Author:
Harrison-Buck Eleanor,McAnany Patricia A.
Abstract
AbstractTerminal Classic circular architecture has been characterized as a “non-Classic” trait stemming from Chontal-Itza groups from the Gulf lowlands who developed a long-distance, circum-peninsular trade route and established their capital city at Chichen Itza in northern Yucatan. Recent investigations of a series of circular shrines proximate to the Caribbean coast in Belize have yielded ceramics and radiocarbon dates that link these buildings to the ninth century, coeval with the early Sotuta phase at Chichen Itza (a.d.830–900). We present an architectural comparison of circular shrines and map out a network of sites that cluster along the rivers and coast of Belize. We consider two possibilities that may not be mutually exclusive: (1) local elite emulation of northern styles following pilgrimage to Chichen Itza for political accession ceremonies, and, (2) trading diasporas involving small-scale migration of Chontal-Itza merchants along the eastern Caribbean coast.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous),Geography, Planning and Development
Reference89 articles.
1. Yucatec Influence in Terminal Classic Northern Belize
2. Survival and Revival of Terminal Classic Traditions at Postclassic Mayapán
3. Harrison-Buck Eleanor 2002 The Feathered Serpent and Mesoamerican Transformations during the Epiclassic: A View from the Sibun River Valley in Belize. Paper presented at the Fourth International Belize Conference and the Fourth British Caribbean Geography Seminar. San Ignacio, Belize.
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