Chichen
Itza
Chichen
Itza is the largest of the Pre-Columbian archaeological
sites in Yucatán, Mexico. The city was built by the Maya
civilization. The name is often represented as Chichén
Itzá in Spanish and other languages to show that both parts
of the name are stressed on their final syllables. In the
Yucatec Maya language (still in use in the area, and written
with the Roman alphabet since the 16th century) this stress
follows the rules of the language so it is written without
diacritics. The Maya name "Chichen Itza" means
"At the mouth of the wells of the Itza people".
Although this was the usual name for the site in
Pre-Columbian times, it is also referred to in the ancient
chronicles as Uucyabnal, meaning "Seven Great
Rulers".
The
Yucatán has no above-ground rivers, so the fact that there
were three natural sink holes (cenotes) providing plentiful
water year round at Chichen made it a natural spot for a
center of population. Two of these cenotes are still in
existence, the most famous being the legendary "Cenote
of Sacrifice", which was sacred to the Maya rain god
Chac. Offerings of jade, pottery, and incense were thrown
into the great well as offerings to Chac, and occasionally
during times of desperate drought a human sacrifice --
however there is no confirmation in either ancient
chronicles nor the archeological dredging of the cenote to
confirm the lurid tales of some tour guides claiming that
great numbers of beautiful, young, virgin women were
regularly cast into the well. The Sacred Cenote was long a
place of pilgrimage Yucatán.
Chichen
was a major center by about 600 in the middle of the Maya
Classic period, but the city saw its greatest growth and
power after the Maya sites of the central lowlands to the
south had already collapsed.
Some
of the notable classic era structures at Chichen include a
fine complex of buildings in the "Puuc"
architectural style. The Spanish nicknamed this complex
"Las Monjas" or "The Nunnery" but was
actually the city's classic era government palace. Just to
the east is a small temple (nicknamed "La Iglesia",
"The Church") with decorated with elaborate masks
of the rain god. To the north is a round building on a large
square platform nicknamed "El Caracol" or
"the snail" for the stone spiral staircase inside;
this was an observatory (the doors were alligned to view the
vernal equinox, the Moon's greatest northern and southern
declinations, and other astronomical events) sacred to
Kukulcan, the feathered-serpent god of the wind and
learning.
Apparently
about 987 a Toltec king named Quetzalcoatl arrived here with
an army from central Mexico, and (with local Maya allies)
made Chichén Itzá his capital, and a second Tula. The art
and architecture from this period shows an interesting mix
of Maya and Toltec styles. Chichen's "Temple of the
Warriors" was clearly built as a copy of Temple B at
the Toltec capital of Tula, although thanks to the Maya
architects is grander than the original. This is a stone
building (originally with a wood and plaster roof) atop a
step-pyramid, with the columns in the interior carved with
the likenesses of warriors. At the top of the stairway
leading to the entrance of the temple is a type of
altar-statue known as a Chac Mool.
Dominating
the center of Chichén is the Temple of Kukulcan (the Maya
name for Quetzalcoatl), often referred to as "El
Castillo" (the castle). This step pyramid with a ground
plan of square terraces with stairways up each of the 4
sides to the temple on top. Great sculptures of Plumed
Serpents run down the sides of the northern staircase, and
are set off by shadows from the corner tiers on the Spring
and Fall equinox. It was practice in Mesoamerican cities to
periodically build larger and grander temple pyramids atop
older ones, and this is one such example. Thanks to
archeologists, a doorway at the base of the north stairway
leads to a tunnel, from which one can climb the steps of the
earlier version of El Castillo inside the current one, up to
the room on the top where you can see King Kukulcan's Jaguar
Throne, carved of stone and painted red with jade
spots.
Seven
courts for playing the Mesoamerican ballgame have been found
in Chichén, but the one about 150 meters to the north-west
of the Castillo is by far the most impressive. It is the
largest ballcourt in ancient Mesoamerica. It measures 166 by
68 meters (545 by 232 feet). The sides of the interior of
the ballcourt are lined with sculpted panels depicting teams
of ball players, with the captain of the winning team
decapitating the captain of the losers.
Built
into one of the exterior walls of the ballcourt is the
Temple of the Jaguar, which features another jaguar throne
-- since this one was not buried for a thousand years, its
red paint and jade spots are long since gone.
Chichen
Itza also has a variety of other structures densely packed
in the ceremonial center of about 5 km² (2 mile²) and
several outlying subsidiary sites. Nearby are the sacred
Caves of Balankanche, where a large selection of ancient
pottery and idols may be seen still in the positions where
they were left in Pre-Columbian times.
The
Maya chronicles record that in 1221 a revolt and civil war
broke out, and archeological evidence confirms that the
wooden roofs of the great market and the Temple of the
Warriors were burnt at about this date. Chichen Itza went
into decline as rulership over Yucatán shifted to Mayapan.
While
the site was never completely abandoned, the population
declined and no major new constructions were built. The
Sacred Cenote, however, remained a place of
pilgrimage.
In
1531 Spanish Conquistador Francisco de Montejo claimed
Chichén Itzá and intended to make it the capital of
Spanish Yucatán, but after a few months a native Maya
revolt drove Montejo and his forces from the land (see
Spanish conquest of Yucatán).
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