Political Alliances and Trade Connections Observed in the Ceramic Record of the Classic Period: The Perspective from the Maya Site of Nakum, Guatemala

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

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Political Alliances and Trade Connections Observed in the Ceramic Record of the Classic Period : The Perspective from the Maya Site of Nakum, Guatemala. / Źrałka, Jarosław; Helmke, Christophe; Hermes, Bernard; Koszkul, Wiesław; Ting, Carmen; Bishop, Ronald L.; Bojkowska, Dorota.

In: Ancient Mesoamerica, Vol. 31, No. 3, 2020, p. 461-475.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Źrałka, J, Helmke, C, Hermes, B, Koszkul, W, Ting, C, Bishop, RL & Bojkowska, D 2020, 'Political Alliances and Trade Connections Observed in the Ceramic Record of the Classic Period: The Perspective from the Maya Site of Nakum, Guatemala', Ancient Mesoamerica, vol. 31, no. 3, pp. 461-475. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0956536120000152

APA

Źrałka, J., Helmke, C., Hermes, B., Koszkul, W., Ting, C., Bishop, R. L., & Bojkowska, D. (2020). Political Alliances and Trade Connections Observed in the Ceramic Record of the Classic Period: The Perspective from the Maya Site of Nakum, Guatemala. Ancient Mesoamerica, 31(3), 461-475. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0956536120000152

Vancouver

Źrałka J, Helmke C, Hermes B, Koszkul W, Ting C, Bishop RL et al. Political Alliances and Trade Connections Observed in the Ceramic Record of the Classic Period: The Perspective from the Maya Site of Nakum, Guatemala. Ancient Mesoamerica. 2020;31(3):461-475. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0956536120000152

Author

Źrałka, Jarosław ; Helmke, Christophe ; Hermes, Bernard ; Koszkul, Wiesław ; Ting, Carmen ; Bishop, Ronald L. ; Bojkowska, Dorota. / Political Alliances and Trade Connections Observed in the Ceramic Record of the Classic Period : The Perspective from the Maya Site of Nakum, Guatemala. In: Ancient Mesoamerica. 2020 ; Vol. 31, No. 3. pp. 461-475.

Bibtex

@article{1de9adda505d4873bbb3e6b7ca9e5818,
title = "Political Alliances and Trade Connections Observed in the Ceramic Record of the Classic Period: The Perspective from the Maya Site of Nakum, Guatemala",
abstract = "Recent research carried out at the Maya site of Nakum, located in northeastern Guatemala, has brought about the discovery of a large collection of ceramic artefacts. This substantial assemblage, apart from monochrome ceramics, includes fragments of polychrome vessels that are decorated with elaborate iconographic scenes and painted hieroglyphic texts. Most of them date to the Late Classic period (ca. a.d. 600–800), which represents the peak of the pre-Columbian Maya civilization. The style of these ceramics, their iconography and accompanying glyphic texts, supplemented in many cases by mineralogical and physicochemical analyses of the ceramic samples, indicate that Nakum was part of a broad and complex network of political and economic interactions between various sites and polities of the southern Maya lowlands in the Classic period. During the first part of the Late Classic period, Nakum seems to maintain close relations with Naranjo, probably serving as its vassal at least from the reign of its renowned king Aj Wosal. After the victory of Tikal over Naranjo in the first part of the eighth century, Nakum shows closer cultural and political connections with Tikal. Nevertheless, towards the end of the Classic era, when we observe the profound collapse of lowland Maya civilization, Nakum elites gain political independence from their former overlords.",
author = "Jaros{\l}aw {\'Z}ra{\l}ka and Christophe Helmke and Bernard Hermes and Wies{\l}aw Koszkul and Carmen Ting and Bishop, {Ronald L.} and Dorota Bojkowska",
year = "2020",
doi = "10.1017/S0956536120000152",
language = "English",
volume = "31",
pages = "461--475",
journal = "Ancient Mesoamerica",
issn = "0956-5361",
publisher = "Cambridge University Press",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Political Alliances and Trade Connections Observed in the Ceramic Record of the Classic Period

T2 - The Perspective from the Maya Site of Nakum, Guatemala

AU - Źrałka, Jarosław

AU - Helmke, Christophe

AU - Hermes, Bernard

AU - Koszkul, Wiesław

AU - Ting, Carmen

AU - Bishop, Ronald L.

AU - Bojkowska, Dorota

PY - 2020

Y1 - 2020

N2 - Recent research carried out at the Maya site of Nakum, located in northeastern Guatemala, has brought about the discovery of a large collection of ceramic artefacts. This substantial assemblage, apart from monochrome ceramics, includes fragments of polychrome vessels that are decorated with elaborate iconographic scenes and painted hieroglyphic texts. Most of them date to the Late Classic period (ca. a.d. 600–800), which represents the peak of the pre-Columbian Maya civilization. The style of these ceramics, their iconography and accompanying glyphic texts, supplemented in many cases by mineralogical and physicochemical analyses of the ceramic samples, indicate that Nakum was part of a broad and complex network of political and economic interactions between various sites and polities of the southern Maya lowlands in the Classic period. During the first part of the Late Classic period, Nakum seems to maintain close relations with Naranjo, probably serving as its vassal at least from the reign of its renowned king Aj Wosal. After the victory of Tikal over Naranjo in the first part of the eighth century, Nakum shows closer cultural and political connections with Tikal. Nevertheless, towards the end of the Classic era, when we observe the profound collapse of lowland Maya civilization, Nakum elites gain political independence from their former overlords.

AB - Recent research carried out at the Maya site of Nakum, located in northeastern Guatemala, has brought about the discovery of a large collection of ceramic artefacts. This substantial assemblage, apart from monochrome ceramics, includes fragments of polychrome vessels that are decorated with elaborate iconographic scenes and painted hieroglyphic texts. Most of them date to the Late Classic period (ca. a.d. 600–800), which represents the peak of the pre-Columbian Maya civilization. The style of these ceramics, their iconography and accompanying glyphic texts, supplemented in many cases by mineralogical and physicochemical analyses of the ceramic samples, indicate that Nakum was part of a broad and complex network of political and economic interactions between various sites and polities of the southern Maya lowlands in the Classic period. During the first part of the Late Classic period, Nakum seems to maintain close relations with Naranjo, probably serving as its vassal at least from the reign of its renowned king Aj Wosal. After the victory of Tikal over Naranjo in the first part of the eighth century, Nakum shows closer cultural and political connections with Tikal. Nevertheless, towards the end of the Classic era, when we observe the profound collapse of lowland Maya civilization, Nakum elites gain political independence from their former overlords.

U2 - 10.1017/S0956536120000152

DO - 10.1017/S0956536120000152

M3 - Journal article

VL - 31

SP - 461

EP - 475

JO - Ancient Mesoamerica

JF - Ancient Mesoamerica

SN - 0956-5361

IS - 3

ER -

ID: 254483135