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Ancient
Mayan Astronomy
Among the Planets, Venus
Held Particular Importance
By Christopher Minster
The ancient Maya were avid astronomers, recording and interpreting every
aspect of the sky.
They believed that the will and actions of the gods could be
read in the stars, moon, and planets, so they dedicated time to doing so, and
many of their most important buildings were built with astronomy in mind.
The sun, moon, and planets — Venus, in particular —ere studied
by the Maya.
The heyday of Maya astronomy was in the 8th century CE, and Maya
daykeepers published astronomical tables tracking the movements of celestial
bodies on the walls of a special structure at Xultun, Guatemala in the early
9th century.
The tables are also found in the Dresden Codex, a bark-paper book written about
the 15th century CE.
Although the Maya calendar was largely based on the ancient
Mesoamerican calendar created at least as early as 1500 BCE, Maya calendars
were corrected and maintained by specialist astronomical observers.
Archaeologist Prudence Rice has argued that the Maya even
structured their governments based in part on the requirements of tracking
astronomy.
The Maya and the Sky
The Maya believed that the Earth was the center of all things, fixed
and immovable.
The stars, moons, sun, and planets were gods; their movements
were interpreted as gods traveling between the Earth, the underworld, and other
celestial destinations.
These gods were greatly involved in human affairs, and so their
movements were watched closely. Many events in Maya life were planned to
coincide with certain celestial moments.
For example, a war might be delayed until the gods were in
place, or a ruler might ascend to the throne of a Mayan city-state only when a
certain planet was visible in the night sky.
Sun God Kinich Ahau
The sun was of utmost importance to the ancient Maya.
The Mayan sun god was Kinich Ahau. He was one of the more powerful
gods of the Mayan pantheon, considered an aspect of Itzamna, one of the Mayan creator gods.
Kinich Ahau would shine in the sky all day before transforming
himself into a jaguar at night to pass through Xibalba, the Mayan underworld.
In a story in the Quiche Maya council book called the Popol Vuh, the hero twins Hunaphu and Xbalanque
transform themselves into the sun and the moon.
Some Mayan dynasties claimed to be descended from the sun.
The Maya were expert at predicting solar phenomena such as
eclipses, solstices, and equinoxes, as well as determining when the sun reached
its apex.
The Moon in Maya Mythology
The moon was nearly as important as the sun to the ancient Maya.
Mayan astronomers analyzed and predicted the moon’s movements
with great accuracy.
As with the sun and planets, Mayan dynasties often claimed to be
descended from the moon.
Mayan mythology generally associated the moon with a maiden, an
old woman, and/or a rabbit.
The primary Maya moon goddess was Ix Chel, a powerful goddess
who battled with the sun and made him descend into the underworld every night.
Although she was a fearsome goddess, she was also the patroness
of childbirth and fertility.
Ix Ch’up was another moon goddess described in some of the
codices; she was young and beautiful and may have been Ix Chel in her youth or in another form.
A lunar observatory on the island of Cozumel appears to mark the
occurrence of the lunar standstill, the varying movement of the moon through
the skies.
Venus and the Planets
The Maya were aware of the planets in the solar system — Venus,
Mars, Saturn, and Jupiter — and tracked their movements.
The most important planet by far to the Maya was Venus, which they associated with war.
Battles and wars would be arranged to coincide with the
movements of Venus, and captured warriors and leaders would likewise be
sacrificed according to the position of Venus in the night sky.
The Maya painstakingly recorded the movements of Venus and
determined that its year, relative to Earth, not the sun, was 584 days long,
closely approximating the 583.92 days that modern science has determined.
The Maya and the Stars
Like the planets, the stars move across the heavens, but unlike
the planets, they stay in position relative to one another.
To the Maya, the stars were less important to their mythos than
the sun, moon, Venus and other planets.
However, the stars shift seasonally and were used by Mayan
astronomers to predict when the seasons would come and go, which was critical
for agricultural planning.
For example, the rise of the Pleiades in the night sky occurs at
about the same time that the rains come to the Mayan regions of Central America
and southern Mexico.
The stars, therefore, were of more practical use than many other
aspects of Mayan astronomy.
Architecture and Astronomy
Many important Mayan buildings, such as temples,
pyramids, palaces, observatories, and ball courts, were laid out in accordance
with astronomy.
Temples and pyramids, in particular, were designed in such a way
that the sun, moon, stars, and planets would be visible from the top or through
certain windows at important times of the year.
One example is the observatory at Xochicalco, which, although not
considered an exclusively Mayan city, certainly had Mayan influence.
The observatory is an underground chamber with a hole in the
ceiling. The sun shines through this hole for most of the summer but is
directly overhead on May 15 and July 29.
On these days the sun would directly illuminate an illustration
of the sun on the floor, and these days were held importance for Mayan priests.
Other possible observatories have been identified at the
archaeological sites of Edzna and Chichen Itza.
Mayan Astronomy and the
Calendar
The Mayan calendar was linked to astronomy.
The Maya basically used two calendars: the Calendar Round and the Long
Count.
The Mayan Long Count calendar was divided into different units
of time that used the Haab, or solar year (365 days), as a base.
The Calendar Round consisted of two separate
calendars; the first was the 365-day solar year, the second was the 260-day
Tzolkin cycle.
These cycles align every 52 years.
Christopher
Minster
Professor
of History and Literature
Education
Ph.D.,
Spanish, Ohio State University
M.A.,
Spanish, University of Montana
B.A.,
Spanish, Penn State University
Introduction
Professor
at the Universidad San Francisco de Quito in Equador
Specialist
in Latin American literature and history with a Ph.D. in Spanish from Ohio
State University
Former
head writer at VIVA Travel Guides, who co-authored and edited numerous travel
guidebooks
Experience
Christopher
W. Minster, Ph.D., is a former ThoughtCo writer who contributed articles about
Latin American history and culture for eight years. He is a professor at the
Universidad San Francisco de Quito in Equador.
Christopher
was the head writer at VIVA Travel Guides, where he co-authored and edited
numerous travel books, including "VIVA Travel Guides Ecuador and Galapagos
Islands Guidebook," 7th Edition (2014), and "VIVA Travel Guides Lima, Peru,"
3rd Edition (2010), as well as a collection of travel stories from different
writers around the world, called "The Viva List Latin America: 333 Places and
Experiences People Love" (2007).
A
specialist in Latin American literature and history, Christopher wrote his
Ph.D. dissertation about the colonial era in the Americas. He also worked as a
teaching assistant for six years at Ohio State University, where he earned his
Ph.D. in Spanish in 2005. Christopher served two years in the U.S. Peace Corps
in Guatemala, working in rural youth development in Huehuetenango.
Education
Christopher
earned his Bachelor's (B.A.) in Spanish from Penn State University and Master's
(M.A.) in Spanish from the University of Montana. He received his Ph.D. in
Spanish from Ohio State University.
Awards
and Publications
"VIVA Travel Guides
Ecuador and Galapagos Islands Guidebook," 7th Edition (2014)
"VIVA Travel Guides
Lima, Peru," 3rd Edition (2010)
"The Viva List Latin
America: 333 Places and Experiences People Love" (2007)
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Ancient maya architecture is characterized by pyramidal temples and ornate palaces that were built in all the Mayan centers of Mesoamerica, from Tajin in the north to Copan in the south.
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