2 Temporal Cycles in The Archaeology of Maya Residential Groups From Caracol, Belize
2 Temporal Cycles in The Archaeology of Maya Residential Groups From Caracol, Belize
2 Temporal Cycles in The Archaeology of Maya Residential Groups From Caracol, Belize
Considerations of ancient Maya cycles of time often focus on dated events obtained from texts on carved stone monuments or on
Maya prophecies recorded in ethnohistoric documents. However, temporal cycles are also in evidence in the archaeological
records of Maya households. Archaeologically recognizable cycles can be seen in the contextual data of Caracols residential
groups, specifically in terms of timed ritual acts carried out in these locations that are often associated either with cache
practices or with human burials. For the Caracol Maya, the dates and sequencing of residential deposits suggests that acts of
veneration were linked to overarching temporal cycles rather than to individual history and events relating to household or
family or even to the death of a family member. Taken collectively, these data suggest that the ancient Maya worldview was
both focused on and constrained by specific concepts related to time. Commemorating the completion of temporal cycles was
important for all levels of Maya society.
Introduction
It has long been known that the ancient
Maya commemorated various cycles of time.
Stone monuments were often erected in cyclical
fashion, repeatedly celebrating 20-year temporal
intervals. The attention that the ancient Maya
paid to time is noted in ethnohistorical accounts
and is also evident in the attention given to lunar
and venus cycles within the codices. Ancient
Maya time also became relevant to
contemporary society in celebrations of the 13th
Baktun in December 2012, however misguided
this might have been. Yet, there remains debate
about the degree to which specific Maya events,
activities, monuments, and/or constructions
reflect historical, as opposed to cyclical,
commemorations. We continue to suggest that
cyclical time was far more important to the
ancient Maya than has been previously argued
and that its significance is reflected in the
archaeological record of many, if not most, sites.
Maya rulers are often portrayed carrying
out ceremonies at the change of a given katun, or
20-year period of time; in fact, many carved
stone monuments are katun markers that were
erected in sequence by each ruler (e.g., Beetz
and Satterthwaite 1981; Proskouriakoff 1950;
Satterthwaite and Jones 1982). Individuals not
only kept counts of their katuns of rule in
many cases counting down these 20-year periods
of time in their texts but they also often
categorized their lives in terms of katun periods
and further noted their participation in first-fire
events that were often associated with New
Years ceremonies carried out in 52 year
sample
size
and
excellent
contextual
information, it is possible to date funerary
ceramics to within relatively small blocks of
time during the peak of Caracols occupation
during the Late Classic Period (A.D. 550-800).
When ceramics are combined with stratigraphy
across the various contexts, additional burials
and caches can be dated through seriation. What
emerges from these data is that fact that
residential burials at Caracol placed in ritual
contexts i.e., on the axis to various structures
appear to have been interred with a temporal
element that mimicked a 40-year or doublekatun cycle. Absolute dating for the burial cycle
can be established by examining dated tombs in
Structure B20 in which the first was utilized by
an individual who died in 9.5.3.1.3 (A.D. 537)
and the second was occupied by an individual
who died in 9.7.3.12.15 (A.D. 577), setting up a
40-year parameter between the stratigraphicallyrelated individuals. The death dates in the
tombs, however, do not account for doublefunerals, secondary interments, or other postprocessing of the dead that commonly occurred
among the Maya, so some latitude may exist
within this temporal cycle.
As has been
previously documented (D. Chase and A. Chase
2004) and as in the example included here,
similar cycles of interment are found across
various residential groups at Caracol.
While we were able to demonstrate that
both face and finger caches are associated with
burials at Caracol (A. Chase and D. Chase
1994), the isolated nature of these cache
deposits, often placed in plazas in front of
buildings, made it difficult to articulate exactly
how caches fit into the broader picture of ancient
Maya ritual. We were able to show that face
caches appeared in the archaeological record of
Caracol toward the beginning of the 9th Cycle
but could neither satisfactorily explain their
stylistic differences nor their temporal position
and longevity.
However, excavations
undertaken within Caracols residential groups
within the last few years have yielded
archaeological contexts containing caches that
could be stratigraphically related to each other
and to dateable burials. These data now permit
us to suggest that face caches were deposited as
part of both mortuary and katun ceremonies in
14
15
Figure 2. Section of Caracol Structure C20; the face cache was recovered immediately above the capstones for the frontal crypt.
16
Figure 4. Seriation of burials recovered from Alta/Baja Vista following a double-katun pattern of interment that is consistent
with the ceramic contents.
17
Figure 5. Seriation of caches from Alta/Baja Vista and other residential groups, showing the stylistic and temporal sequence of
these containers.
18
Summary
Because of the long-term commitment to
understanding Caracols archaeological past, it is
now possible to make some sense out of what
once appeared to be disparate ritual deposits
found throughout Caracols residential units.
While initially interesting because of their
widespread distribution at the site and because
of their social implications (A. Chase and D.
Chase 2009), Caracols face caches can now be
associated with calendric ritual and assigned to
specific blocks of time 20-year katuns; thus,
they also are exceedingly useful for dating the
ritual use of a given residential unit. The face
caches appear to interdigitate with residential
burials that are also cyclical in nature, but that
operate on an expanded double-katun timeline
hase 2003, 2011]).
Permutations in ritual
remains among Caracols residential groups still
19
Conclusion
Western perception of time is, for the
most part, linear as well as historical. The
historical aspects of Western time have come to
be superimposed upon the interpretations that we
make of the Maya archaeological record. Thus,
archaeologists tend to focus on individuals and
agency rather than on repetitive commemorative
activities and offerings for the propitiation of
cyclical time. Maya ritual events, specifically as
relating to burials and caches, are often
interpreted archaeologically in terms of
individuals, families, and lifespans rather than
being interpreted within a broader cosmological
frame that commemorates temporal cycles.
Ritual timing may differ from lifespan timing.
Thus, a burial may commemorate a larger event
or cycle and not the simple death of an
individual.
How the ancient Maya viewed and used
time has a complex history of interpretaion.
While the modern world has appropriated Maya
time, as was seen in the public preoccupation
with and celebration of the end of the 13th
baktun (and the supposed end of the world) in
December 2012, professional scholars of the
past also had difficulty understanding how the
20
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