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III.
Classic Period
Classic
Maya civilization became more complex in about AD 300
as the population increased and
centers in the highlands and the lowlands
engaged in both cooperation and competition with each
other. Trade and warfare were important stimuli to cultural
growth and development.
The
greatest developments occurred in the Petén jungle and
surrounding regions of the lowlands where major city-states,
such as Tikal, Piedras Negras, and Copán, arose and developed
from AD 300 to 900.
Society
became more complex, with distinct social classes developing.
Families of nobles formed a hereditary ruling class that
stood apart from the common Maya. At the top of society,
a hereditary king ruled over each Maya city. Kings were
similar to the earlier ruling chiefs except that they
formed a distinct social class along with other nobles.
Under the direction of their kings, who also performed
as priests, the centers of the lowland Maya became densely
populated jungle cities with vast stone and masonry temple
and palace complexes.
The
core area of Tikal, for example, covered about 9 sq km
(about 3 sq mi) and included about 2700 structures with
an estimated population of 11,300. The total area of Tikal,
including the core, peripheral, and rural areas, is estimated
at 314 sq km (121 sq mi) with an estimated population
of 92,000.
During
the Classic period, warfare was conducted on a fairly
limited, primarily ceremonial scale. Maya rulers, who
were often depicted on stelae (carved stone monuments)
carrying weapons, attempted to capture and sacrifice one
another for ritual and political purposes.
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Some
pre-Columbian cultures,
like the Maya of Mexico, painted frescoes and murals
to record their daily life and history. In 1946 archaeologists
found the perfectly preserved Bonampak Fresco Cycle
(AD 792?), beneath a layer of calcification, near
the Lacanhá River in southern Mexico. The fresco takes
up several walls and tells the story of the last dynastic
succession at Bonampak. This scene depicts Maya warriors
standing guard over prisoners of war, on whose heads
the guards stand.
SEF/Art
Resource, NY
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The
rulers often destroyed parts of some cities, but the destruction
was directed mostly at temples in the ceremonial precincts;
it had little or no impact on the economy or population
of a city as a whole.
Some
city-states did occasionally conquer others, but this
was not a common occurrence until very late in the Classic
period when lowland civilization had begun to disintegrate.
Until
that time, the most common pattern of Maya warfare seems
to have consisted of raids employing rapid attacks and
retreats by relatively small numbers of warriors, most
of whom were probably nobles.
Lowland
Maya centers were true cities with large resident populations
of commoners who sustained the ruling elites through payments
of tribute in goods and labor. They built temples, palaces,
courtyards, water reservoirs, and causeways. Walls, floors,
and other surfaces in a lowland Maya city were smoothly
covered with red or cream-colored limestone stucco, which
shone brilliantly in the tropical sun.
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The
Maya, a Native American people of Mexico and the
northern part of Central America, produced intricate
relief carvings—that is, sculpture in which the
figures project from a background surface, as
pictured here. The relief art either adorned buildings
or stood alone as stelae (inscribed stone slabs
and pillars). Maya sculpture frequently depicted
rulers and gave dates and other information about
these rulers. Sculpture and other art forms were
also used to record important events and to portray
deities and their activities.
George
Swain/Liaison Agency
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Sculptors
carved stelae, which recorded information about the rulers,
their family and political histories, and often included
exaggerated statements about their conquests of other
city-states.
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"Maya
Civilization," Microsoft® Encarta® Online Encyclopedia 2000
http://encarta.msn.com
© 1997-2000 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
Contributed
By: William R. Fowler, B.A., M.A., Ph.D. Associate Professor
of Anthropology and Latin American Studies, Vanderbilt University.
Author of El Salvador: Antiguas Civilizaciones. Editor of Ancient
Mesoamerica.
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return to index Maya Civilization
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