Maya

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Maya

The ancient Maya were a group of American Indian peoples who lived in southern Mexico, particularly the present-day states of Chiapas, Tabasco, Campeche, Yucatan, and Quintana Roo, and in Belize, Guatemala, and adjacent Honduras. Their descendants, the modern Maya, live in the same regions today, in both highlands and lowlands, from cool highland plains ringed by volcanos to deep tropical rain forests.

Through the region runs a single major river system, the Apasion-Usumacinta and its many tributaries, and only a handful of lesser rivers, the Motagua, Hondo, and Belize among them. The ancestors of the Maya, like those of other New World peoples, crossed the BERING LAND BRIDGE from Asia more than 20,000 years ago, during the last ice age.

The Maya were the first people of the New World to keep historical records: their written history begins in 50 BC, when they began to inscribe texts on pots, jades, bones, stone monuments, and palace walls.

Maya records trace the history of the great kings and queens who ruled from 50 BC until the Spanish conquest in the 16th century. All Maya "long count" calendar inscriptions fall between AD 292 and AD 909, roughly defining the period called Classic. Earlier Maya culture is called Formative or Preclassic (2000 BC-AD 300), and subsequent civilization is known as Postclassic (AD 900-conquest).

Protected by difficult terrain and heavy vegetation, the ruins of few ancient Maya cities were known before the 19th century, when explorers and archaeologists began to rediscover them. The age and proliferation of Maya writings have been recognized since about 1900, when the calendrical content of Maya hieroglyphic inscriptions was deciphered and the dates correlated with the Christian calendar. For most of the 20th century, only the extensive calendrical data of Maya inscriptions could be read, and as

a result, Maya scholars hypothesized that the inscriptions were pure calendrical records. Because little evidence of warfare had been recognized archaeologically, the Classic Maya were thought of as peaceful timekeepers and skywatchers. Their cities, it was thought, were ceremonial centers for ascetic priests, and their artwork anonymous, without concern for specific individuals.

More recent scholarship changes the picture dramatically. In 1958 Heinrich Berlin demonstrated that certain Maya hieroglyphs, whi...

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...ee across the border to Mexico, where thousands of refugees remained. The Mexican government moved a large number to a permanent settlement near Edzna, Campeche.

In both the highland and the lowlands, the Maya have maintained age-old traditions. Maya rituals for naming children, nurturing the agricultural cycle, marriage, sickness, death, and even auguring the future have been widely retained. In the northern lowlands, Chaac the rain god is worshiped, and in times of need a chachaac, or rainmaking ceremony, is performed. Before the conquest, the uayeb, or last five days of the year, was a dangerous time; most Maya now identify uayeb with Holy Week, and it and

Carnival are carefully observed. Particularly in the Mexican highland communities of Zinacantan and Chamula, the cargo system of rotating civil offices is retained.

Although the Spanish quickly established their capitals after the conquest, Maya rebellions were common until the 20th century. In Yucatan, Mexico established (1902) a separate territory, Quintana Roo on the east side of the peninsula, where many rebels fled. Made a state in 1974, Quintana Roo is now the location of Mexico's prosperous Caribbean resorts.

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