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Pyramids of the
Feathered Serpent
Our tour guide, a descendant of
the Mayas, took his stick and started drawing in the dirt. The
images illustrated his running commentary as he explained why
these ancient people built the pyramid at Chichen Itza in
Yucatan. It had to do with the earth and the seasons. There are
91 steps on each of the four sides making 364 steps in total. At
the very top is another step leading to the inner chambers where
the sacrifices were held. That makes 365 steps, the number of
days in a year. But the Mayan year was a little different than
ours in that it consisted of 18 months of 20 days each with five
days left over. This too is in the pyramid. The pyramid's
stairways divide the nine terraces on each side of the structure
into 18 segments, each representing a month.
And then things get even more interesting.
The pyramid is built in such a way as to pay homage, so to
speak, to the sun. Here's why. The two axes that run through the
northwest and southwest corners are oriented to where the sun
rises at the summer solstice and where it sets at the winter
solstice. Likewise, as we shall soon see, the pyramid also tells
us something about the vernal and autumnal equinoxes.
The whole imposing structure is built at a 45-degree angle and
you don't realize how steep that is until you start going up the
staircase yourself. Each step is at least a foot high and there
are no handrails or anything else to help you along. It's
probably as close as one can get to Indiana Jones' Temple of
Doom. At the very top the view of the ancient capital of the
Mayan world is spectacular. Many of the remaining buildings on
this 11.5-acre site have been restored so you can witness their
true grandeur but the pyramid is the most telling building of
all.
Known as the Castle and also as the Pyramid of Kukulcan, it is a
magnificent structure that wouldn't look out of place in the
middle of Imperial Rome. But this isn't Roman. It's Mayan.
Reaching 90 feet high, it must be the most precarious 90-foot
climb on earth and if going up is for the faint of heart, then
coming down is surely for the suicidal.
I'm normally not afraid of heights but still I made sure to take
the ‘easy' way down the side where authorities have installed a
rope. However, even walking straight down while gripping the
rope wasn't good enough; I opted to ‘bum' it all the way down
every one of those 91 steps. Just to make sure I wouldn't lose
my balance.
It's not such a crazy thought. The guide told us there have been
incidents of tourists who missed a step – one is all it would
take – only to fall to their deaths, merely the latest
sacrifices the place has been witness to. Having climbed the
thing myself, I can see what he was talking about. This being
the 12th consecutive day the guide has conducted a tour without
a day off, he describes the genius of the Mayas and doesn't miss
a beat.
During the vernal equinox (March 20th) and the autumnal equinox
(September 21st), at 3 p. m., the sun shines on the western
balustrade of the pyramid's main stairway and creates the
illusion of a serpent – 37 yards long. I use the word ‘illusion'
but others would say there is something far more sinister at
play here. Nevertheless, during these equinoxes this giant snake
appears to slither down the pyramid right into the creature's
head, which is carved in stone at the bottom of the stairway. It
apparently has to do with the symbolic descent of the god Kulcan
to earth to begin the agricultural cycle.
I didn't know much about that but I had to ask the guide. The
way he explained it these people definitely knew the world was
round, not to mention its place in the cosmos, and seeing that
the pyramid was built during the 11th to 13th centuries upon the
foundations of earlier temples I found it rather amazing. This
was hundreds of years before Galileo and we all knew what
trouble he got into when he claimed the earth revolved around
the sun.
"From what year did the Mayas know the world was round?" I asked
him.
"They always knew it," he said.
"Then what was the problem with all those Europeans?"
This launched him into a long dissertation on the Catholic
Church and how science and religion will fight for the same
space in a person's mind. If you're a staunch Catholic, he
implied, the Church always wins and that's what happened for
hundreds of years. But the old Mayas – these primitive Indians
who sacrificed so many people to the gods we'll never know how
many lives were lost at the top of that pyramid – were smart.
"The knowledge of the universe is carved in the stones at
Chichen Itza," the guide said.
Indeed. Especially in such fields as geometry and astronomy, the
Mayas were far more advanced during the period 1000 to 1200 than
any other civilization was for a long time afterward. The Mayas
were one of the great civilizations of Mesoamerica. Long before
the Spaniards arrived, they were already well on the way in such
disciplines as mathematics, astronomy, hieroglyphics,
architecture, never mind art and culture. They lived throughout
Central America, in the limestone plains of Mexico's Yucatan
Peninsula, and in Guatemala, Belize, Honduras and El Salvador.
The Mayan culture began to spread in the 4th century and up
until about the year 800, it thrived with great cities and
ceremonial centers all over the region. A large Mayan community
was also at Chichen Itza and some of the early buildings there
date from the 8th and 9th centuries. Between 800 and 925,
however, the Mayas went into decline. What exactly went wrong is
open to debate but one theory is that over a 150-year period
three great droughts – each of them lasting a decade – did the
Mayas in. Maybe so. But from about 900 to approximately 1200,
the Toltecs from central Mexico meshed with Mayan traditions and
the Toltec god Kukulcan ruled supreme. An actual leader named
Kukulcan, which means the Serpent God, is said to have
established order when he defeated the Mayan city tribes and
made Chichen Itza his capital. This period lasted until the
northern Mayas became integrated into Toltec society and then
the Mayan dynasty finally died out.
But they sure had a good run.
At Chichen Itza, however, there doesn't appear to have been a
break as there was elsewhere in the Mayan world. People lived
here continuously. In fact, there is evidence of early
Proto-Mayan tribes inhabiting the flat limestone plateau of the
Yucatan Peninsula as far back as 8,000 years ago.
While Mayan ruins are found throughout eastern Mexico and
Central America, it is Chichen Itza – inland and about halfway
between the two cities of Merida and Cancun – where one finds
the greatest collection of ruins. Chichen was largely ignored
until the 19th-century American explorer John Stephens toured
the area and studied many of the sites in and around the region.
He and a British draftsman, Frederick Catherwood, published
‘Incidents of Travel in Yucatan' in 1843, which prompted others
to come. But it wasn't until the 1920s that Mexican
archaeologists, assisted by the Carnegie Institution of
Washington, began restoring monuments. The result is a veritable
gold mine for history and archaeology buffs.
The Temple of Warriors. The Thousand Columns Group. The Platform
of Eagles and Jaguars. The Ossuary. The Observatory. And the
Ball Court, which for some may be the most interesting of all.
The Ball Court was where an old Mayan game was played between
two teams. Depending on whom you listen to, the captain of the
losing team – some say it was the winning team – was
decapitated. There are different opinions about this but what
cannot be disputed is that stone carvings in the walls clearly
depict a player having his head severed. One might wonder then
why any ball player would want to be a team captain. On the
other hand, in the Mayan world it was a great honor to be
sacrificed to the gods.
The great Ball Court at Chichen Itza is of sufficient size and
scope to be mentioned in the same breath as the Circus Maximus
or Colosseum in Rome. The playing area is 545 feet long by 225
feet wide – or almost two football fields. The two long sides
are bounded by platforms with vertical faces, the two shorter
sides by rectangular temples. Halfway up along each of the long
sides are the ‘goals', actually large stone rings, and the
objective was to propel a rubber ball through them.
During our stay in the Yucatan, my wife and I were treated to an
actual game played by modern actor-athletes. This took place in
a theater that could also be termed a stadium. The players
couldn't pick up the ball and throw it – that would be too easy
– but instead had to strike the ball with their hips. There were
angled platforms at both sides of the playing field and the idea
was to get the ball bouncing on the platform and for one team to
maintain possession until one of its players could get a good
shot at the ring.
No goals were scored in the game we saw and it was probably a
good thing; there were no decapitations.
Another interesting note about the Ball Court concerns the
remarkable acoustics. Stand at one end of the great playing area
and whisper a sound and it can be heard at the other end as
clear as a bell. Exactly why no one has been able to determine,
not even the engineer who was building an opera house in Europe
and who came to Chichen Itza to study the place. He left
bewildered.
The Observatory is yet another Mayan building at Chichen Itza
that, no doubt, baffled those early Spaniards who arrived in the
16th century and knew the world to be flat. Built between 900
and 1000 – again, many centuries before Galileo – the Tower was
accessed by a series of staircases. It was a cylindrical
building with a small chamber from which Mayan astronomers
studied the heavens through observation slits.
They must have been doing something right because they
accurately recorded the solar, lunar and even Venusian cycles,
not to mention solar eclipses and movements of various
constellations. Using their knowledge of astronomy and
mathematics, the Mayas developed their aforementioned solar
calendar which they called ‘Haab'.
With the Mayas there was no separation of science and religion.
It was all one and the same. But astronomy was central to their
view of the world and they regarded the cosmos as the chess
board, if you will, for sacred forces. The gods were the
heavenly bodies they observed with so much accuracy and, of
course, all human life depended on the gods.
Today, especially during the spring and fall equinoxes when
greats crowds come to witness the symbolic descent of Kukulcan
down the north staircase of the Castillo, we can admire the
intelligence of the Mayas. At the same time, we can cringe at
their eager relish of human sacrifice. It is unlikely there was
a more imposing place than the Castle in which to pay the
supreme price so let's take a closer look at it.
The Castle or pyramid sits on a square base with nine recessed
stories – representing the planes of the underworld – as it
climbs into the sky. At the very top is the temple, its entrance
divided by two columns in the shape of serpents; there are a
great many serpents to be sure at Chichen Itza. Strangely
enough, another smaller pyramid is inside the Castle. The Mayas
traditionally built temples and pyramids over earlier ones and
they did the same here. Tourists are allowed to climb the 60
steps of the inner pyramid through a three-foot-wide tunnel and
this is definitely not for those who are claustrophobic. Or
asthmatic for the air is very thin. At the top of the inner
pyramid you are greeted by a red throne or altar in the shape of
a jaguar.
Astronomy aside, there is yet another mystery associated with
the pyramid and, just like the echo at the great Ball Court, it
involves sound. At the 1998 meeting of the Acoustical Society of
America, which met in Norfolk, Virginia, an acoustical
consultant named David Lubman delivered a paper called ‘An
archaeological study of chirped echo from the Mayan pyramid of
Kukulkan at Chichen Itza'. As people have noted over the years,
clapping one's hands at the base of the pyramid produces what
Lubman called ‘chirped echoes' from the staircases. Physics will
explain the phenomenon as periodic reflections from stepfaces.
Said Lubman: "What is very interesting is that the chirped echo
sounds arguably like the primary call of the Mayan scared bird,
the resplendent Quetzal. This magnificent bird, now near
extinction, has for thousands of years represented the spirit of
the Mayas." Lubman concluded that the Mayas may have
intentionally coded the sound of their sacred bird right into
the architecture of the pyramid.
It may sound a little like Ripley's Believe it or Not, but with
the Mayas we might be wiser to believe it.
Not far from the Castle is a natural well – the Sacred Cenote.
Used for religious and ceremonial purposes, which means
sacrifices, it was in honor of the cult of Chaac, who was the
god of Rain and Water. The well, some 200 feet in diameter with
walls 70 feet deep, was where people – children, virgins and
warriors – were thrown in after being purified in a steam bath.
The cenote was always central to Chichen Itza as the first
nomadic people who lived here thousands of years ago also knew
about it.
What transpired in the Sacred Cenote was evident after
explorations began in the late 19th century. In addition to the
many skulls found at the bottom were gold and copper bells, gold
disks, mirrors, jade beads, carvings of snake heads and rattles,
clay vessels and arrow heads.
Over the years many experts have been to Chichen Itza to study
the Mayan ruins and determine just what they mean. But
interpretation of what is found here varies. Of course, there is
no doubt about the sacrifices but the artwork is open to
speculation. Consider the Platform of Eagles and Jaguars, built
to honor two animals greatly revered by the Mayas. A staircase
on each side of the square platform is carved with large heads
of feathered serpents. On the walls of the platform are panels
with reliefs of eagles and jaguars devouring human hearts; the
raised panels depict the eagles and sunken ones the jaguars.
These animals relate to the sun's journey across the sky during
the day and its descent into the underworld at night.
As morbid as such reliefs may be, they must take a back seat to
the Wall of Skulls. This is a rectangular platform showing
symbols of death and, by all accounts, was where the heads of
those who were sacrificed were put on display. Rows and rows and
more rows still of human skulls carved in the stone relate the
story of the many who honored the gods. The T-shaped stone
structure is 200 feet long and 40 feet wide and dedicated to the
glory of military conquest and ritual sacrifice. Along with the
horizontal rows of skulls are carvings of eagles and warriors
carrying away human heads. When the platform of this building
was first excavated, many human skulls were indeed found here.
Chichen Itza is a contract in extremes. While the Maya here
brought the arts and sciences to great heights of achievement,
they simultaneously plumbed the depths of inhumanity and
savagery.
Copyright Jerry Amernic
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Copyright 2008 Jerry Amernic. All Rights Reserved |
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