Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-vdxz6 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-28T17:23:57.409Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Spatial Orders in Maya Civic Plans

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2017

Wendy Ashmore
Affiliation:
Department of Anthropology, University of California, Riverside, CA 92521-0418
Jeremy A. Sabloff
Affiliation:
University of Pennsylvania Museum, 33rd & Spruce Streets, Philadelphia, PA 19104-6324

Abstract

Ancient civic centers materialize ideas of proper spatial organization, among the Maya as in other societies. We argue that the position and arrangement of ancient Maya buildings and arenas emphatically express statements about cosmology and political order. At the same time, the clarity of original spatial expression is often blurred in the sites we observe archaeologically. Factors responsible for such blurring include multiple other influences on planning and spatial order, prominently the political life history of a civic center. Specifically, we argue here that centers with relatively short and simple political histories are relatively easy to interpret spatially. Those with longer development, but relatively little upheaval, manifest more elaborate but relatively robust and internally consistent plans. Sites with longer and more turbulent political histories, however, materialize a more complex cumulative mix of strategies and plausibly, therefore, of varying planning principles invoked by sequent ancient builders. We examine evidence for these assertions by reference to civic layouts at Copán, Xunantunich, Sayil, Seibal, and Tikal.

En los antiguos centros cívicos se materializan ideas acerca de la organización espacial adecuada, tanto entre los mayas como entre otras sociedades. En este estudio se propone que la ubicación y la disposición de antiguos edificios y espacios abiertos mayas expresan enfáticamente ideas respecto a la cosmología y el orden político. Al mismo tiempo, la claridad de la expresión espacial original a menudo es difusa en los sitios arqueológicos, debido a muchas otras influencias en la planeación y el orden espaciales, sobre todo la historia de la vida política de cada centro cívico. Específicamente proponemos que los centros que tienen historias políticas cortas y simples son relativamente fáciles de interpretar espacialmente, mientras que aquellos con desarrollos más prolongados, aunque con agitación política limitada, presentan una planeación interna más elaborada y relativamente fuerte. Sin embargo, en los asentamientos con historias políticas largas y más turbulentas, se materializa una mezcla más compleja de estrategias y, presumiblemente, en consecuencia quienes los construyeron se basaron en una amplia variedad de principios de planeación. En este estudio exploramos las evidencias para fundamentar estas propuestas refiriendo a la disposición cívica de Copán, Xunantunich, Sayil, Seibal y Tikal.

Type
Reports
Copyright
Copyright © Society for American Archaeology 2002

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

References Cited

Agrinier, Pierre 1983 Tenam Rosario: una posible relocalización del Clásico Maya Terminal desde el Usumacinta. In Antropología e historia de los Mixe-Zoques y Mayas: homenaje a Frans Blom, edited by Lorenzo Ochoa and Thomas A. Lee, pp. 241-253. Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, México, and Brigham Young University, Provo.Google Scholar
Ashmore, Wendy 1984 Quiriguá Archaeology and History Revisited. Journal of Field Archaeology 11:365-386 Google Scholar
Ashmore, Wendy 1986 Petén Cosmology in the Maya Southeast: An Analysis of Architecture and Settlement Patterns at Classic Quiriguá. In The Southeast Maya Periphery, edited by Patricia A. Urban and Edward M. Schortman, pp. 3549. University of Texas Press, Austin.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ashmore, Wendy 1987 Cobble Crossroads: Gualjoquito Architecture and External Elite Ties. In Interaction on the Southeast Mesoamerican Periphery: Prehistoric and Historic Honduras and El Salvador, edited by Eugenia J. Robinson, pp. 2848. BAR International Series 327. British Archaeological Reports, Oxford.Google Scholar
Ashmore, Wendy 1989 Construction and Cosmology: Politics and Ideology in Lowland Maya Settlement Patterns. In Word and Image in Maya Culture: Explorations in Language, Writing, and Representation, edited by William F. Hanks and Don S. Rice, pp. 272-286. University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City.Google Scholar
Ashmore, Wendy 1991 Site-planning Principles and Concepts of Directionality among the Ancient Maya. Latin American Antiquity 2: 199-226.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ashmore, Wendy 1992 Deciphering Maya Site Plans. In New Theories on the Ancient Maya, edited by Elin Danien and Robert J. Sharer, pp. 173-184. Museum Monographs, 77, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia.Google Scholar
Ashmore, Wendy 1995 Ritual Landscapes in the Xunantunich Area. Paper presented at the First International Symposium on Maya Archaeology, San Ignacio, Belize.Google Scholar
Ashmore, Wendy 1998 Monumentos políticos: sitios, asentamiento, y paisaje por Xunantunich, Belice. In Anatomia de una civilización: aproximaciones interdisciplinarias a la cultura Maya, edited by Andres Ciudad Ruiz, Yolanda Fernández Marquinez, José Miguel García Campillo, Ma. Josefa Iglesias Ponce de León, Alfonso Lacadena García-Gallo, Luis T. Sanz Castro, pp. 161-183. Publ. No. 4. Sociedad Española de Estudios Mayas, Madrid.Google Scholar
Ashmore, Wendy 2000 “Decisions and Dispositions”: Socializing Spatial Archaeology. Presented at the 99th Annual Meeting, American Anthropological Association, San Francisco.Google Scholar
Ashmore, Wendy 2002 The Idea of a Maya Town. In Structure and Meaning in Human Settlement, edited by Tony Atkin and Joseph Rykwert. University of Pennsylvania Museum Publications, Philadelphia, in press.Google Scholar
Ashmore, Wendy, and Bernard Knapp, A. (editors) 1999 Archaeologies of Landscape: Contemporary Perspectives. Blackwell, Oxford.Google Scholar
Ashmore, Wendy, and Leventhal, Richard M. 1993 Xunantunich Reconsidered. Paper presented at the Conference on Belize, University of North Florida. Jacksonville.Google Scholar
Ashmore, Wendy, Yaeger, Jason, and Robin, Cynthia 2002 Commoner Sense: Late and Terminal Classic Social Strategies in the Xunantunich Area. In The Terminal Classic in the Maya Lowlands: Collapse, Transition, and Transformation, edited by Don S. Rice, Prudence M. Rice, and Arthur A. Demarest. Westview Press, Boulder, in press.Google Scholar
Barrett, John C. 1999 The Mythical Landscapes of the British Iron Age. In Archaeologies of Landscape: Contemporary Perspectives, edited by Wendy Ashmore and A. Bernard Knapp, pp. 253-265. Blackwell, Oxford.Google Scholar
Basso, Keith H. 1984 “Stalking with Stories”: Names, Places, and Moral Narratives Among the Western Apache. In Text, Play, and Story: The Construction and Reconstruction of Self and Society, edited by Stuart Plattner and E. M. Bruner, pp. 19-55. 1983 Proceedings of the American Ethnological Society. American Anthropological Association, Washington D.C.Google Scholar
Basso, Keith H. 1996 Wisdom Sits in Places: Notes on a Western Apache Landscape. In Senses of Place, edited by Steven Feld and Keith H. Basso, pp. 53-90. SAR Press, Santa Fe.Google Scholar
Bender, Barbara 1998 Stonehenge: Making Space. Berg, Oxford.Google Scholar
Bender, Barbara (editor) 1993 Landscape: Politics and Perspective. Berg, Oxford.Google Scholar
Benson, Elizabeth P. (editor) 1980 Mesoamerican Sites and World-Views. Dumbarton Oaks, Washington D.C.Google Scholar
Bradley, Richard 1993 Altering the Earth: The Origins of Monuments in Britain and Continental Europe. The Rhind Lectures 1991-92. Monograph Series Number 8. Society of Antiquaries of Scotland, Edinburgh.Google Scholar
Bradley, Richard 2000 An Archaeology of Natural Places. Routledge, London.Google Scholar
Brady, James E., and Ashmore, Wendy 1999 Caves, Mountains, Water: Ideational Landscapes of the Ancient Maya. In Archaeologies of Landscape: Contemporary Perspectives, edited by Wendy Ashmore and A. Bernard Knapp, pp. 124-145. Blackwell, Oxford.Google Scholar
Brotherston, Gordon 1976 Mesoamerican Description of Space II: Signs for Direction. Ibero- Amerikanisches Archiv N.F. Jg 2, H. 1: 39-62.Google Scholar
Carl, Peter, Kemp, Barry, Laurence, Ray, Coningham, Robin, Higham, Charles, and Cowgill, George L. 2000 Were Cities Built as Images? Cambridge Archaeological Journal 10:327-365.Google Scholar
Carrasco, David, Jones, Lindsay, and Sessions, Scott (editors) 2000 Mesoamerica’s Classic Heritage: From Teotihuacan to the Aztecs. University Press of Colorado, Boulder.Google Scholar
Chapman, John 1994 Destruction of a Common Heritage: The Archaeology of War in Croatia, Bosnia and Hercegovina. Antiquity 68:120-126.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Coe, William R. 1990 Excavations in the Great Plaza, North Terrace and North Acropolis of Tikal. Tikal Report No. 14 (6 vols.). Museum Monographs, 61, University of Pennsylvania Museum, Philadelphia.Google Scholar
Coggins, Clemency Chase 1967 Palaces and the Planning of Ceremonial Centers in the Maya Lowlands. Unpublished manuscript, Tozzer Library, Peabody Museum, Harvard University.Google Scholar
Coggins, Clemency Chase 1975 Painting and Drawing Styles at Tikal, Guatemala: An Historical and Iconographic Reconstruction. Ph.D. dissertation, Fine Arts, Harvard University. University Microfilms, Ann Arbor.Google Scholar
Coggins, Clemency Chase 1979 A New Order and the Role of the Calendar: Some Characteristics of the Middle Classic Period at Tikal. In Maya Archaeology and Ethnohistory, edited by Norman Hammond and Gordon R. Willey, pp. 38-50. University of Texas Press, Austin.Google Scholar
Coggins, Clemency Chase 1980 The Shape of Time: Some Political Implications of a Four-part Figure. American Antiquity 45:727-739.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cowgill, George F. 2000 Intentionality and Meaning in the Layout of Teotihuacan. Cambridge Archaeological Journal 10:358-365.Google Scholar
de Montmollin, Olivier 1989 Archaeology of Political Structure: Settlement Analysis in a Classic Maya Polity. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
de Montmollin, Olivier 1995 Settlement and Politics in Three Classic Maya Polities. Monographs in World Archaeology No. 24. Prehistory Press, Madison.Google Scholar
Dunning, Nicholas P., Scarborough, Vernon, Valdez, Fred Jr., Luzzadder-Beach, Sheryl, Beach, Timothy, and Jones, John G. 1999 Temple Mountains, Sacred Lakes, and Fertile Fields: Ancient Maya Landscapes in Northwestern Belize. Antiquity 73:650-660.Google Scholar
Eliade, Mircea 1959 The Sacred and the Profane. Harcourt Brace, New York.Google Scholar
Emerson, Thomas E. 1997 Cahokia and the Archaeology of Power. The University of Alabama Press, Tuscaloosa.Google Scholar
Fash, William L., and Fash, Barbara W. 2000 Teotihuacan and the Maya: A Classic Heritage. In Mesoamerica’s Classic Heritage: From Teotihuacan to the Aztecs, edited by David Carrasco, Lindsay Jones, and Scott Sessions, pp. 432-463. University Press of Colorado: Boulder.Google Scholar
Fash, William L., and Stuart, David 1991 Dynastic History and Cultural Evolution at Copán, Honduras. In Classic Maya Political History, edited by T. Patrick Culbert, pp. 147-179. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Folan, William J. 1992 Calakmul, Campeche: A Centralized Urban Administrative Center in the Northern Peten. World Archaeology 24:158-168.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Folan, William J., Marcus, Joyce, Pincemin, Sophia, Carrasco, Maria del Rosario Domínguez, Fletcher, Laraine, and López, Abel Morales 1995 Calakmul: New Data from an Ancient Maya Capital in Campeche, México. Latin American Antiquity 6:310-334.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fox, John W. 1994 Political Cosmology among the Quiché Maya. In Factional Competition and Political Development in the New World, edited by Elizabeth M. Brumfiel and John W. Fox, pp. 158-170. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Freidel, David A., and Scheie, Linda 1988a Symbol and Power: A History of the Lowland Maya Cosmogram. In Maya Iconography, edited by Elizabeth P. Benson and Gillett Griffin, pp. 4493. Princeton University Press, Princeton.Google Scholar
Freidel, David A., and Scheie, Linda 1988b Kingship in the Late Preclassic Maya Lowlands: The Instruments and Places of Royal Power. American Anthropologist 90:547-567.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Freidel, David A., Scheie, Linda, and Parker, Joy 1993 Maya Cosmos: Three ThousandYears on the Shaman’;s Trail. William Morrow, New York.Google Scholar
Fritz, John M. 1978 Paleopsychology Today: Ideational Systems and Human Adaptation in Prehistory. In Social Archeology: Beyond Subsistence and Dating, edited by Charles L. Redman, Mary Jane Berman, Edward V. Curtin, William T. Langhorne, Jr., Nina M. Versaggi, and Jeffery C. Wanser, pp. 37-59. Academic Press, New York.Google Scholar
Fritz, John M. 1986 Vijayanagara: Authority and Meaning of a South Indian Imperial Capital. American Anthropologist 88:44-55.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gallareta Negron, Tomas, Hernandez, Lourdes Toscano, and Alvarez, Carlos Perez 1995 Programa de investigación del Proyecto Labná: temporada de campo de 1995. Propuesta de investigación al Consejo de Arqueología del Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia. Merida, Yucatan.Google Scholar
Graham, Ian 1978 Naranjo, Chunhuitz, Xunantunich. Corpus of Maya Hieroglyphic Inscriptions, Vol. 2, Part 2. Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology, Harvard University, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Graham, Ian, and von Euw, Eric 1975 Naranjo. Corpus of Maya Hieroglyphic Inscriptions, Vol. 2, Part 1. Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology, Harvard University, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Guillemin, George 1968 Development and Function of the Tikal Ceremonial Center. Ethnos 33:1-35.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hall, Edward T. 1966 The Hidden Dimension. Doubleday, Garden City, New York.Google Scholar
Hanks, William F. 1991 Referential Practice: Language and Lived Space Among the Maya. University of Chicago Press, Chicago.Google Scholar
Harrison, Peter D. 1994 Spatial Geometry and Logic in the Ancient Maya Mind, Part II: Architecture. In Seventh Palenque Round Table, 1989, vol. 9, edited by Merle Greene Robertson and Virginia M. Fields, pp. 243-252. Pre-Columbian Art Research Institute, San Francisco.Google Scholar
Hegmon, Michelle 1989 Social Integration and Architecture. In The Architecture of Social Integration in Prehistoric Pueblos, edited by William D. Lipe and Michelle Hegmon, pp. 5-14. Occasional Paper No. 1. Crow Canyon Archaeological Center, Cortez, Colorado.Google Scholar
Houk, Bret A. 1996 The Archaeology of Site Planning: An Example from the Maya Site of Dos Homhres, Belize. Ph.D. dissertation, Department of Anthropology, University of Texas, Austin. University Microfilms, Ann Arbor.Google Scholar
Houston, Stephen D. (editor) 1998 Function and Meaning in Classic Maya Architecture. Dumbarton Oaks, Washington, D.C. Google Scholar
Houston, Stephen D., Stuart, David, and Taube, Karl 1992 Image and Text on the “Jauncy” Vase. In The Maya Vase Book, vol. 3, edited by Justin Kerr, pp. 499-512. Kerr Associates, New York.Google Scholar
Jones, Christopher 1991 Cycles of Growth at Tikal. In Classic Maya Political History, edited by T. Patrick Culbert, pp. 102-127. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Kidder, Alfred V., Jennings, Jesse D., and Shook, Edwin M. 1946 Excavations at Kaminaljuyú, Guatemala, Publication 561. Carnegie Institution of Washington, Washington D.C. Google Scholar
Kowalski, Jeff Karl 1998 Uxmal and the Puuc Zone; Monumental Architecture, Sculpture Façades and Political Power in the Terminal Classic Period. In Maya, edited by Peter Schmidt, Mercedes de la Garza, and Enrique Nalda, pp. 400-425. Bompiani, Milan.Google Scholar
Kowalski, Jeff Karl (editor) 1999 Mesoamerican Architecture as a Cultural Symbol. Oxford University Press, Oxford.Google Scholar
Laporte, Juan Pedro 1987 El “talud-tablero” en Tikal, Petén: nuevos datos. In Homenaje a Roman Piña Chan, edited by Barbro Dahlgren, Carlos Navarrete, Lorenzo Ochoa, Mari Carmen Serra, Yoko Sugiura, pp. 265-316. Universidad Nacional Autonoma de México, México.Google Scholar
Laporte, Juan Pedro, and Fialko, Vilma 1990 New Perspectives on Old Problems: Dynastic References for the Early Classic at Tikal. In Vision and Revision in Maya Studies, edited by Peter D. Harrison and Flora Clancy, pp. 33-66. University of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque.Google Scholar
Laporte, Juan Pedro, and Fialko, Vilma 1995 Un Reencuentro con Mundo Perdido, Tikal, Guatemala. Ancient Mesoamerica 6:41-94.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lawrence, Denise S., and Low, Setha M. 1990 The Built Environment and Spatial Form. Annual Review of Anthropology 19:453-505.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
LeCount, Lisa J., Yaeger, Jason, Leventhal, Richard M., and Ashmore, Wendy 2002 Dating the Rise and Fall of Xunantunich: A Late and Terminal Classic Maya Center. Ancient Mesoamerica, in press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lekson, Stephen H. 1999 The Chaco Meridian: Cycles of Power in the Ancient Southwest. AltaMira, Walnut Creek, California.Google Scholar
Leventhal, Richard M., and Ashmore, Wendy 2002 Xunantunich in a Belize Valley Context. In Current Research in the Belize River Valley, edited by James F. Garber. University Press of Florida, Gainesville, in press.Google Scholar
Low, Setha M. 1995 Indigenous Architecture and the Spanish American Plaza in Mesoamerica and the Caribbean. American Anthropologist 97:748-762.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Low, Setha M. 2000 On the Plaza: The Politics of Public Space and Culture. University of Texas Press, Austin.Google Scholar
Marcus, Joyce 1987 The Inscriptions of Calakmul: Royal Marriage at a Maya City in Campeche, México. Museum of Anthropology Technical Reports No. 21. University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Martin, Simon 2000 Court and Realm: Architectural Signatures in the Classic Maya Southern Lowlands. In Royal Courts of the Ancient Maya, volume I: Theory, Comparison, and Synthesis, edited by Takeshi Inomata and Stephen D. Houston, pp. 168-194. Westview Press, Boulder, CO.Google Scholar
Martin, Simon, and Grube, Nikolai 1995 Maya Superstates. Archaeology 48(6):41-46.Google Scholar
Martin, Simon, and Grube, Nikolai 2000 Chronicle of the Maya Kings and Queens: Deciphering the Dynasties of the Ancient Maya. Thames & Hudson, London.Google Scholar
Matheny, Ray T. 1986 Early States in the Maya Lowlands During the Late Preclassic Period: Edzna and El Mirador. In City-States of the Maya: Art and Architecture, edited by Elizabeth P. Benson, pp. 144. Rocky Mountain Institute for Pre-Columbian Studies, Denver.Google Scholar
Millon, René F. 1973 The Teotihuacan Map. Urbanization at Teotihuacan, México, vol. 1. University of Texas Press, Austin.Google Scholar
Morley, Sylvanus G. 1935 Guide Book to the Ruins of Quiriguá. Supplementary Publication 16. Carnegie Institution of Washington, Washington D.C. Google Scholar
Niles, Susan A. 1987 Niched Walls in Inca Design. Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians 46:277-285.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pollock, H. E. D. 1980 The Puuc: An Architectural Survey of the Hill Country of Yucatan and Northern Campeche, Mexico. Memoirs of the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology, Vol. 19. Harvard University, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Rapoport, Amos 1982 The Meaning of the Built Environment: A Nonverbal Communication Approach. Sage Publications, Beverly Hills.Google Scholar
Ruppert, Karl, and Denison, John H. Jr. 1943 Archaeological Reconnaissance in Campeche, Quintana Roo, and Petén. Carnegie Institution of Washington, Publ. 543. Carnegie Institution of Washington, Washington, D.C. Google Scholar
Rykwert, Joseph 1988 The Idea of a Town: The Anthropology of Urban Form in Rome, Italy and the Ancient World. Reprinted. MIT Press, Cambridge, MA. Originally published 1976.Google Scholar
Sabloff, Jeremy A. 1975 Excavations at Seibal, Department of Petén, Guatemala: Ceramics. Memoirs of the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology, Vol. 15, No. 1. Harvard University, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Sabloff, Jeremy A., and Tourtellot, Gair III 1991 The Ancient City of Sayil: The Mapping of a Puuc Regional Center. Middle American Research Institute, Publ. 60. Tulane University, New Orleans.Google Scholar
Scheie, Linda 1977 Palenque: The House of the Dying Sun. In Native American Astronomy, edited by Anthony F. Aveni, pp. 42-56. University of Texas Press, Austin.Google Scholar
Scheie, Linda, and Mathews, Peter 1998 The Code of Kings. Scribners, New York.Google Scholar
Schortman, Edward M., and Nakamura, Seiichi 1991 A Crisis of Identity: Late Classic Competition and Interaction on the Southeast Maya Periphery. Latin American Antiquity 2:311-336.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sharer, Robert J. 1978 Archaeology and History at Quiriguá, Guatemala. Journal of Field Archaeology 5:51-70.Google Scholar
Sharer, Robert J. 1994 The Ancient Maya. Fifth edition. Stanford University Press, Stanford.Google Scholar
Sharer, Robert J., Fash, William L., Sedat, David W., Traxler, Loa P., and Williamson, Richard 1999 Continuities and Contrasts in Early Classic Architecture of Central Copán. In Mesoamerican Architecture as a Cultural Symbol, edited by Jeff Karl Kowalski, pp. 220-249. Oxford University Press, Oxford.Google Scholar
Smith, A. Ledyard 1982 Excavations at Seibal, Department of Petén, Guatemala: Major Architecture and Caches. Memoirs of the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology, Vol. 15, No. 1. Harvard University, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Smyth, Michael, and Dore, Christopher 1992 Large-site Archaeological Methods at Sayil, Yucatan, México: Investigating Community Organization at a Prehispanic Maya Center. Latin American Antiquity 3:3-21.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Steinhardt, Nancy Shatzman 1986 Why were Chang’an and Beijing so Different? Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians 45:339-357.Google Scholar
Stuart, David 2000 “The Arrival of Strangers”: Teotihuacan and Tollan in Classic Maya History. In Mesoamerica’s Classic Heritage: From Teotihuacan to the Aztecs, edited by David Carrasco, Lindsay Jones, and Scott Sessions, pp. 465-513. University Press of Colorado, Boulder.Google Scholar
Sugiyama, Saburo 1993 Worldview Materialized in Teotihuacan, Mexico. Latin American Antiquity 4:103-129.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tate, Carolyn 1985 Summer Solstice Ceremonies Performed by Bird Jaguar III of Yaxchilan, Chiapas, México. Estudios de Cultura Maya 16:85-112.Google Scholar
Taube, Karl 1998 The Jade Hearth: Centrality, Rulership, and the Classic Maya Temple. In Function and Meaning in Classic Maya Architecture, edited by Stephen D. Houston, pp. 427478. Dumbarton Oaks, Washington, D.C. Google Scholar
Tourtellot, Gair III 1988 Excavations at Seibal, Department of Petén, Guatemala: Peripheral Survey and Excavation: Settlement and Community Patterns. Memoirs of the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology, Vol. 16. Harvard University, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Tourtellot, Gair III, and Sabloff, Jeremy A. 1994 Community Structure at Sayil: A Case Study of Puuc Settlement. In Hidden Among the Hills: Maya Archaeology of the Northwest Yucatan Peninsula, edited by Hanns J. Prem, pp. 71-92. Acta Mesoamericana. Verlag von Flemming, Mockmuhl.Google Scholar
Tourtellot, Gair III, Sabloff, Jeremy A., and Carmean, Kelli 1992 “Will the Real Elites Please Stand Up?” An Archaeological Assessment of Maya Elite Behavior in the Terminal Classic Period. In Mesoamerican Elites: An Archaeological Assessment, edited by Diane Z. Chase and Arlen F. Chase, pp. 80-98. University of Oklahoma Press, Norman.Google Scholar
Townsend, Richard F. (editor) 1992 The Ancient Americas: Art from Sacred Landscapes. The Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago, and Prestel Verlag, Munich.Google Scholar
Traxler, Loa P. 2001 The Royal Court of Early Classic Copán. In Royal Courts of the Ancient Maya, volume 2: Data and Case Studies, edited by Takeshi Inomata and Stephen D. Houston, pp. 44-73. Westview Press, Boulder.Google Scholar
Tuan, Yi-Fu 1977 Space and Place: The Perspective of Experience. University of Minnesota Press, Minneapolis.Google Scholar
Ucko, Peter J., Tringham, Ruth, and Dimbleby, G. W. (editors) 1972 Man, Settlement and Urbanism. Duckworth, London.Google Scholar
Vogrin, Annegret 1989 The Spatial Relationships of Monuments at Copán and Quiriguá. In Memorias del Segundo Coloquio Internacional de Mayistas, Vol. I, pp. 139-148. Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, México. Google Scholar
Vogt, Evon Z. 1969 Zinacantan: A Maya Community in the Highlands of Chiapas. Belknap Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Whalen, Michael E., and Minnis, Paul E. 2001 Architecture and Authority in the Casas Grandes Area, Chihuahua, Mexico. American Antiquity 66:651-658.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wheatley, Paul 1971 The Pivot of the Four Quarters: A Preliminary Enquiry into the Origins and Character of the Ancient Chinese City. Aldine, Chicago.Google Scholar
Willey, Gordon R. (editor) 1956 Prehistoric Settlement Patterns in the New World. Viking Fund Publications in Anthropology No. 23. Wenner-Gren Foundation for Anthropological Research, New York.Google Scholar
Willey, Gordon R., Ledyard Smith, A., Tourtellot, Gair III, and Graham, Ian 1975 Excavations at Seibal, Department of Petén, Guatemala: Introduction: The Site and its Setting. Memoirs of the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology, Vol. 11, No. 1., Harvard University, Cambridge.Google Scholar