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Judi Lynn

(160,525 posts)
Mon Mar 2, 2020, 10:01 PM Mar 2020

'Astounding new finds' suggest ancient empire may be hiding in plain sight



Teotihuacan was once a bustling, cosmopolitan metropolis, the center of an empire whose reach may have extended 1000 kilometers away to the Maya region. MAX SHEN/GETTY IMAGES


By Lizzie WadeFeb. 27, 2020 , 1:30 PM

SAN JUAN TEOTIHUACAN, MEXICO—On 16 January 378 C.E., a stranger arrived in Tikal, a large Maya city in what is now northern Guatemala. His name was Sihyaj K’ahk’ (SEE-yah Kak), or Fire is Born, and he was likely a mighty warrior from a distant land. Many archaeologists think he hailed from Teotihuacan, a metropolis of 100,000 people about 1000 kilometers northwest of Tikal, near today’s Mexico City. And he may have come with an army.

The stone Maya monuments that record Sihyaj K’ahk’s arrival don’t say why he came or how he was received by Chak Tok Ich’aak, or Jaguar Paw, the long-reigning king of Tikal. But the day Sihyaj K’ahk’ marched into the city was the day Jaguar Paw died.

The engravings suggest Sihyaj K’ahk’ had been sent by a powerful foreign ruler called Spearthrower Owl. Within 2 years, Spearthrower Owl’s young son was crowned the new king of Tikal. In portraits carved on stone monuments there, the new king, named Yax Nuun Ayiin, holds an atlatl, a spearthrower used by Teotihuacan warriors, and wears a Teotihuacan-style headdress adorned with tassels. Some images of him and his father on monuments at Tikal are even carved in the flat, geometric style of Teotihuacan art, distinct from the intricate, naturalistic portraits of the Maya. Under the exotic new king and his descendants, Tikal became one of the most powerful cities in the Maya region.

Archaeologists have known the outline of those events for decades, but have long debated their meaning. Now, new evidence from both Teotihuacan and the Maya region has brought the relationship between those two great cultures back into the spotlight—and hints it may have been more contentious than most researchers had thought.

More:
https://www.sciencemag.org/news/2020/02/astounding-new-finds-suggest-ancient-empire-may-be-hiding-plain-sight

Also posted in Anthropology:
https://www.democraticunderground.com/12295406

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'Astounding new finds' suggest ancient empire may be hiding in plain sight (Original Post) Judi Lynn Mar 2020 OP
K&R and thanks. nt tblue37 Mar 2020 #1
It's crazy that so many European-descended anthropologists and archeologists ignored Judi Lynn Mar 2020 #2
Thanks for posting. I love reading about anthropology riversedge Mar 2020 #3
I agree with you regarding anthropology: so much ahead to learn for the rest of our lives always. Judi Lynn Mar 2020 #4

Judi Lynn

(160,525 posts)
2. It's crazy that so many European-descended anthropologists and archeologists ignored
Tue Mar 3, 2020, 03:34 AM
Mar 2020

what has been right here in the Americas all this time, isn't it? It appears their interest has only fired up relatively recently.

Some of these constructions most certainly predate the pyramids of Egypt.

Judi Lynn

(160,525 posts)
4. I agree with you regarding anthropology: so much ahead to learn for the rest of our lives always.
Tue Mar 3, 2020, 06:30 PM
Mar 2020

Hope the material will be expanding quickly now that so many parts of the Americas are being opened to research that wasn't possible earlier.

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