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PETROGLYPHS.US rock art petroglyph and pictograph educational articles |
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| Mural Reveals Pre-Classic Maya as a Civilized Society | |
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By: Thomas H. Maugh II, Times Staff Writer |
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Inside a ruined pyramid in
the Guatemalan jungle, archeologists have unearthed the oldest known Maya
painting, a brightly colored 30-foot-long mural depicting the Maya creation myth
and the coronation of the Maya's first earthly king. |
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![]() PHOTOGRAPHER: Vlad Dumitrascu National Geographic Maya Discovery This mural found in the ruins of a pyramid in Guatemala depicts the Maya creation myth. Here, the son of the maize god sheds his own blood in sacrifice. |
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Archeologist David Freidel of Southern Methodist University, who was not
involved in the research, called the painting a "masterpiece."
The scenes "are executed with the confidence, compositional imagination and
technical perfection of an artist who, while anonymous, must rank with the best
the world has ever known." |
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![]() An illustration provided by National Geographic magazine shows a cut-out view of the pyramid at San Bartolo, Guatemala. |
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The newly found mural, whose images are accompanied by text, undermines both of
those arguments "without any doubt," Estrada-Belli said. It shows that the early
Maya had a sophisticated system of writing and that their kings obtained and
exercised their powers with all the trappings and symbols of kingship found in
later Maya societies. |
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The room containing the mural — located at the rear of a pyramid — was filled
with rubble about the time San Bartolo was abandoned. Two of the walls of the
room, which also bore murals, were smashed and used for fill. The team has been
collecting fragments from those murals and hopes eventually to reassemble them. |
![]() PHOTOGRAPHER: Kenneth Garrett National Geographic Archaeologists recover pottery and a carved stone effigy from the rubble. |
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"In Western terms, it's like knowing only modern art and then stumbling on a
Michelangelo or a Leonardo," he said. |
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![]() PHOTOGRAPHER: Kenneth Garrett National Geographic A beautifully carved effigy of the rain god Chac. |
Epigraphers are having difficulties deciphering much of the text accompanying
the images because it is subtly different from the hieroglyphics of the Classic
period, said archeologist Karl Taube of UC Riverside. |
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The tomb contained three chambers. The bottom chamber held the bones of a man buried with a jade plaque — the symbol of Maya royalty — on his chest. That chamber also contained a large green stone figurine and seven vessels, including a frog-shaped bowl and a vase bearing the effigy of the rain god, Chac. |
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