III.
Classic Period - A. Society and Economy
Classic
Maya kings carried the title k'ul ahau (supreme and sacred
ruler). In the latter part of the Classic period, kings
were assisted in governing by a hereditary ruling council.
The power of the king existed as both a political and
religious authority in this period.
In contrast, the king's religious power declined during
the Postclassic period (AD 900 to 1521) because the institution
of priesthood appeared.
Merchants
were important to Maya society because of the significance
of trade. Principal interior trade routes connected all
the great Classic lowland centers and controlled the flow
of goods such as salt, obsidian, jade, cacao, animal pelts,
tropical bird feathers, and luxury ceramics.

In
the early Classic period in central Mexico Teotihuacán
emerged as the greatest city in an area that included
modern Mexico and most of Central America. The religious
and political power of Teotihuacán
radiated throughout Mesoamerica.
One
result of Teotihuacán's influence was a highly integrated
network of trade in which the Maya participated. Highland
Maya from the southern region carried obsidian for tools
and weapons; grinding stones; jade; green parrot and quetzal
feathers; a tree resin called copal to burn as incense;
and cochineal, a red dye made from dried insects. Those
from the lowlands brought jaguar pelts, chert (flint),
salt, cotton fibers and cloth, balche, wax, honey, dried
fish, and smoked venison. People either bartered goods
directly or exchanged them for cacao beans, which were
used as a kind of currency.
Wealth
acquired from trade enabled the upper classes to live
in luxury, although there was little improvement in the
lives of the lower classes. A Maya nobleman wore an embroidered
cotton loincloth trimmed with feathers; a robe of cotton,
jaguar skin, or feathers; sandals; and an elaborate feather
headdress that was sometimes as large as himself. His
head had been fashionably elongated by being pressed between
boards when he was a few days old, and his eyes had purposely
been crossed in childhood by having objects dangled before
them. His nose was built up with putty to give it an admired
beak shape, and his ears and teeth were inlaid with jade.
A noblewoman wore a loose white cotton robe that was often
embroidered. Her head was also elongated, and she filed
her teeth to points.
Nobles lived in houses of cut stone with plastered walls
that often bore brightly painted murals. In the living
room nobles gave banquets of turkey, deer, duck, chocolate,
and balche. The guests were expected to bring gifts and
to give a banquet in return.
A
dead noble was buried in a stone vault with jade and pottery
ornaments, and occasionally with human sacrifices, which
were provided to serve him in the afterlife.
Most
of the Maya people were village farmers who gave two-thirds
of their produce and much of their labor to the upper
classes. Commoner men wore plain cotton loincloths and
simple tunics. Women wore woven cotton blouses and skirts
or loose-fitting sack dresses with simple embroidered
patterns. Women and girls wore their hair long and took
care that it was always combed and arranged attractively.
Different hairstyles signaled the marital status of women.
Both men and women tattooed their bodies with elaborate
designs.
At
the bottom of Maya society were slaves who were convicted
criminals, poor commoners who sold themselves into bondage,
captives of war, or individuals acquired by trade. Slaves
performed menial tasks for their owners and they were
often sacrificed when their owners died so that they could
continue to serve in the afterlife.
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