Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Landscapes of the Itza
View through CrossRef
Designated a World Heritage site in 1998 by UNESCO, Chichen Itza in Yucatan, Mexico, has fascinated explorers, scholars, and visitors for nearly 500 years. Yet, despite Chichen Itza’s extensive written corpus, fundamental questions remain regarding the occupants, rulers, ritual and religious nature, political economy, and even chronology of this late Maya capital. This volume presents new archaeological, epigraphic, ceramic, and art historical data and contemporary interpretations regarding Chichen Itza both in terms of its internal dynamics and in terms of its relationships with smaller sites in the surrounding area. Utilizing concepts of landscape as both geographic and ideological milieus, some chapters explore the ways that the presence of Chichen Itza was felt in regional sites, including Popola, Ichmul de Morley, and Ek Balam, and how boundaries operated between such sites. Other chapters analyze visual culture through the lenses of iconography, political geography, ritual, and gender to examine the hieroglyphic texts, sculpture, painting and buildings at Chichen Itza, including the Castillo, the Osario, and the Mercado. The volume presents new avenues to understand Chichen Itza and its environs.
University Press of Florida
Title: Landscapes of the Itza
Description:
Designated a World Heritage site in 1998 by UNESCO, Chichen Itza in Yucatan, Mexico, has fascinated explorers, scholars, and visitors for nearly 500 years.
Yet, despite Chichen Itza’s extensive written corpus, fundamental questions remain regarding the occupants, rulers, ritual and religious nature, political economy, and even chronology of this late Maya capital.
This volume presents new archaeological, epigraphic, ceramic, and art historical data and contemporary interpretations regarding Chichen Itza both in terms of its internal dynamics and in terms of its relationships with smaller sites in the surrounding area.
Utilizing concepts of landscape as both geographic and ideological milieus, some chapters explore the ways that the presence of Chichen Itza was felt in regional sites, including Popola, Ichmul de Morley, and Ek Balam, and how boundaries operated between such sites.
Other chapters analyze visual culture through the lenses of iconography, political geography, ritual, and gender to examine the hieroglyphic texts, sculpture, painting and buildings at Chichen Itza, including the Castillo, the Osario, and the Mercado.
The volume presents new avenues to understand Chichen Itza and its environs.
Related Results
The Archaeology of Chichen Itza
The Archaeology of Chichen Itza
This chapter is a comprehensive overview of research at Chichen Itza written from an archaeological perspective. The authors present a historical review of excavations, settlement ...
Rulers without Borders
Rulers without Borders
This chapter explores the nature of polity borders in Early Postclassic Yucatan. It outlines definitions for borders and related terms and argues that the Itza maintained hegemonic...
Capitanes del Itzá: evidencia mural inédita de Chichén Itzá
Capitanes del Itzá: evidencia mural inédita de Chichén Itzá
Poco antes de morir, Eric Thompson dirigió mi atención a una fascinante colección de copias a todo color, de pinturas murales de Chichén Itzá, Yucatán. Estos dibujos formaron parte...
The Least Earth
The Least Earth
This chapter concerns landscapes at Chichen Itza, including actual terrain and two- and three-dimensional representations of landscape. The focus is the Mercado, a gallery-patio bu...
The Castillo-sub at Chichen Itza
The Castillo-sub at Chichen Itza
Despite its prominent position at the center of Chichen Itza’s Great Terrace, the Castillo remains poorly documented and poorly understood. Reviewing the earliest descriptions and ...
Introduction
Introduction
The introduction discusses the importance of Chichen Itza as a Maya capital, hub of a trading network, and home to a unique art tradition. Landscape is a unifying theme, and its ge...
K’ak’ Upakal K’inich K’awil and the Lords of the Fire
K’ak’ Upakal K’inich K’awil and the Lords of the Fire
This chapter integrates ceramics, stratigraphy, epigraphy, and careful readings of ethnohistoric sources to propose a historical reconstruction of Chichen Itza, focused particularl...
In the Shadow of Quetzalcoatl
In the Shadow of Quetzalcoatl
This chapter investigates how the rise of Chichen Itza impacted small towns and villages in the vicinity. An analysis of ceramics, architecture, obsidian, and other classes of data...

