Introduction
Classic Maya cities of the first millennium AD are increasingly understood as places shaped by locals and non-locals. That presence can be seen in ‘hard’ terms—the result of invasion, in-migration, human trafficking and resident elites or traders of foreign origin (Vaillant Reference Vaillant1935; Wright Reference Wright2012; Houston Reference Houston2020; Martin Reference Martin2020)—or as ‘softer’ interactions that emphasise an interplay of eclectic art styles and “cosmopolitan discourses” (Halperin & Martin Reference Halperin and Martin2020: 830). Finding unambiguous proof of ‘hard’ or ‘soft’ contact remains a challenge, but there can be no doubt that non-local enclaves existed in Mesoamerica. A case in point is Teotihuacan, Mexico. During the second quarter of the first millennium AD, the city had pockets of people, artefacts and building styles from Oaxaca, the Gulf Lowlands, West Mexico and probably the Maya region (Clayton Reference Clayton2005; Spence et al. Reference Spence, White, Rattray, Longstaffe and Blanton2005; Croissier Reference Croissier2007; Álvarez-Sandoval et al. Reference Álvarez-Sandoval2015; Sugiyama et al. Reference Sugiyama, Sugiyama, Ortega and Fash2016). Their position within the city was oriented roughly to their direction of origin. Whether such foreigners were summoned, or came of their own volition is uncertain, but Teotihuacan appeared to be the dominant party in these interactions.
Tikal, lidar and the ‘Ciudadela’
The Maya metropolis of Tikal in Guatemala has long yielded evidence of reciprocal contact with Teotihuacan (Laporte Reference Laporte1989). It has also revealed glyphic accounts of martial intrusions in detail that is unavailable at Teotihuacan itself (Stuart Reference Stuart, Carrasco, Jones and Sessions2000). Most texts at Tikal refer to the main personage of this contact as Sihyaj K'ahk’ (“Born from Fire”)—an epithet that is Maya in origin but non-Maya in phrasing, recalling the fiery darts of Teotihuacan warfare. Taking place in AD 378, that intrusion from Teotihuacan was local to Tikal, yet regional in impact, occurring within a landscape of newly founded dynasties served by ancestral cults and protected or surveilled by extensive fortifications that reflect the contemporaneous insecurities and oppressions (Estrada-Belli et al. Reference Estrada-Belli2009; Houston et al. Reference Houston, Newman, Román and Garrison2015, Reference Houston, Garrison, Firpi, Helmke, Kettunen and Źrałka2019). Within Tikal, the major focus of this Teotihuacan presence was in a distinct sector located just south of the Mundo Perdido Complex (Figure 1). Buildings in this area combined Maya and Teotihuacan-style elements, including the talud-tablero (‘slope-panel’) moulding linked to the Mexican city (Iglesias Reference Iglesias1987; Laporte & Fialko Reference Laporte and Fialko1995).
A lidar capture in 2016 (Canuto et al. Reference Canuto2018) detected another feature. Located in an area between two elite residences with Teotihuacan features (Groups 6C-XVI and 6D-V) was what appeared to be a natural hillock (Figure 2). Earlier mappers had marked this feature with natural contours, while, in field notes, also observing blocks of masonry on its surface (Carr & Hazard Reference Carr and Hazard1961). It soon became clear that this precinct mirrored—at a smaller scale—the form of the ‘Ciudadela’ (the citadel) at Teotihuacan, along with, on its eastern side, a building in the same position as the celebrated Temple of the Feathered Serpent (Sugiyama Reference Sugiyama and Robb2017a). The Ciudadela at Tikal was approximately 30 per cent smaller than its exemplar at Teotihuacan, yet it had the same north–south wings on the eastern pyramid, an enclosed square plaza in front and a reservoir (called the ‘Madeira’) in place of the canal to the north of the complex at Teotihuacan (Figure 3). Although much less distinct, the northern edge may have been affected by later robbing of stone to build additions to the Mundo Perdido Complex. The broader sector appears to be oriented 15.5±1° to the east, resembling the grid that guided the urban plan at Teotihuacan (Figure 4).
Prompted by these lidar data, excavations began in 2019 (Román Ramírez & Méndez Lee Reference Román Ramírez and Méndez Lee2020). In the pyramid of the Ciudadela—a structure approximately 12m high (possibly the third tallest at Tikal during this period)—excavators documented the highly unusual use of clays and adobes as building materials, with six construction phases, most dating to the Early Classic period (c. AD 300–550). The main structure (6D-105) yielded a deposit of Teotihuacan-style incense burners, in an evident parallel to the ‘Adosada’ platform that covered the western façade of the Temple of the Feathered Serpent at Teotihuacan (Figure 5). The back of this building was aligned to the north and associated with an intensely burned deposit of two human sacrifices and green obsidian points resembling lithics at Teotihuacan (Chinchilla et al. Reference Chinchilla, Tiesler, Gómez and Price2015). A further burial with green obsidian points was located in the southern structure of the Ciudadela (6D-106). Pending further study, and excavations in 2021, this deposit may correspond to the warrior burials found under the Temple of the Feathered Serpent at Teotihuacan (Sugiyama Reference Sugiyama and Robb2017b).
Conclusion
Maya cities are not synchronous wholes (cf. Smith et al. Reference Smith2021). Planned by sector—often by individual rulers—they tend to articulate poorly with other parts of their urban form, usually by means of causeways of post hoc design. The ‘Ciudadela’ at Tikal appears to be a plan-within-a-plan: a deliberate evocation of a focal feature of Teotihuacan. As with the foreign enclave at Teotihuacan, it lies in a western part of the city, and is thus oriented towards its locus of inspiration. As an embedded ‘quotation’ of a distant place, the precinct at Tikal recalls Los Horcones in Chiapas, which in part resembles the plaza and buildings that define the area of Teotihuacan's Temple of the Moon (García-Des Lauriers Reference García-Des Lauriers and Harrison-Buck2012). With the historical evidence from glyphic writing, the Tikal ‘Ciudadela’ suggests a considerable investment that, in one phase, galvanised into the replication of an imperial locality tied to conquest and foreign rites.
Funding statement
Funding was provided by Fundación Patrimonio Cultural y Natural Maya (PACUNAM), Guatemala.