Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures and Table
- Preface
- Living with the Ancestors: Kinship and Kingship in Ancient Maya Society
- Introduction to the Revised Edition
- ONE A Point of Departure
- TWO Ancestor Veneration and Lineage Organization in the Maya Region
- THREE Creating a Genealogy of Place
- FOUR Lineage as a Crucible of Inequality
- FIVE Kin Groups and Divine Kingship in Lowland Maya Society
- SIX Ancestors and Archaeology of Place
- POSTSCRIPT The Future of the Ancestors and the Clash between Science and Human Rights
- Notes
- References Cited
- Index
ONE - A Point of Departure
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 July 2014
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures and Table
- Preface
- Living with the Ancestors: Kinship and Kingship in Ancient Maya Society
- Introduction to the Revised Edition
- ONE A Point of Departure
- TWO Ancestor Veneration and Lineage Organization in the Maya Region
- THREE Creating a Genealogy of Place
- FOUR Lineage as a Crucible of Inequality
- FIVE Kin Groups and Divine Kingship in Lowland Maya Society
- SIX Ancestors and Archaeology of Place
- POSTSCRIPT The Future of the Ancestors and the Clash between Science and Human Rights
- Notes
- References Cited
- Index
Summary
The Maya lived with their ancestors in a manner that departs radically from twentieth-century western mortuary practices. Rather than distancing themselves physically from the dead—sequestering the ancestors in cemeteries apart from living spaces—they maintained a proximity between the living and the dead. From 1000 B.C. to the early sixteenth century, this subgroup of the first Americans—Maya of the Yucatán Peninsula and Guatemalan highlands (Figure 1.1)—interred their ancestors under the floors of their houses, in residential shrines, and within large funerary pyramids right in the center of their cities and villages. Through a complex series of rituals and sacralization of places, the dead were not forgotten; rather, active lines of communication were maintained between the living and the dead. The deathway of the Maya did not emphasize the termination of life as does the Christian deathway (Metcalf and Huntington 1991); instead, Maya celebrated the continued and pervasive influence of the ancestors in the lives of both rulers and farmers—the life that arises from death (Carlsen and Prechtel 1991: 26). Formerly referred to by the antiquated phrase “cult of the dead,” this social practice is anything but that. On the contrary, it is about living descendants and their strategies and struggles to chart a course for the future. In this book, I use what I hope is a more appropriate phrase to describe this practice: “living with the ancestors.”
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- Information
- Living with the AncestorsKinship and Kingship in Ancient Maya Society, pp. 1 - 21Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2014