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Guatemalan
archaeologist Mónica Pellecer Alecio takes a green stone figurine
from the oldest known Maya royal tomb, dating from about 150 B.C.,
found at San Bartolo, an ancient Maya ceremonial site in Guatemala.
Assisting her is San Bartolo project director William Saturno, assistant
professor of anthropology at the University of New Hampshire and a
research associate of Harvard’s Peabody Museum of Archaeology
and Ethnology. National Geographic is a supporter of Saturno’s
research. Photo by Kenneth Garrett © National Geographic.
Oldest
Preserved Maya Mural Reveals Mythology Of Kings And Highly Developed
Hieroglyphs
By Erika Mantz, Media Relations
WASHINGTON/GUATEMALA CITY — Archaeologists at an ancient Maya
ceremonial site in Guatemala have uncovered the final wall of a large
Maya mural dating from 100 B.C. that shows the mythology surrounding
the origin of kings and a highly developed hieroglyphic script. Before
the excavation of the vividly painted mural, there was scant evidence
of the existence of early Maya kings or of their use of elaborate
art and writing to establish their right to rule.
The site, known as San Bartolo, contains a pyramid complex and several
buried rooms. To the west of the pyramid where the mural room was
discovered, archaeologists led by Guatemalan Mónica Pellecer
Alecio found the oldest known Maya royal burial, from around 150 B.C.
The latest finds at the site will be reported in the January 2006
issue of National Geographic magazine.
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Project
director William Saturno, of the University of New Hampshire and Harvard’s
Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology, said the mural room’s
recently excavated west wall is a masterpiece of ancient Maya art
that reveals the story of creation, the mythology of kingship and
the divine right of a king. The 30-foot by 3-foot west wall mural
shows two coronation scenes — one mythological, the other the
coronation of a real king.
Archaeologists have determined the mural is about 200 years older
than originally thought. As previously announced, Saturno found the
mural room in 2001 through sheer chance. To seek some shade, he had
ducked into a trench that looters had cut into the unexcavated pyramid,
and when he shone his flashlight on the walls, he saw the mural. Saturno
and his team are now in the midst of a five-year project to uncover
the mural and reveal its story.
“In Western terms, it’s like knowing only modern art and
then stumbling on a Michelangelo or a Leonardo,” Saturno, 36,
said. “With its fine painting and its elaborate mural showing
the mythic basis of kingship, the chamber has upended much of what
we thought we knew about the early Maya. The mural shows that early
Maya painting had achieved a high level of sophistication and grace
well before the great works of the Classic Maya in the seventh century.”
The mural is wonderfully preserved. Parts of it look like they were
painted yesterday, Saturno noted.
The work at San Bartolo has been supported by grants from the National
Geographic Society, the National Endowment for the Humanities, the
Peabody Museum, the Annenberg Foundation and the Reinhart Foundation.
The work is authorized by the Guatemalan Institute of Anthropology
and History.
“It is in the interest of the Guatemalan state to support the
archaeological research, the mural restoration and conservation program
undertaken by Dr. Saturno and his team. We are also interested in
implementing a conservation project with the objective of preserving
the murals,” said Ervin S. Lòpez Aguilar, director of
the Department of Prehispanic Monuments.
The first part of the west wall mural shows the establishment of order
to the world. Four deities, variations of the same figure —
the son of the maize god — provide a blood sacrifice and an
offering in four cardinal directions as they set up the physical world.
The deities move through the Maya universe. The first god stands in
the water and offers a fish, establishing the watery underworld. The
second stands on the ground and sacrifices a deer, establishing the
land. The third floats in the air, offering a turkey, thereby establishing
the sky; and the fourth stands in a field of flowers, offering fragrant
blossoms, the food of gods, and establishing paradise in the east,
where the sun is reborn daily.
The next section of the mural shows the maize god establishing the
world center and crowning himself king upon a wooden scaffold. The
final section traces his birth, death and resurrection, bringing sustenance
to the world. The last scene shows a historic coronation of a Maya
king, named and titled, receiving his headdress from an attendant.
By acceding to the throne in the company of gods, the mural likely
shows the king is claiming the divine right to rule from the gods
themselves.
Project iconographer Karl Taube of the University of California, Riverside,
said the San Bartolo murals provide an unparalleled view of the early
development of Maya mythology and art. “All too often such carvings
are broken or heavily eroded,” he said. “In contrast,
the murals at San Bartolo are in brilliant polychrome and extend for
many meters along the chamber walls. Elaborate red spirals indicate
wind, breath and aroma and can be seen exhaling from the mouths of
serpents and other beings, and at the edge of bird wings to denote
movement. The maize god appears no less than seven times in the currently
exposed portion of the mural, giving us an unprecedented understanding
of his attributes and mythology at this early date.”
Although painted almost 1,500 years after the San Bartolo murals,
the Maya book known as the Dresden Codex features a very similar sequence
of directional trees and sacrificial offerings.
Because the surviving glyphs within the mural room date to centuries
before most other Maya texts (of the Classic period), they remain
hard to read. David Stuart, Schele Professor of Mesoamerican Art &
Writing at the University of Texas at Austin, who is working on deciphering
them, says they are probably captions for the figures they accompany.
One legible example from the west wall shows one of the sacrificing
young gods named by his accompanying caption as “star man.”
“It’s enigmatic, but emphasizes his cosmological role
within the larger creation myth represented,” Stuart said.
About a mile from the mural room, Mónica Pellecer Alecio’s
team of archaeologists excavated beneath a small pyramid and found
a vaulted tomb under heavy capstones, likely the burial place of one
of the early Maya kings. The tomb contained a burial complex. The
first part housed five ceramic vessels; the second, some human bones
and six ceramic vessels; the third, the bones of a man, with a jade
plaque — the symbol of Maya royalty — on his chest, plus
a large, green stone figurine and seven vessels, including a delicate
frog-shaped bowl and a vase bearing an effigy of the rain god Chac.
During the past year, archaeologists working nearby the mural room
have found remains of two other rooms, one that faced the mural room
and one on top of the pyramid, as well as thousands of mural fragments,
more than 9,000 from a small excavation near the top room alone. In
these fragments, the painting is finer and the figures smaller and
more intricate. Saturno and his team hope to be able to piece the
fragments together to get a sense of what these murals show.
“The artistic and physical evidence of the Maya’s earliest
kings revealed at San Bartolo is among the most important finds in
Maya archaeology in the last few decades,” Saturno said. “It
has opened a window into the very origins of Maya civilization. As
we excavate the site further and piece together more images and glyphs
from the mural fragments we have discovered, new surprises could be
revealed.” |
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