Copan I: The Late Classic Period
Part of: Society for American Archaeology 82nd Annual Meeting, Vancouver, BC (2017)
This session explores data pertaining to the first half of the Late Classic period at Copan in Honduras. This period is marked by the reign of three long-lived rulers: Ruler 11, K'ahk' Uti' Chan; Ruler 12, K’ahk’ Uti’ Witz’ K’awiil; and Ruler 13, Waxaklajuun Ubaah K’awiil. Under K'ahk' Uti' Chan the population of the valley rose significantly. Under K’ahk Uti’ Witz’ K’awiil the Copan polity is believed to have first expanded into a state. Ruler 12’s reign saw the dedication of stelae both in the center of the city, as well as in areas outside of the Copan Pocket, including in Santa Rita. He erected at least one altar at Rio Amarillo, gifted ceremonial ceramic vessels as far away as Tazumal, El Salvador, and performed a scattering ritual at the site of Quirigua, Guatemala. Waxaklajuun Ubaah K’awiil stepped into the shoes of his illustrious predecessor and for 42 years ruled over a community whose art style burgeoned. He proclaimed Copan one of the corners of the Maya world along with Calakmul, Tikal, and Palenque, and presented himself in the guise of various gods on stelae in the Great Plaza, and yet ended his reign beheaded by the ruler of Quirigua.
Other Keywords
Maya •
Copan •
Epigraphy •
Statecraft •
Honduras •
Ceramics •
Mesoamerica •
Architecture •
History •
Education
Geographic Keywords
Republic of El Salvador (Country) •
Belize (Country) •
Republic of Guatemala (Country) •
Mesoamerica •
United Mexican States (Country) •
North America (Continent) •
Republic of Honduras (Country) •
Jamaica (Country) •
Republic of Nicaragua (Country) •
Republic of Panama (Country)
Resources Inside This Collection (Viewing 1-9 of 9)
- Documents (9)
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Copan in the Wider Maya World (2017)
DOCUMENT Citation Only
The peripheral location of Copan has always raised questions about the ways in which it related to the core of the Maya world. Clearly Copan was no isolate in the Classic Maya tradition, divorced from developments elsewhere, but what did it continue to draw from the center and what were the mechanisms underlying those contacts? What do we know about the influence of centrally placed polities in this far-flung region, which held a symbolic status in the far east, but could never be a significant...
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Copan reloaded: a new look at the Ante step and its context (2017)
DOCUMENT Citation Only
This presentation reassesses the chronology and meaning of the inscription on the hieroglyphic step of the Ante structure at Copan, Honduras. The analysis was made possible by a high-resolution 3D scan of the step produced in 2011. The new interpretation indicates that the city of Copan underwent a re-foundation event upon the accession of its eighth ruler, Wi’ Ohl K’inich. The known contexts of similar statements are discussed along with the implications of several possible translations for our...
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Cream Wares of the Southeast Maya Periphery (2017)
DOCUMENT Citation Only
Since publication on the compositional analyses of Copan ceramics by Bishop and Beaudry in 2004 several scholars have addressed the manufacture and distribution of cream wares similar to those that are found at Copan. The additional accumulation of data usually results in more insights and better source attributions, but at times the complexities of compositional analysis can mislead interpretation. This paper presents highlights of greatly extended sampling and uses a geochemical perspective...
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Foundations to the Late Classic Kingdom: Copan in the 6th century CE (2017)
DOCUMENT Citation Only
Historical and archaeological data support interpretation of Classic Maya polities as centralized states—strongly integrated organizations with stratified and hierarchical political structures led by rulers wielding coercive power. Yet archaeology is often hard pressed to identify changes instigated by individuals or events, or define watershed moments when particular sites or regions coalesced as states. By the early sixth century CE, the kingdom of Copan had established itself as a dominant...
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Leveraging Power: Stonecarvers and Architectural Sculpture Production in the Copan Region (2017)
DOCUMENT Citation Only
The abundance and diversity of monumental art, architecture and hieroglyphic texts at sites outside the Principal Group in the Copan Valley, and into the hinterlands, illuminate the timing and intent of regal investiture of authority in elites considered important to the stability of the kingdom. The consistent use of two imagery programs in architecture, and the linking of one of those programs with textual confirmation of membership in the royal court, reveal two strategies for leveraging the...
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The Obsidian Order at Copan: A Discussion of Science, Education, and Institutions in Late Classic Statecraft (2017)
DOCUMENT Citation Only
This paper investigates an order of ranked specialists marked by title Taaj ("obsidian"), as they occur at Late Classic Copan. This "obsidian order" was first identified on a mural at the site of Xultun, Guatemala, where archaeological evidence revealed that its members held expertise in indigenous Maya sciences, ritual practice and codex book production. Since then, the Taaj have been identified at several Classic Maya centers besides Xultun—with the texts of Copan providing the most detailed...
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Piecing Together the Life History of K’ahk’ Uti’ Witz’ K’awiil (2017)
DOCUMENT Citation Only
Copan's longest-lived ruler dramatically expanded his realm, reach, and resources. The valley population nearly doubled, and the historical record indicates he was active in the ritual and political lives of other centers both near to home and farther afield. Ruler 12 contextualized his defensive perimeter within the sacred geography of the valley by erecting six stelae in 652 C.E. His successor enshrined that achievement and his memory in the most elaborately decorated temple outside the royal...
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Pushing the Limits of Power: Copan Expansionist Strategies in the El Paraíso Valley, Western Honduras (2017)
DOCUMENT Citation Only
The reign of K’ahk’ Uti’ Witz’ K’awiil, Copan Ruler 12, has been rightly hailed as a pivotal time in Copan's political history. Given that no monumental constructions on the Copan Acropolis have as yet been securely attributed to his patronage, this long-lived ruler appears to have turned his focus outward, expanding the Copan kingdom into a multi-ethnic polity with a long geographic reach. In this paper we explore Ruler 12's administrative strategy in one region of the Copan kingdom, the El...
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The Stromsvik Macroblade Cache from Copan, Honduras: A Symbolic Analysis (2017)
DOCUMENT Citation Only
Among the myriad types of votive offerings created by the Classic Maya, many contain chipped-stone obsidian and flint materials. These caches often consist of debitage, cores, flakes, blades, and sometimes so-called "eccentrics", which are elaborately chipped ceremonial items that sometimes take the form of god effigies. The contexts of these deposits can include the stairways, centerlines, and corners of important structures, below stelae and other monuments, and in the center of royal or elite...