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Maya Kings and Cities. Maya Create City-States. The homeland of the Maya stretched from southern Mexico into northern Central America and this region included a highland and lowland region.
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Maya Create City-States • The homeland of the Maya stretched from southern Mexico into northern Central America and this region included a highland and lowland region. • The lowlands lie to the north and include the dry scrub forest of the Yucatan Peninsula and the dense, steamy jungles of southeastern Mexico and northern Guatemala. • The highlands are further south which is a range of cool, cloud-wreathed mountains that stretch from southern Mexico to El Salvador.
Urban Centers • The period from 250-900 C.E. is known as the Classic Period of Maya civilization and during this time, the Maya built spectacular cities such as Tikal which was a major center in northern Guatemala. • Each city was an independent city-state that was ruled by a god-king and served as a center for religious ceremonies and trade. • Maya cities featured giant pyramids, temples, palaces and elaborate stone carvings.
Agriculture and Trade • Although Maya city-states were independent, they were linked through alliances and trade. • Cities would exchange local products like flint, feathers and honey along with craft goods like cotton textiles and jade ornaments. • Agriculture provided the basis of Maya life. They grew crops such as maize, beans and squash.
Kingdoms Built on Dynasties • Successful farming methods led to the accumulation of wealth and the development of social classes. • The noble classes were on top with the merchants and those with specialized skills were below them. The peasant majority were at the bottom of the social classes. • The Maya King was at the top and he was regarded as a holy figure and his position was hereditary.
Religion Shapes Maya Life • Religion influenced most aspects of Maya life. The Maya believed in many gods that could be good, evil or both. • Gods were also associated with the four directions and with different colors. • The Maya also believed that each day was a living god whose behavior could be predicted with the help of a system of calendars.
Religious Practices • The Maya worshipped their gods in various ways. • They would pray, make offerings, pierce and cut their bodies and offer their blood to the gods. • They sometimes even carried out human sacrifice.
Math and Religion • Maya religious beliefs also led to the development of the calendar, mathematics and astronomy. • The Maya developed a 260 day religious calendar which consisted of thirteen 20 day months. • A second 365 day solar calendar consisted of eighteen 20 day months with a separate period of 5 days at the end. • The two calendars were linked together like meshed gears so that any given day could be identified in both cycles.
Maya astronomers were able to attain great precision by using a math system that included the concept of zero. • The Maya used a shell symbol for zero, dots for the numbers 1-4 and a bar for 5. • They used the numerical system primarily for calendar and astronomical work.
Written Language • The Maya also developed the most advanced writing system in the ancient Americas. • Maya writing consisted of about 800 hieroglyphic symbols or glyphs. • They used their writing system to record important events in history and they would carve their glyphs into stone or record them in a bark-paper book called a codex. • Only three of these books exist today.
Mysterious Decline • The remarkable history of the Maya ended in mystery. • In the late 800s, the Maya suddenly abandoned many of their cities and invaders from the north, the Toltecs, moved into the lands that had been occupied by the Maya. • No one really knows why this happened, though experts offer overlapping theories.
By the 700s, warfare had broken out among the various Maya city-states and increased warfare disrupted trade and produced economic hardship. • Population growth and over-farming may have damaged the environment and led to food shortages, famine and disease. • By the time that the Spanish arrived in the early 1500s, the Maya were divided into small, weak city-states that gave little hint of their former glory.