Pre-Columbian
Maya site in Retalhuleu, in the Highland Maya region, near the Pacific coast of Guatemala. It is best known for its monumental stone sculptures, some of which were recorded in the 19th century. The site lies partly on the Finca San Isidro Piedra Parada, and it was known by this name when
Eric Thompson published a description of some of the sculpture in 1943. ‘Abaj Takalik’ (‘standing stone’) is a translation of ‘Piedra Parada’ into
Quiché Maya. It was occupied during the Pre-Classic (c. 2000
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Abaj Takalik
Elizabeth P. Benson
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Agua Blanca
Colin McEwan
[anc. Salangome]
Pre-Columbian site in Manabí Province, Ecuador, 8 km inland in the Buenavista River Valley. It was a principal town, controlled by a lord, of the powerful indigenous polity of Salangome, recorded in 1528 by the navigator of the Spanish explorer and conquistador Francisco Pizarro. Human occupation at Agua Blanca spanned at least 5000 years and included components of all the principal ceramic-using cultures identified along Ecuador’s coasts. The ceramic sequence began with Valdivia wares in the early 3rd millennium
The visible archaeological remains at Agua Blanca are of Manteño date. They comprise the wall foundations of several hundred domestic structures, storehouses, temples, and other public buildings, which together make the site the largest and best-preserved of all surviving Manteño towns. The orientations of some buildings were clearly governed by astronomical considerations. The long axis of the principal temple, for example, is directed towards the point of sunrise on the December solstice, and this alignment determined the east–west axis of many buildings at the site. A secondary or derived axis, at right angles to the first, determined the layout of other structures. In still other areas, buildings were arranged radially around a central mound, a practice resembling the principles of spatial organization expressed in the earlier dated ...
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Alta Vista
Phil C. Weigand
Site of Pre-Columbian culture near Chalchihuites, Zacatecas, northern Mexico. It was explored by Gamio in 1910 and by Kelly in 1971 and 1976. Its chronology is still uncertain, but the most important occupation was during the Classic period (c.
The ceremonial centre comprises a complex series of interrelated buildings whose overall effect is monumental. The main compound is a square plaza surrounded by a banquette topped by platforms. On the north side there is a small pyramid covering a crypt, which contained three high-status burials. Adjacent to the plaza is a structure, once roofed, known as the Hall of Columns, which also contained prestige burials. At an angle to the Hall of Columns is an ‘observatory’ structure, which, because of its placement on the Tropic of Cancer, clearly had special meaning for Mesoamericans. It may have been coordinated with the pecked, double calendar circle at Cerro de Chapín, a nearby site to the south. Other architectural features include a colonnaded entrance fronting a road to the mines, a palace-like court with a skull rack (...
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Altar de Sacrificios
Elizabeth P. Benson
Site of Pre-Columbian Maya ceremonial centre in the Río Pasión drainage, near the source of the Usumacinta River, El Petén, Guatemala. It was occupied nearly continuously from the Middle Pre-Classic period (c. 1000–c. 300
The corpus of stone sculpture includes: 26 circular altars, most of them plain, although 7 are carved with hieroglyphs; 21 stelae carved with glyphic panels and rulers holding symbols of office; 3 ‘censer’ altars (basins behind deity masks); and various panels and obelisks. The earliest known monument is Stele 10, with a date of ...
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Altun Ha
Jeremy A. Sabloff
Site of Pre-Columbian Maya culture in the southern Lowland Maya region of Belize, c. 56 km north of Belize City. The site flourished c. 200
The central part of the site is organized around two plazas. Plaza A, the earlier, is bordered by four temples and several platforms. Two of these structures investigated by Pendergast are known as A-1 and A-6. Structure A-1, the ‘Temple of the Green Tomb’, is named after the tomb found inside it, dated
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Amapa
Phil C. Weigand
Site of Pre-Columbian culture on the coastal plain of Nayarit, Mexico. It was probably an important regional ceremonial centre for the western Mesoamerican cultures. Although it had been extensively studied, notably by Clement Meighan, by the late 1990s an absolute chronology for the site had yet to be established. Some researchers, using obsidian hydration dates, believe that the critical Cerritos phase began c. 600
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Anasazi
[Navajo: ‘the ancient ones’]
Term applied to the prehistoric ‘Basketmakers’ (fl to c.
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Antilles, Greater
Group of Caribbean Islands comprising Cuba, Republic of, Jamaica, Puerto Rico and Hispaniola, the last divided into Haiti, Republic of and the Dominican Republic. Prior to contact with the Spanish colonists, the art of the Greater Antilles was relatively unified. However, after colonization traditions soon separated.
Antilles, Lesser, §I: Introduction...
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Aztatlán
Eduardo Williams
Pre-Columbian culture of northwest Mexico. It belongs to the area between the Sinaloa River in the north and the Río Grande de Santiago in the south, probably extending as far southeast of this area as the Chapala Basin of Jalisco–Michoacán, and it flourished c. 880–c. 1400
By c. 500
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Aztec
Emily Umberger
Term applied to the Nahuatl-speaking peoples of late Pre-Columbian central Mexico (1350–1521) and to the Triple Alliance Empire which arose in the Basin of Mexico (1431) less than 100 years before the Spanish Conquest.
When the Spanish arrived in 1519 most central Mexican city-states were tributaries of the Aztec Empire, an alliance of cities of the lake area of the Basin. Founded in 1431 after the defeat of the Tepanecs of Azcapotzalco, by the 1470s it had expanded well outside the Basin, and the dominant city of the alliance, Tenochtitlan, was transformed into its imperial capital. In the 19th century the term Aztec was popularized as a generic label for the late pre-conquest inhabitants of central Mexico. Some scholars use the term more narrowly for the inhabitants of the Basin (the definition used here), and others for just Tenochtitlan, whose inhabitants called themselves Mexica. Whatever their individual tribal names, the Nahuas of central Mexico shared a common culture resulting from a mix through intermarriage of ancestral barbarians (generically called Chichimecs) who had migrated into the area from the north, and civilized ancestors (...
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Bahía
Jorge G. Marcos
Pre-Columbian regional culture of coastal Ecuador that flourished c. 500
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Ballcourt
T. J. J. Leyenaar and Hilda Lietzmann
Enclosed space or building for a ballgame. Ballcourts, as opposed to pitches or fields, were built in Pre-Columbian Mesoamerica for a game played with a solid rubber ball; in Pre-Columbian South America the game was unknown. In Europe special buildings were constructed in the 16th–18th centuries for an early form of tennis.
The ballcourt (Nahuatl tlachtli; Maya Quiché hom) in Mesoamerica was a rectangular earthen or stone enclosed structure used for the Mesoamerican ballgame, played with a solid rubber ball. The ballgame appears to have first developed in the Olmec heartland of the Gulf Coast region of Mexico. The early ballgame was presumably played on a flat, open field without boundaries marked by walls or earthen kerbs. The earliest known ballcourt (c. 700
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Barriles
Joan K. Lingen
Site in Panama, in the Volcan Baru district of Chiriquí Province near the Costa Rican border. It is one of the best known and most elaborate Pre-Columbian Panamanian sites; it flourished c.
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Batan Grande
Izumi Shimada
Region in La Leche Valley on the north coast of Peru, which contains numerous archaeological sites. The central part of the valley, over 55 sq. km in area, has been designated the Poma National Archaeological and Ecological Reserve because of the concentration of some thirty major Pre-Columbian cemeteries and mounds nested within dense semi-tropical thorny native forest. The most notable period of local cultural development was the Middle Sicán (see Sicán), c. 900–1100
The long-term funerary and religious importance of the Poma Reserve is underlined by the limited evidence for widespread or intensive agricultural activity there, despite its abundant fertile alluvium. As the beginning and end of various major canals, Batan Grande controlled the vital local water supplies and thus held political control over the adjacent valleys. Although a Late Sicán shift of settlement away from Batan Grande removed much of this political significance, the site clearly retained its eminence as a key burial and metallurgical center up to the Spanish conquest. The Spanish name for the area in fact derives from the hundreds of large ...
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Bonampak
Mary Ellen Miller
Site of a Maya ceremonial center in the tropical rainforest of the Chiapas, Mexico, that flourished around the end of the 8th century
The paintings in Structure 1 were commissioned in 791
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Cacaxtla
Claudia Brittenham
Pre-Columbian site in Tlaxcala, central Mexico. It flourished c. 250
The ruins of Cacaxtla lie in the hilly uplands between Tlaxcala and Puebla, c. 100 km east of Mexico City, on ancient routes of communication between the Central Highlands and both the Gulf Coast region and the Southern Highlands of the Mixteca. Only portions of the site have been excavated, and its history is not yet fully understood. Archaeological evidence indicates human occupation since the Late Pre-Classic period (c. 300
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Cahokia
David M. Jones
Site in the USA in East St Louis, IL, of a huge Pre-Columbian city. Founded c.
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Cahuachi
Helaine Silverman
[Kawachi]
Major site of the Pre-Columbian early Nazca culture in the Nazca Valley on the south coast of Peru. It was the capital of a brilliant civilization that flourished c.
William Strong’s fieldwork of 1952–3 determined that Cahuachi was first settled in the early 1st century
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Caja-espiga
Paul Gendrop
[Sp.: “peg-and-socket joint”]
Construction method that enables an exact joint to be made between two pieces of wood, stone, or other material by means of a tenon or peg (espiga) on one piece fitted into a corresponding mortice or socket (caja) in the other. In Pre-Columbian Mesoamerica the caja-espiga joint was used particularly in sculpture, both freestanding and architectural. Its origins probably lie in Olmec sculpture, as represented in Monument 34 from San Lorenzo Tenochtitlan, the figure of a kneeling man carved in andesite (h. 790 mm, c. 1200–750
At Teotihuacan (fl.
c. 250
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Cajamarca
W. Iain Mackay
Peruvian city and capital of the department of Cajamarca in northern Peru. It is also notable for being the site of a Pre-Columbian culture represented primarily by a localized pottery style dated c. 400–c. 1000