar for five and a stylized shell for zero. All other
numbers were written by combining these. The Mayas also devised glyphs
for the numbers 0 through 19, which were often used instead of the other
system.
Maya philosophy is very
special, since no other culture of the period was so obsessed with time.
Like other peoples of Mesoamerica they had two calendars; the ritual
one, called Tzolkin that was used for calculating religious
ceremonies and festivals and predicting the destinies of people, and the
solar calendar or Haab, containing 18 months of 20 days each
plus five unlucky days called uayeb (18 x 20 + 5 = 365 days).
The two calendars were used in conjunction, and the Maya calculations
were so accurate that they were able to make exact reckonings, predict
eclipses and plot the orbit of the planet Venus.
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