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Origins and Characteristics of Olmec and Mayan Societies

Explore the early Mesoamerican societies of the Olmecs and Mayans, including their origins, characteristics, and mysterious decline. Learn about their agricultural practices, cities, social hierarchy, and cultural advancements.

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Origins and Characteristics of Olmec and Mayan Societies

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  1. Chapter 6 Early Societies in the Americas and Oceania

  2. Origins of Mesoamerican Societies • Migration across Bering land bridge? • Probably 13,000 BCE, perhaps earlier • By sea from Asia? • By 9500 BCE reached southernmost part of South America • Hunter/Gatherer societies • evolve into agricultural societies

  3. Early Mesoamerican societies, 1200 B.C.E.-1100 C.E.

  4. Olmecs and Mayans

  5. Olmecs • 1200-100 BCE • The “Rubber People” • Called that by others • Ceremonial Centers • San Lorenzo, La Venta, Tres Zapotes • Olmec Heads • Up to 10 ft tall, 20 tons • Transported by dragging, rolling on logs • 1000/workers per head

  6. Characteristics of Olmec Civilization • Intensive agricultural techniques • Area received abundant rainfall so extensive irrigation systems were unnecessary • Still the Olmecs built elaborate drainage systems to divert waters that might otherwise have caused floods • Specialization of labor • Jade craftsmen • Cities • Built around ceremonial centers at San Lorenzo, La Venta, and Tres Zapotes • A social hierarchy • Society was probably authoritarian • Common subjects provided labor and tribute to the elite

  7. Characteristics of Olmec Civilization • Organized religion and education • Ceremonial centers, priests, temples, altars, and human sacrifice • Development of complex forms of economic exchange • Imported jade and obsidian and exported small jade, basalt, and ceramic works of art • Development of new technologies • Excellent astronomers and mathematicians who developed a calendar • Advanced development of the arts. (This can include writing.) • Created colossal human heads sculpted from basalt rock

  8. Agriculture and Herding • Staple: maize • Herding: turkeys, barkless dogs • Both food • No draft animals • No development of wheeled vehicles

  9. Olmec Society • Probably authoritarian in nature • Large class of conscripted laborers to construct ceremonial sites • Also tombs for rulers, temples, pyramids, drainage systems

  10. Olmecs • Earliest known ceremonial centers of the ancient Americas appeared near modern day Veracruz around 1200 B.C. • Served as the nerve center for the first complex society of the Americas, the Olmecs • “Olmec” was not what the people called themselves • It means “rubber people” and comes from the rubber trees that flourish in the region

  11. Olmec Head at La Venta

  12. Decline of the Olmec • Olmecs systematically destroyed their ceremonial centers at both San Lorenzo and La Venta and then deserted the sites • Statues were broken and buried, monuments defaced, and capitals burned • No one knows why, but some speculate reasons involving civil conflicts or doubts about the effectiveness or legitimacy of the ruling classes • By about 400 B.C., Olmec society had fallen on hard times and other societies soon eclipsed it

  13. Mysterious Decline of Olmecs • Ceremonial centers destroyed • No evidence of warfare • Revolution? • Civil war?

  14. Mayans • Began to develop around 300 A.D. in what is now southern Mexico, Guatemala, Belize, Honduras, and El Salvador • Known as “The People of the Jaguar”

  15. Olmec Influence on the Mayans • Maize • Ceremonial centers with temple pyramids • Calendar based on the Olmec one • Ball games • Rituals involving human sacrifice

  16. Characteristics of a Civilization • Intensive agricultural techniques • Specialization of labor • Cities • A social hierarchy • Organized religion and education • Development of complex forms of economic exchange • Development of new technologies • Advanced development of the arts. (This can include writing.)

  17. Agriculture Cacao Maize

  18. Agriculture • Soil in Mesoamerican lowlands was thin and quickly lost fertility • Mayans built terraces to retain the silt and therefore greatly improved agricultural production • Raised maize, cotton, and cacao • Cacao was a precious commodity consumed mostly by nobles and even used as money

  19. Maya • huge cities discovered in 19th c. • 300 BCE-900 CE • Terrace Farming • Cacao beans • hot chocolate • Currency • Major ceremonial center at Tikal

  20. THE MAYA II. The Maya - between A.D. 300 and 900 A. located in modern-day Guatemala, Belize and Southern Mexico B. cities were religious centers built around enormous stepped temple-pyramids C. they were astronomers and mathematicians 1. this knowledge was used to schedule religious rituals, plant, and harvest D. played a game called pok-a-tok E. their disappearance is a mystery, however evidence found in 2002 suggests that possibly a massive series of civil wars is responsible

  21. Cities

  22. Cities: Tikal • From about 300 to 900, the Maya built more than eight large ceremonial centers • All had pyramids, palaces, and temples • Some of the larger ones attracted dense populations and evolved into genuine cities • The most important was Tikal • Small city-kingdoms served as the means of Mayan political organization

  23. Cities: Tikal • Most important Mayan political center between the 4th and 9th Centuries • Reached its peak between 600 and 800 with a population of nearly 40,000 • The Temple of the Jaguar dominated the skyline and represented Tikal’s control over the surrounding region which had a population of about 500,000

  24. Tikal

  25. Tikal: Temple of the Jaguar • 154 feet high • Served as funerary pyramid for Lord Cacao, Maya ruler of the late 6th and early 7th centuries

  26. El Castillo

  27. Temple at Copan

  28. Palenque

  29. Social Hierarchy A Mayan Warrior A Mayan Priest

  30. Social Hierarchy • King and ruling family • Priests • Hereditary nobility (from which came the merchant class) • Warriors • Professionals and artisans • Peasants • Slaves

  31. Social Hierarchy • King and ruling family • Ruled from the city-kingdoms such as Tikal • Ruled by semi-divine right and believed their connection with the gods was maintained by ritual human sacrifice • Often had names associated with the jaguar • Priests • Maintained an elaborate calendar and transmitted knowledge of writing, astronomy, and mathematics A Mayan King

  32. Social Hierarchy • Hereditary nobility (from which came the merchant class) • Owned most of the land and cooperated with the kings and priests by organizing military forces and participating in religious rituals • Warriors • Mayan kingdoms fought constantly with each other and warriors won tremendous prestige by capturing high-ranking enemies • Captives were usually made slaves, humiliated, tortured, and ritually sacrificed

  33. Social Hierarchy • Professionals and artisans • Architects and sculptors supervised construction of the large monuments and public buildings • Peasants • Fed the entire society • Slaves • Provided physical labor for the construction of cities and monuments • Often had been captured in battle

  34. Specialization

  35. Specialization • Astronomers • Mathematicians • Warriors • Architects and sculptors • Potters • Tool manufacturers • Textile makers

  36. Religion and Education Human Sacrifice and Bloodletting Ritual

  37. Religion: Importance of Agriculture • Mayan religion reflected the fundamental role of agriculture in their society • Popol Vuh, was the Mayan creation myth that taught that the gods had created human beings out of maize and water • Gods kept the world in order and maintained the agricultural cycle in exchange for honors and sacrifices

  38. Religion: Bloodletting Rituals • Mayans believed the shedding of human blood would prompt the gods to send rain to water the maize • Bloodletting involved both war captives and Mayan royals Mayan queen holds a bowl filled with strips of paper used to collect blood.

  39. Religion: Bloodletting • A popular bloodletting ritual was for a Mayan to pierce his own tongue and thread a thin rope through the hole, thus letting the blood run down the rope

  40. Religion: The Ball Game • Mayans inherited a ball game from the Olmecs that was an important part of Mayan political and religious festivals • High-ranking captives were forced to play the game for their very lives • The losers became sacrificial victims and faced torture and execution immediately following the match • Object of the game was to propel an 8 inch ball of solid baked rubber through a ring or onto a marker without using your hands

  41. Mayan Ball Court

  42. Ball Court at Copan

  43. Hoop on a Maya ball court

  44. Economic Exchange Mayan symbol for movement

  45. Economic Exchange • Traveling merchants served not just as traders but also as ambassadors to neighboring lands and allied people • Traded mainly in exotic and luxury goods such as rare animal skins, cacao beans, and finely crafted works of art which rulers coveted as signs of special status • Cacao used as money

  46. New Technologies Mayan Calendar Observatory at El Caracol

  47. New Technologies • Excelled in astronomy and mathematics • Could plot planetary cycles and predict eclipses of the sun and moon • Invented the concept of zero and used a symbol to represent zero mathematically, which facilitated the manipulation of large numbers • By combining astronomy and mathematics, calculated the length of the solar year at 365.242 days– about 17 seconds shorter than the figure reached by modern astronomers Mayan numerical system

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