Quirigua was one of the smallest Mayan cities, but one of the most notable due to its splendid series of monuments.
Located in Izabal, Guatemala, 2 miles from the main
highway to Puerto Barrios, lies Quiriguá a late Classic Maya city, best
known for its stelas. Quiriguá was a great Maya city during the Classic
period. The site's founder of the ruling dynasty was Tutum Yol K'inichm and it lasted from 550 to 850 A.D.
During that time period Quiriguá controlled the
Jade and
Obsidian trade to the Caribbean
coast and the region's highlands and lowlands. It was also during
these years that Quiriguá had a fierce rivalry with its neighbor,
Copán, which it conquered in 738 A.D. During this conquest the ruler
of Quiriguá, Butz' Tiliw or Cauac Sky,
captured and
sacrifice in the Grand Plaza Copán's Waxaklahun Ubah K'awil or 18
Rabbit.
In AD 775, the Maya lord
K’ak’ Tiliw Chan Yoat (Fire Burning Sky
Lightning God) set up an immense stone monument in the center of his
city. The
unimaginative archaeologists who discovered the stone called it
Stela C. This monument bears the longest single hieroglyphic
description of the Maya Creation Myth, noting that it took place on
the Maya calendar's
day 13.0.0.0.0, 4 Ahaw, 8 Kumk’u, a
date corresponding to August 13, 3114 BC on our calendar. This date
appears over and over in other inscriptions throughout the
Maya world.
The
monuments at
Quiriguá are unique in several other respects. Few other sites
display full frontal views of the human figure, a later departure
from the traditional profile depictions. Quiriguá also has numerous
excellent examples of a fairly rare form of 'longhand'
Mayan glyphs
which use full animal and human figures, instead of smaller symbols
or variations on abbreviated 'head-type' glyphs to represent the
same meanings. There are only three other known examples of the
full-figured glyphs in the entire Mayan world. The most striking of
the sculptures at Quiriguá, however, are the zoomorphs, great
unquarried sandstone boulders carved to represent animals. The
boulders are covered with figures and glyphs in the characteristic
Quiriguá mixture of low and high relief, and represent some of the
most intricately carved designs in the Maya world. Nothing like them
is found at any other site. Acoording to Maudsley, the
most beautiful Mesoamerican sculpture, is Zoomorph P and its altar,
Altar O, dedicated in 795 AD, sit before the stairway of a ruined
palace facing the main plaza at Quiriguá. It stands seven feet high
and over eleven feet wide, covered with figures, masks, and small
glyphs, the altar depicts a god emerging from
Xibalbá.
The altar or
Zoomorph O, which flanks Zoomorph P in front of
the ruined palace, is exceptional for its flamboyantly executed
dancing figure and a series of large full-figure glyphs, bearing
enormous numbers
in the dates (Up to 400 million Years).
It was an autonomic capital and inhabited since the 2nd century AD, and
flourished until the 10th century, when it was abandoned for unknown
reasons.
The stelae are arranged around the central plaza,
accompanied by altars carved into zoomorphic shapes. The largest of
these Stela is eight meters tall.
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