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Archaeologists Launch Excavations On Yucatan Peninsula

Archaeologists of the University of Bonn have just begun the first of three series of excavation programs in Xkipché on the Mexican peninsula of Yucatán.

They are investigating the living conditions of the population shortly before the city was finally abandoned towards the end of the 10th century, as well as the city's role as the residence of local princes during the turbulent period of its decline.

The location of the find is in the vicinity of the world-famous ruined city of Uxmal (recently accorded the status of world cultural heritage site), and, like Uxmal, goes back to the classical and late classical culture of the Mayas, being inhabited from ca. 500 to 1000 A.D.

The focus of the current excavations is smaller buildings with a C-shaped ground plan, which are regarded as a reliable indicator of the last large-scale settlement of the Puuc region of Yucatán.

A second focus of this research project, which is mainly funded by the German Research Association, is to investigate the living conditions of the less prosperous sections of the population.

The Xkipché Archaeological Project is the first research project in the north of the Yucatán peninsula to specifically focus on the peasant class in the late classical period of the Maya culture; almost all of the other archaeological excavations in this region have been predominantly concerned with the role of the local and supra-regional élites.

German exploration of the ruined city of Xkipché is about a century old: between 1886 and 1893 the explorer Teobert Maler visited approximately a hundred large and small ruined sites in the Puuc zone of the Yucatán peninsula, which he recorded in descriptions, drawings and photographs. A large number of these ruins were subsequently lost in the dense scrub of this impassable hilly terrain and were only rediscovered in the last few decades.

Xkipché was one of these, which Professor Hanns J. Priem of the Institute of Ancient American Culture and Ethnology (IAE) was able to reach in 1989 after a great deal of effort. From 1991 to 1997, archaeologists of the University of Bonn excavated a palace complex there, which, with its two stories and over 40 rooms, some of which were still well preserved, was one of the biggest in the entire region.

At around 1000 A.D., leadership was taken over by a different sector of the population, whose buildings can be distinguished, among other things, by their poor workmanship.

Finally, the region was abandoned for almost a millennium. As yet it is only possible to speculate as to the reasons for this.

Excessive strain on the natural resources by the traditional method of slash-and-burn cultivation may have been a factor, which presumably coincided with an extensive period of successive years of low rainfall.

This had catastrophic effects on an area without expanses of surface water, where the population was dependent on storing water from the rainy season for their water supply in the dry season. However, research findings show that social upheavals as a consequence of local wars and social unrest also seem to be increasingly probable factors.

The Xkipché project is being carried out at the invitation of the Mexican government by the IAE, a university institute which specializes in research into the ancient cultures of America. The excavation is envisaged as being purely for research purposes, with subsequent access to the site for visitors not intended.

(Editor's Note: Related images are available at this URL.)


[Contact: Prof. Hanns J. Prem]

09-Apr-2002

 

 

 

 

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