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User:Rbhusari/Maya cave sites

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Maya caves are associated with the Maya civilization of pre-Columbian Mesoamerica. Certain beliefs and observances connected with these caves are also maintained among some contemporary Maya peoples. These caves served religious rather than utilitarian purposes; thus, cave studies of archaeological artifacts, combined with epigraphic, iconographic, and ethnographic studies, can inform understanding of Maya religion and society.[1]

Maya caves attracted robbers and invaders during the war, so the entrances to some of them were walled up. James Brady, widely considered to have founded the discipline of Mesoamerican cave archaeology, has lead topographic surveys of immured caves of Dos Pilas and Naj Tunich).[2][3]

Study

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The total number of Maya caves located in the Puuc region of Yucatan is more than 2000, most of which are not open.[citation needed] Of the 2000 caves in this region, more than 300 are registered by the National Institute of Anthropology and History (INAH).[4] The INAH leads two projects to study Maya caves: Caves: Register of Prehispanic Cultures Evidence in Puuc Region established in 1997[4], and El Culto al Cenote en el Centro de Yucatan[5].

In works compiled for the fight against idolatry, 16th-century Spanish sources mentioned 17 Maya caves and cenotes, of which nine have been found.[6] In Relación de las cosas de Yucatán, friar Diego de Landa described the Sacred Cenote.[7]

Underground Maya archaeology began in the 1980s and 1990s.[8] In 2008, a Mayan underground complex of eleven temples, 100-meter stone roads, and a flooded labyrinth of caves was found on the Yucatan Peninsula.[9]

The most famous caves are Balankanche, Loltun Cave, Actun Tunichil Muknal, and Jolja'.

Associations with writing

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"sign entry" or "impinged bone element" (versions early and late of the classical period Maya)

The symbol representing a cave in Maya writing is unknown. According to James Brady, a cave is represented in the Mayan texts as "sign entry" or "impinged bone element" (see figure), and is read as CH'EN or CH'EEN. As proof of his hypothesis, James Brady cites three arguments:

1) Semantically, the sign denotes a certain place in which one can enter, sit down, or do a burial.

2) Visually, the sign shares features with symbols of death, the underworld, and bats.

3) Phonetically, the sign ends in a consonant "N". In Mayan written language, this sign is part of the verb "OCH-WITZ" ("Go inside the Mountain").[8]

Association with settlement

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A desire to be near the sacred influenced Mesoamerican settlement.[10] In Mesoamerican creation myths, water was associated with fertility. Caves had flowing water from mountains, making these natural features sacred and were sought out by Mesoamerican migrants looking for new homes.[11][12] A cave was considered an axis mundi if it was located in the centre of a village.[13] The Late Postclassic site of Mayapan incorporated several cenotes into ceremonial groups, and the Cenote Ch’en Mul is at the heart of the site.[14] At Dos Pilas, house platforms were often in front of cave entries and cave tunnels stretched beneath the platform.[15]

Architectural landscapes and themes

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Artificial landscapes often mimicked sacred landscapes. Doorways of temples resembled cave entrances to mountains; sometimes, they were carved to resemble monster mouths.[16] The same was true for the Aztecs, who designed an artificial cave according to the mythical seven-chamber cave of emergence, Chicomoztoc, at Utatlán and Teotihuacan.[17] At Muklebal Tzul, an artificial well was made to appear like a water-bearing cave.[18]

Entrances to the Underworld

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In Maya mythology, caves are gateways to the watery Maya underworld, Xibalba. For Mesoamerican groups, including the Maya, life and death occur at liminal zones between the world and the underworld. Caves are associated with life and death; emerging from the underworld is life, and descending into the underworld is death. The Maya believed that humans, the sun, and the moon were born from the underworld.[19]

References

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  1. ^ Prufer and Brady 2005: 11
  2. ^ James E. Brady and Keith M. Prufer (2005). In the Maw of the Earth Monster: Studies of Mesoamerican Ritual Cave Use. Part 3: The Maya Region. CHAPTER 12: Ethnographic Notes on Maya Q’eqchi’ Cave Rites: Implications for Archaeological Interpretation. Organization of Q’eqchi’ Maya Sacred Geography. Page № 313
  3. ^ Cal State. "James Brady". Department of Anthropology - Cal State. Retrieved October 2, 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  4. ^ a b "Maya Caves and Caverns Registration Continues". www.inah.gob.mx. Retrieved 2021-10-02.
  5. ^ "Underworld Maya Temples Discovered". www.inah.gob.mx. Retrieved 2021-10-02.
  6. ^ INAH. Templos subterráneos
  7. ^ Гуляев. Древние Майя. Загадки погибшей цивилизации
  8. ^ a b James E. Brady and Keith M. Prufer (2005). In the Maw of the Earth Monster: Studies of Mesoamerican Ritual Cave Use. Part 3: The Maya Region.
  9. ^ Miguel Angel Gutierrez (15 August 2008). "Portal to mythical Mayan underworld found in Mexico". Reuters. Archived from the original on 27 August 2012. Retrieved 2011-09-05.
  10. ^ Dunning et al. 1999: 652
  11. ^ Prufer and Kindon 2005: 28
  12. ^ Brady and Prufer 2005: 368
  13. ^ Brady and Ashmore 1999: 127
  14. ^ Pugh 2005: 54
  15. ^ Brady and Ashmore 2005: 131
  16. ^ Miller 1999: 51, 55
  17. ^ Brady and Prufer 2005: 373
  18. ^ Prufer and Kindon 2005: 40
  19. ^ Pugh 2005: 50; Moyes 2005: 189; Brady and Colas 2005: 151