The Land of the Windy Water Lords: Secondary Centers in the Motul de San Jose Polity, Guatemala

Author(s): Kitty Emery; Antonia Foias

Year: 2015

Summary

Motul de San José dominated a swath of the northern shore of Lake Peten Itza in central Peten, Guatemala, during the Late Classic. Its Ik’ Emblem Glyph has now been translated as "Windy Water," an apt name for this zone. Excavations at two small sites in the periphery of Motul de San José, Kante’t’u’ul (approx. 3km northwest) and Chachacklu’um (approx. 5km east) aimed to investigate the relations between these secondary centers and their political overlords at Motul de San José. Settlement patterns, architecture, burials and material culture in general will be compared to reflect on the territory controlled by Motul at its apogee during the eighth century A.D.

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Cite this Record

The Land of the Windy Water Lords: Secondary Centers in the Motul de San Jose Polity, Guatemala. Antonia Foias, Kitty Emery. Presented at The 80th Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, San Francisco, California. 2015 ( tDAR id: 395248)

Keywords

Geographic Keywords
Mesoamerica

Spatial Coverage

min long: -107.271; min lat: 12.383 ; max long: -86.353; max lat: 23.08 ;