Secrets of the Maya: Deciphering Tikal
After decades of intense research, the ancient ruins of Mexico and Central America are yielding new insights into the pre-Columbia culture
- By David Roberts
- Smithsonian magazine, July 2004, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 3)
A leader in the field of Mayan epigraphy is David Stuart, who was awarded a MacArthur Fellowship in 1984 at age 18—the youngest recipient of the so-called genius award—for his several publications and papers about deciphering Mayan hieroglyphs. He defined some previously unknown glyphs and refined the spelling rules of the Mayan writing system. Now 38, Stuart is the curator of Mayan hieroglyphs at HarvardUniversity’s Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology. He has a special fondness for Tikal. “It’s the atmosphere of the place,” Stuart says. “Tikal is simply one of the most overpowering archaeological sites in the world.”
Though Tikal may have been settled by at least 600 b.c., most of the city’s edifices were built during what is called the Classic period of Maya history, from a.d. 250 to 900. It was a time when the Maya created great artwork and amazing architecture across the region (see “Of Majesty and Mayhem,” p. 49). Recent finds may yet force scholars to redefine the beginning of this period. This spring, archaeologists working at the nearby city of Cival uncovered evidence that distinctively Mayan art and writing may have developed as early as 300 b.c., and a wall painting dating to about a.d. 100, the oldest known intact Maya mural to date, was discovered in an 80-foot-high pyramid at the ruins of San Bartolo, a ceremonial site in Guatemala. Still,Tikal stands out. “The buildings at Tikal are particularly well built, and they have stood up quite well against the onslaught of the jungle,” says Stan Loten, an architectural archaeologist and retired professor who conducted surface surveys of Tikal’s standing structures from 1964 to 1970.
Beginning in the 1880s, well before other glyphs yielded up their meanings, researchers began decoding the Maya calendar from glyphs on stelae at sites all over the Maya world. Most stelae include the date of their creation, written in a five-number sequence known to scholars as the Long Count, or the number of days since the beginning of this current era. This system is built on a base of 20 rather than 10 and is made up of glyphs and combinations of a single dot for “one,” a bar for “five,” and a glyph that translated to mih, or “zero.” Once scholars figured out this system, they were able to correlate it with the Gregorian calendar, revealing an astonishing sense of time: the Long Count starts in 3114 b.c. The earliest dated monument yet discovered in Tikal and all of the Maya lowlands, Stela 29, has a Long Count date of 8.12.14.13.15, which translates to a.d. 292.
Understanding this calendar was an important step in understanding the history of the Maya. Of all the dated stelae found at Tikal, not one is from between a.d. 562 and 692. This period of monumental silence is known as the Hiatus. For decades, scholars were at a loss to explain what happened during those years. But after the discovery of the Long Count, one of the next breakthroughs in deciphering the Mayan writing system was recognizing what experts call the emblem glyph—a unique hieroglyph that represents a specific city-state. Tikal’s emblem glyph is read as mutal, which is based on the word mut, meaning “bound” or “tied.” The glyph resembles how a ruler’s tied-back hair might look from behind (see stela, page 46), and appears on stelae in ancient Maya city-states as far away as Copán, about 180 miles to the southeast. But why?
As experts translated more glyphs, they learned that Tikal had lost a war with Caracol, a Maya city in present-day Belize. The evidence is a boast of the victory, in a.d. 562, inscribed on an altar found in Caracol. That crushing defeat must have hung over Tikal like a pall. Before the glyphs were read, no archaeologist would have dreamed that Caracol, though a substantial city-state, could have laid low the mighty Tikal. Other stelae at Caracol suggest that the key to its triumph was an alliance with Calakmul, another Maya powerhouse in present-day Mexico. For more than 100 years, then, Tikal may have been a conquered city-state, languishing in thrall to foreign rulers.
Somehow, Tikal recovered. In 672, the city launched a war against Dos Pilas, about 70 miles to the southwest. An upstart Maya city less than 50 years old at the time, Dos Pilas had the nerve to use Tikal’s emblem glyph, calling itself in effect “New Tikal.” In the war, Tikal was triumphant. Glyphcovered stone stairways at Dos Pilas record the city’s defeat.
So explicit are Mayan glyphs that archaeologists have by now compiled a chronology of 33 rulers of Tikal (including at least one queen) spanning 800 years. Scholars formerly named these rulers after the glyphs that signified them, such as Double Bird, Jaguar Paw and Curl Snout. As epigraphers learned to sound out the glyphs, they assigned phonetic names. The architect of the first phase of Tikal’s revival was Nuun Ujol Chaak, a warrior king also known as Shield Skull.
Nuun Ujol Chaak’s era was hardly peaceful. As a young king, he fled Tikal when Calakmul declared war in a.d. 657. But he returned to lead Tikal’s defeat of Dos Pilas in 672. Then, only five years later, Nuun Ujol Chaak lost again to Dos Pilas, which was most likely collaborating with Calakmul, probably the greatest Maya power at the end of the seventh century. Victory over Tikal’s rivals was finally achieved by his son, Jasaw Chan K’awiil I, on August 5, 695. A drawing on a building in the Central Acropolis shows Jasaw carried in triumph into the city on a litter, leading his captive— perhaps the defeated lord of Calakmul—by a tether.
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Comments (16)
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......it doesnt have anyhting i wanted so why is it in the option of what is happening in tikal now?!
Posted by ayesha akter on January 26,2013 | 10:47 AM
you should really try to make this shorter
Posted by on January 7,2013 | 07:30 PM
There is no understanding of Native American worldview without comprehension of their cosmological knowledge.
Aztlan Consultants
Posted by TG Futch III on April 24,2011 | 03:24 PM
I'm doing a report on Tikal, and I've read in other plases that it took place in the 4th centurey or so. And that was a looooong time ago and the Bible times were also a long time ago, so I went and read Genesis (first book in the Bilble) chapter 11, and verses 1 to 10. And heres what it said. (starting from verse 3).
3. And they said one to another, Go to let us make brick, and burn them throughly. And they had brick for stone, and slime had they for morter.
4. And they said, Go to, let us build us a city and a tower, whose top may reach unto heaven; and let us make us a name, lest we be scattered abroad unto the face of the whole earth.
5. And the Lord came down to see the city and the "tower," which the childeren of men builded.
6. And the Lord said, Behold, the people is one, and they have all one launage; and this they begin to do: and now nothing will be restrained from them, which they have imagined to do.
7. Go to, let us go down, and there confound their launage, that they may not understand one another's speech.
8. So the Lord scattered them abroad from thence upon the face of all the earth: and they left "off" to build the city.
9. Therefore is the name of it called Babel; because the Lord did there coufound the launage of all the earth.
All this make a LOT of sense and fits together perfectly, so I think that tower is Tikal.
Posted by Hannah on April 17,2011 | 12:36 PM
im doing this project about tikal and what is the economic system??
Posted by melissa on February 22,2011 | 08:43 PM
I am doing a project on tikal. does anyone know the cultural or historical significance of it?
Posted by Anna on January 20,2011 | 07:45 PM
How can I see the pictures associated with these articles? The articles are interesting and delightfully easy to access. Thank you.
Posted by Burnell Vassar on May 23,2010 | 08:36 PM
SECRETS OF THE MAYA...
If I may express, I would suggest to refer this beautiful article of knowledge to friends or to those who intend to visit Tikal before going.
I have greatly appreciated it.
Merci beaucoup _ Thank You David Roberts (Smithsonian magazine ).
Lucien Alexandre Marion
Gatineau Qc (Canada )
Posted by Lucien Alexandre Marion on April 8,2010 | 02:57 PM
Obviously, increased knowledge of the Mayan culture could contribute great additional treasures to the people of this planet. Regardless of how the Mayan people lived their life, one thing is perfectly clear...they were as intelligent as anyone on the planet.
Posted by Dewey V. Hudson on March 14,2010 | 03:49 PM
You can travel to Tikal with an archaeologist on trips with Far Horizons Archaeological & Cultural trips - www.farhorizons.com
Posted by Mary Dell Lucas on September 23,2009 | 04:39 PM
I visited Tikal in June it was fantastic sight. Your article help put some of the history of it together for. Do you have of Tikal that would show everything. Thank you, Sharon
Posted by Sharon on October 24,2008 | 06:32 PM
I was born april 11th, 1970 in the northern hemisphere, 60 parallel,49th longitude.I would like to know my sign and what would be for told of me,deciphered from the mayan calender,thankyou Rodney.
Posted by rodney on September 24,2008 | 05:58 PM
what wonderful ancient history would like to read more about their astronomical side of the maya and what they belive cheers john
Posted by john on September 14,2008 | 10:08 AM
iNTRESTiNG, A BiT COMFUSiNG BUT iNTERESTiNG! NiCE ARTiCLE! KiONE FRASER :)
Posted by Kione Fraser on April 4,2008 | 09:28 PM
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