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Mayan Writing

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The Maya Scribe Mayan Writing Surfaces Limestone Volcanic Tuff Plaster and Paper Other Surfaces Mayan Writing Tools The Maya Codices The Paris Codex The Madrid ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Mayan Writing


1
Mayan Writing
Mayan Writing Andrea M. Ranada
  • Andrea Ranada

2
The Maya Scribe
  • Typical appearance
  • Hair wrapped with a head cloth
  • A stick bundle attached to the head cloth
  • The occasional stick-like tool included in the
    headdress
  • A sarong tied at the waist (its length may vary).
  • Scribes had a special status in society
  • Some kings and queens were also scribes
  • The Maya worshipped the gods of writing, one of
    them being Rabbit God.

3
Mayan Writing Surfaces
4
Limestone
  • Limestone is abundant in the Yucatán peninsula
  • Freshly excavated limestone is fairly soft and
    easily manipulated, but eventually hardens upon
    exposure to air
  • The picture on the left is from the Tablet of the
    96 Hieroglyphs at Palenque on limestone.

5
Volcanic Tuff
  • Found at Copán (limestone was rare in this
    region)
  • Extremely durable under the humid conditions of
    the area
  • Produced remarkable three-dimensional sculptures
  • The picture above depicts the Moon Goddess with
    the Rabbit God. It is from a bench in the
    scribal compound of Copán.

6
Plaster and Paper
  • Plaster (calcium carbonate) is commonly used on
    the walls of ancient Mayan architecture
  • Plaster can be found on the surface of all four
    Maya codices, suggesting that the scribes did not
    directly write on the paper, but more on
    plaster-like surfaces
  • Amate is the paper used by the Maya it is made
    from the inner bark of wild fig trees
  • Papermaking process
  • Boil inner bark fibers
  • Soak it in lime
  • Layer fibers in grid formation
  • Compress to combine the layers into a sheet

7
Other Surfaces
  • Jade
  • Pottery
  • Wood
  • Bone
  • Shell

8
Mayan Writing Tools
  • Carving and Incising Tools
  • No evidence that it was made of metal
  • Most likely stone chisels were used on monumental
    stone
  • On bone, wood, and shell, hafted obsidian blades
    were probably used
  • Brush and Quill Pens
  • Brush pens supposedly similar to traditional
    Chinese brush pens
  • Quill pens were used for more thinner lines and
    more precise designs
  • Inkpots and Inks
  • The Maya used conch shells cut in half lengthwise
    as inkpots
  • Black and red pigments were typically used on the
    codices

9
The Maya Codices
  • The inner bark of wild fig trees were used to
    form the sheets of paper.
  • Horizontal sheets were made and folded
    accordion-style to form the Maya books
  • These folded sheets had script and illustrations
    on both sides and possibly wood or leather served
    as covers.
  • The Maya books served a general purpose of
    presenting calendrical and celestial systems,
    including but not limited to
  • Venus cycle tables
  • Eclipse tables
  • Pictures of ceremonies deities
  • Multiplication tables
  • A 260-day sacred almanac

10
The 260-day count
11
The Paris Codex
  • Katuns (20 years)
  • Tuns (360 days)
  • The grand cycle is 13 katuns, and after 13
    katuns, history is supposed to repeat itself.
  • The codex only documents 11 katuns (at least 2
    pages are missing).
  • The center of each codex page has an image of the
    deity that rules that katun (one katun is
    documented per page).
  • Hieroglyphic text about prophecies and rituals
    frames these images.

12
The Madrid Codex
  • Also known as the Tro-Cortes, because at some
    point the codex split into two parts (1st part
    Tro, 2nd part Cortes) and was found at separate
    occasions in Spain
  • This codex seems to be purely about divination
  • It does not contain astronomy, prophecies, or
    multiplication tables, but it does contain a
    260-day almanac.

13
The Grolier Codex
  • A recent discovery
  • Only half (10 pages) of it has been found
  • It primarily deals with the 582-day Venus cycle
  • Each page deals with one part of the cycle
  • Each part has a sinister deity dominating that
    part of the cycle
  • The deities are sinister because the Mesoamerican
    mentality considers all aspects of the planet as
    ill-omened.

14
The Dresden Codex
  • Consists of several 260-day almanacs as well as
    Venus, eclipse, and multiplication tables.
  • The almanacs were divided vertically into tols
  • Each division corresponds to a sacred Maya year
    (tzolkin)
  • Each year is a period of 260 days, or a
    tonalpohualli
  • Each tol has a calendrical glyph with
    hieroglyphic text within four glyph blocks above
    it
  • Each calendrical glyph indicates a day in the
    sacred calendar, and right below it is an image
    of a god or some sort of protagonist, such as the
    Moon Goddess.

15
Conclusion
  • The purpose of Mayan writing, specifically in
    codices, is to document celestial events and
    calendrical systems.
  • The Grolier and Dresden codices deal with more
    astronomical instances.
  • The Paris Codex concerns katuns and tuns.
  • The Madrid Codex remains purely divinatory.
  • The content of the four codices all truly
    represent the remarkable achievements of the
    ancient Maya.

16
The End
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