Mesoamerican Archaeology. Группа авторов

Mesoamerican Archaeology - Группа авторов


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themes in later Mesoamerican belief, including that of a multilayered cosmos consisting of a watery underworld, a quadripartite terrestrial realm often represented as the back of a crocodile, and a celestial realm inhabited by birds, butterflies, celestial bodies, and the deities and forces associated with them (Miller and Taube 1993: 28–29; Tate 1999). Connecting these realms at the center was the axis mundi represented by a world tree or mountain of creation and sometimes personified as a shaman or ruler – humans thought to be able to move between the realms (Reilly 1995). Places that provided access between the cosmic layers, such as caves, springs, or mountaintops where clouds accumulated, were especially powerful places in the sacred landscapes of Mesoamerica and themselves were seen as living entities (see, e.g., Schele 1995; Townsend 1992). Similarly, animals – both real and imagined composites – who moved between air, earth, and water were venerated and held a prominent place in Olmec iconography (Taube 1995). Finally, water in both its surface and atmospheric manifestations, was associated with agricultural fertility and natural abundance as well as with risk from storm and flood (Cyphers et al. 2013: 90–94).

      Figure 2.7 Macayal phase offering at El Manatí.

      Photo courtesy of Ponciano Ortiz Ceballos and Carmen Rodríguez.

      Figure 2.8 Some examples of Olmec monumental sculpture. (a) Colossal head (Tres Zapotes Monument A). (b) Tabletop altar–throne (La Venta Monument 4). (c) Full-round sculpture (El Azuzul) “twins.” (d) Stela (La Venta Stela 2).

      All photos by author.

      Massive tabletop altar–thrones, weighing up to 40 tons in the case of La Venta Monument 4 (Figure 2.2b), depicted a human figure – presumably the ruler or one of his ancestors – emerging from a cave-like niche with humans or dwarf-like supernaturals on the sides. The details of each differ, but the overall theme seems to be one of rulership sanctioned by human lineage and mythical origins. The two more complete of these known from San Lorenzo have been mutilated as part of decommissioning or recycling efforts (Cyphers 2008, 2012; Grove 1981). Tellingly, two of the colossal heads from San Lorenzo bear vestiges of the niche indicating that they were recarved from thrones (Porter 1990), which Cyphers (2012) argues were likely those used by the rulers depicted. Smaller thrones treat other themes, depicting dwarves, supernatural beings, and so-called Atlantean figures supporting the sky. Thrones were carved in a combination of low and high relief, but the Olmecs also exceled from an early time in carving sculptures fully in the round that depicted humans, animals, and human–animal composites as their most common subjects. Though full-round sculpture continued to be produced in the Middle Formative, by the second half of the period stelae came to replace colossal heads as the preferred means of representing rulers, often in scenes with human or supernatural attendants or with human peers or emissaries.

      The image of the water hill (altepetl in the Nahuatl language) rising from a primordial sea was a powerful one that would come to symbolize the city to later Mesoamerican societies, including the Aztecs. In Olman the urban characteristics of such a place were first manifested at San Lorenzo, which sprawled down the slopes of the San Lorenzo plateau toward the seasonally inundated floodplain (Arieta Baizabal and Cyphers 2017; Cyphers 2012; Cyphers et al. 2013). At the summit of the plateau, Olmec rulers emphasized their control over water with long drain lines that carried water to flow over the edge of the plateau and associated sculptures of felines and composite supernatural were-jaguars (Cyphers 1999). Rulers further emphasized their own power at the center of their polity with colossal head portraits and massive tabletop thrones, while political leaders in lesser settlements such as Loma del Zapote and Estero Rabón exhibited smaller thrones and sculptures in the round (Cyphers 1999, 2012).


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