AIS 101: Dec. 2, 2013 Today, Begin Lecture on Human Sacrifice in Mesoamerica. Return Midterm Exam...
-
Upload
cyrus-raine -
Category
Documents
-
view
215 -
download
2
Transcript of AIS 101: Dec. 2, 2013 Today, Begin Lecture on Human Sacrifice in Mesoamerica. Return Midterm Exam...
AIS 101: Dec. 2, 2013
• Today, Begin Lecture on Human Sacrifice in Mesoamerica. Return Midterm Exam #2.
• Tomorrow, Continue Lecture on Human Sacrifice.
• Wed., Guest Lecture by Crit Callebs• Thur., Topic to be Determined• Fri., discuss questions for final exam; review
some of the most important things we have learned this quarter; give you a summary of your scores and overall percentage
Our Last Day of Class is Friday, Dec. 6 Attendance is Required of All Students
The Day of Ultimate Epistemological Enlightenment!
What are the four sources of Information on Mayan Human Sacrifice? What are the strengths and weaknesses of each one? Describe the osteological taphonomic evidence for Maya human sacrifice presented in class, did you find it convincing? Why or why not?
This Question Will Be On The Final Exam
What Are The Sources of Information on Mayan Human Sacrifice?
•Spanish Accounts•Maya Writing, Inscriptions, and Art
• Contextual Evidence•Osteological Evidence
Human Sacrifice was Practiced by Many Cultures
• Canaanites 3500 – 1100 B.C. • Carthaginians 300 – 140 B.C.• Chimu and Inca – A.D. 1000 – 1535 • Gauls 500 B.C. – A.D. 300• Scythians 700 B.C. – A.D. 600 • Polynesians A.D. 1700 and earlier• And others…..
Important Points to Ponder as We Study Anthropology and History:
• Cultural Relativism—an individual’s actions and beliefs must be evaluated in terms of their cultural context, not your own.
• And we should keep in mind that the ethics and morals of today can not be superimposed on the past…..right?
• But can these ideas be taken too far…can they imply that there are no universally immoral acts?
Archaeological Evidence for Human Sacrifice at Tenochtitlan and Surrounding Regions
Bound and Decapitated Individuals at Teotihucan (100 – 600 C.E.)(Sugiyama 2004)
At Templo Mayor in Tenochtitlan, skulls with perforations for display on “skull racks” (Smith 2011 and References Therein) and associated ritual items
Archaeological Samples from Electra, Tlatelocoma and Tlateloco (Pijoan and Lory 2007)
And other sources:
Evidence of Cannibalism and/or Human Sacrifice at Electra and Tlatelocoma
• Intentional bone breakage• Evidence of exposure to heat• Anvil or hammerstone abrasions• Cutmarks• Extensive absence of certain bones
such as vertebrae and coxae• Bone polishing
• The Aztec world existed in a delicate harmony maintained by placating the deities
• To them, sacrifices not murder, religious obligations
• Human Sacrifice also had political significance• In many ways the Aztecs were a very moral
and sophisticated society
Aztec Human Sacrifice
Aztec Poets elaborated on the nobility of a death upon the sacrificial alter:
“Perhaps thou wilt merit death by the obsidian knife.” (de Sahagun 1577)
“May his heart not falter. May he long for the flowery death by the obsidian blade. May he savor the scent, savor the freshness,and savor the sweetness of the darkness.” (de Sahagun 1577)
Skullrack at Chichen Itza
Photo from http://www.imagesofanthropology.com/MesoAmerica_Ancient_Sites_page_2.html on 30 Nov 2006
What was the role of human sacrifice in Maya religion?
• An invisible sacred quality (k’uh) inhabited all things in the universe• The world was an ordered place,
controlled by an array of deities, humans must behave property and observe certain rituals or the deities would be unhappy
• The aim of bloodletting and human sacrifice was to offer (k’uh) to the dieties
• These rituals were not common but occurred for major events the dedication of a new temple or inauguration of a new ruler
• Captured rulers were decapitated• Removal of the heart • Offerings of incense flowers and food are
made today by the Maya
What Are The Sources of Information on Mayan Human Sacrifice?
•Spanish Accounts•Maya Writing, Inscriptions, and Art
• Contextual Evidence•Osteological Evidence
Spanish Accounts
• Numerous accounts but the authenticity can be questioned, at least the scale they describe.
Maya Written Sources
• Pre-Conquest Maya Written Sources Madrid, Dresden, Paris, and Grolier Codices. • Axe Event Glyphs on Stelae.
What are the Sources of Information on Mayan Human Sacrifice?
•Spanish Accounts•Maya Writing, Inscriptions, and Art
• Contextual Evidence•Osteological and Evidence
“into this well they had the custom of throwing men alive, as a sacrifice to the gods in time of drought.”
“They also threw into it many other things, like precious stones and things that they prized.”
-de Landa
Contextual Archaeological Evidence
The Sacred Cenote at Chichen Itza
Numerous Human Bones Recovered, mostly male subadults (Tiesler 2005
and Alanis 2004)
Why are they interpreted as sacrificial victims?
• Ritual preparation of bodies but lack of grave goods or prepared graves.
• All that could be identified were adult males• Body positions—face down hands and feet in
positions suggest they were bound• Three burials were “trophy heads”, one was
decapitated, one with severed limbs, two cut in half at the waist, one with a severed foot and one with a mutilated foot
Tiesler, Vera and Cucina Andrea 2006 Procedures in Human Heart Extraction and Ritual Meaning: Taphonomic Assessment of Anthropogenic Marks in Classic Maya Skeletons. Latin American Antiquity 17:493-510.
What is Taphonomy?
The study of the processes that affect animals and plants from the time they die until they either disintegrate or become fossilized. Greek for the laws of burial.
Taphonomic Inferences
• Patterns of anthropogenic lesions may permit us to distinguish the probable cause of death
• Perimortem violence is prone to leave unhealed lesions in the form of fractures, stab marks and sharp force trauma in fresh bone, sometimes these marks can be difficult to distinguish from postmortem damage.
A Procedural Reconstruction-Common pattern of spine affected ventrally and ventrolaterally (left) at level of 10th to 12th vert.
-All cutmarks are regular and straight, penetrated 1-4 mm and compress the impacted bone without displacing the bone to either side
-All lesions have same morphology, likely made by similar procedures and tools
-Absence of cuts on sternum or anterior ribs
Experimental Replication
• Three approaches to heart replicated on cadavers with obsidian knives: horizontal and parasternal transthoracic access and subthoracic transdiaphragmatic access.
• Tests also preformed on effects of removing other organs
• Most efficient means of heart removal by horizontal access beneath lower ribs, leaves traces on lower thoracic verts.