Draft:Classic Period in Belize

The Classic Period of Belizean, Mayan, and Mesoamerican history began with the advent of Mayan monumental inscriptions in 250 AD, and ended with the decline of these inscriptions during the Classic Mayan Collapse in 900 AD.

Geography
During the pre-Columbian era, Belize formed part of the Mayan Lowlands of the Mayan Region of Mesoamerica. Traditionally, the first-order subdivisions of the latter follow cultural or political boundaries of Preclassic, Classic, or Postclassic civilisations, eg Mayans and Aztecs. The Mayan region of Mesoamerica is one such. It, in turn, is further subdivided physiographically into at least three regions, ie the Mayan Lowlands, Highlands, and Pacific. The first of these second-order subdivisions, which fully encompassed Belize, is still further subdivided into northern, central, and southern portions, called the Northern, Central, and Southern Lowlands. Belizean territory north of Indian Creek ie Nim Li Punit is often included within the Central Lowlands, fully encompassing five of Belize's districts, and an upper portion of Toledo. Territory south of Indian Creek, including Nim Li Punit, is often placed within the Southern Lowlands, encompassing the central and lower portions of Toledo.

Fall of El Mirador
The onset of the Classic Period in the Lowlands saw the completion of the fall and abandonment of El Mirador, which had begun in the Terminal Preclassic. Having been the pre-eminent power across the central Lowlands during the Preclassic, its collapse is thought to have been felt across this sphere of influence, possibly leading to political, economic, or social distress in previously-subordinate centres, and certainly creating a power vacuum in the central Lowlands.

Rise of Tikal
Tikal, and to a lesser extent various other Lowland states, promptly rose to prominence upon El Mirador's demise, with the former becoming 'the largest Classic city of the Peten region and among the largest of all Maya sites.' Significantly, Tikal Stela 29, likely installed by Foliated Jaguar circa 8.12.14.8.15 (ie 6 July 292 Greg), is deemed a 'hallmark' or 'the best evidence of Tikal's emergence as the capital of an independent polity,' as it portrays the king donning various important regnal symbols, most notably a double-headed serpent bar and the capital's emblem glyph.

Teotihuacan influence
From at least circa 300, Teotihuacan is thought to have begun exerting cultural, commercial, and perhaps even political influence over Tikal and the surrounding Lowlands. Their influence seems to have especially increased after 8.17.1.4.12 (ie 14 January 378 Greg), the day when Siyaj K'ak' of Teotihuacan is thought to have conquered Tikal. Post-conquest Tikal would then embark on a successful expansionist programme of military conquest and strategic royal marriages 'that would see it become the dominant power in the central Lowlands.' The 411–456 reign of Siyaj Chan K'awiil of Tikal would apparently mark both the apogee of that city's hegemony, and the complete synthesis of local and foreign traditions.

Hiatus
The late Early Classic Hiatus was a stretch of sixty years in 534 – 593 ie 9.5.0.0.0 – 9.8.0.0.0 'when few dated monuments were erected' in cities across the Central Lowlands, but most especially in Tikal, which had entered 'a time of decline and dynastic turmoil.' In particular, the 562 fall of Tikal to a Calakmul-Caracol alliance is thought to have 'plunged much of the central Lowlands into a series of wars,' thereby upsetting 'the established Lowland order' and ushering in 'a whole new era in the political development of the Mayan Lowlands.'

Late
The Late Classic is traditionally deemed the 'apogee' of Mayan civilisation.

Rise and fall of Calakmul
The power vacuum left by Tikal's conquest was swiftly filled by Calakmul, judging from extant records of their alliances and military victories scattered 'throughout the Lowlands.' The 636–686 reign of Yuknoom the Great marked the apogee of Calakmul's power. This would nevertheless be brought to an end by Jasaw Chan K'awiil I of Tikal, whose 695 conquest of Calakmul sought to restore Tikal to its former pre-eminence. This restorative programme would be completed by K'awiil I's successor, Yik'in Chan K'awiil, via a series of successful military manoeuvres in 736–744, thereby inaugurating 'the most successful k'atun in Tikal's history.'

Terminal
The Terminal Classic saw the demise of 'almost all' states in the central and southern Lowlands, even as polities in the northern reaches 'continued to prosper.' sha ch9 xx

Classes
Classic Mayan societies are known to have been stratified into at least two classes, ie the elite and common ones, with 'somewhat fluid' distinctions between these defined by descent, occupation, wealth, and accomplishments, among other factors. Most notably, elite status was typically signalled by wealth, privilege, and supernatural associations, though an emerging non-elite middle class may have later detracted from wealth as a status-marker.

Elite
The elite class constituted a small minority of the population, but have historically been the focus of Mayanist scholarship. By at least the Late Classic, the elite class are thought to have been 'internally ranked by differences in status, wealth, and power.'

Non-elite
The non-elite class constituted 'the vast majority of the population.' Despite this, they are 'not even mentioned' in Classic Mayan texts, and until the 2000s were heavily understudied by archaeologists. Archaeological findings suggest that by the Late Classic the non-elite class were considerably stratified via the emergence of a commercially prosperous 'middle class.'

Population
Average population densities of Classic Maya cities have been estimated at about 1,554 people per square mile (600 per square kilometre). Additionally, settlement studies have yielded surprisingly high mean population densities for the rural central Lowlands. Late Classic estimates for the upper Belize River Valley (surrounding Xunantunich) range from 881 to 1,360 inhabitants per square mile (340–525 per square kilometre), while those for the Paten central lakes area (surrounding Tikal) are about 518 per square mile (200 per square kilometre). The Late Classic urban-cum-rural population of the central Lowlands is thereby estimated 'in the tens of millions of people,' and thought to have constituted 'one of the world's most densely populated preindustrial societies.' The Late Classic, in particular, is thought to have marked the peak of Mayan population in the Lowlands.

Astronomy
Classic Mayan astronomy has been likened to that of the Babylonian civilisation, as contrasted with that of the likes of Kepler and Copernicus. In particular, stars, moons, and planets were thought to embody deities, and their observation was believed to aid in prophesying.

Celestial bodies studied
The sun, moon, Venus, and the North Star are known to have been heavily studied in the Classic Period. There is some evidence to suggest that Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn may also have been studied or observed.

Instruments and practice
Classic Mayan astronomers employed 'long sight lines and horizontal markers that allowed accuracy to within less than a day in fixing the synodical or apparent revolution of many celestial bodies.' Their naked-eye observatories are thought to have been placed atop elevated hills or buildings, with celestial movements noted with reference to some fixed feature on the horizon. For instance, Copan Stela 10 (on an eastern hilltop) is thought to have formed part of an east-west sight line, with Stela 12 employed as the corresponding fixed feature on the western horizon, as these align with annual sunsets on 12 April. Similarly, the notable E Groups in various Classic sites (first discovered in Uaxactun) are thought to have each formed three east-west sight lines possibly used 'to mark the positions of equinoxes and solstices' (via solar alignment on 21 March, 21 June, 23 September, and 21 December).

Time-keeping
Classic Mayan time-keeping has been described as 'a sophisticated system of arithmetic and a series of complex calendars' producing 'endless cycles of time' which were employed by aristicratic and priestly classes for 'both mystical and practical purposes.'

Units
The basic calendrical unit employed was the k'in ie the solar day. These were progressively composed, usually in vigesimal steps, into further calendrical units as follows.

Cycles
The various calendrical units were further composed into several cyclical counts, with the 260-day almanac, the 365-day year, and 52-year Calendar Round (all common to Mesoamerica) being the most popular during the Classic Period.

Distance dates
Classic monumental inscriptions often record dates by giving a Long Count base-date and thereafter providing distance numbers ie the number of days to be counted forwards or backwards from said base-date so as to reach the desired date. This is thought to have made chiselling easier, as a single (but cumbersome) Long Count date could thereby be used to easily furnish numerous other dates. For instance, the Quirigua Monument 6 Stela F records a Long Count base-date of 9.16.10.0.0 (ie AD 15 March 761 Greg), and later provides a distance number in the form of an earlier Calendar Round date of 1 Ajaw 13 Yaxk'in, resulting in a well-specified date of over 90 million years ago without incurring the cost of chiselling a further Long Count date.

Period-ending dates
Late Classic monumental inscriptions also record k'atun end-dates by providing only one-fifths of the Long Count date (ie the k'atun number) together with the full Calendar Round date. For instance, the Long Count date of 9.16.0.0.0 (ie AD 7 May 751 Greg, marking the end-date of the sixteenth k'atun) might rather be inscribed as k'atun 16 2 Ajaw 13 Sek.

Record-keeping
Classic Mayan record-keeping has been deemed 'the most detailed' out of all such Amerindian traditions, leading to an extant corpus that, though fragmented, 'is far and away the most extensive and data rich of any Native American society.' Records were kept both on durable media, like stone and ceramic, and on non-durable media, like bark-paper. Many examples of the former are extant and legible, while none the latter have survived in legible form.

Contents of records
Until the late 20th century, most Mayanists thought Classic records 'were devoted entirely to astronomy, astrology, and calendrics, in spite of [Spanish] colonial accounts that spoke of pre-Columbian Maya histories, genealogies, medical texts, and treatises on plants and animals.' With the decipherment of the Mayan script, epigraphists discovered Classic records dealing with historical events, including 'birth, death, establishment, conquest, destruction, and other fundamentals of individual and social existence,' similarly to Old World records.

Language of records
Classic records from the Mayan Lowlands, which represent the bulk of the surviving corpus from the period, are widely thought to have been written 'in a courtly or prestigious form of Ch'olan,' the ancestral Mayan language of present-day Ch'olti' and Ch'orti' languages.

Ceramics
The Preclassic–Classic transition in the ceramic traditions of the Lowlands and wider Mayan Region is traditionally marked by the widespread adoption of polychrome pottery, especially that decorated with red-and-black geometric motifs in bands laid over an orange or cream base.

Economy
Our understanding of Classic Mayan economy 'is far from complete,' with our only extant records on commerce being 'a few graphic depictions of tribute goods on Classic period pottery and the Bonampak murals, the [Classic] Mayan inscriptions [being] generally silent on economic subjects.' sha ch11 xx

A consensus holds among scholars that kings 'commanded a sizeable workforce through corvee labour and controlled much of the produciton and trade in presige goods,' but there is debate regarding the 'extent of their management of the production and distribution of food and other necessities of everyday life.' For instance, while there is little evidence to suggest that the state regulated farming to any significant degree (except in Caracol), there is 'good evidence' that it likely regulated trade in foodstuffs via control of the capital's marketplaces. Additionally, access to regional riverine and coasting trade were assiduously regulated and taxed by strategically located states. In the central Lowlands, for instance, Tikal, Calakmul, and El Mirador are each thought to have become wealthy 'largely because of their location, which commanded east-west trade routes across the Peten.' Similarly, access to rare resources in widespread demand is thought to have been tightly controlled by nearby centres, like Colha, which monopolised the good-quality flint in their environs.

Astrology
There is some evidence to suggest the Classic Period use of a zodiac of thirteen signs or houses, each embodied by an animal, ie those recorded in pages 23 and 24 of the Paris Codex.

Cosmology
Classic Mayan cosmology approached that of medieval Europeans, with 'the earth as the centre of [a] universe governed by supernatural powers.' Their world was 'as an ordered place, controlled by an array of deities' personified in celestial bodies (sun, moon, planets, stars). Good fortune and order held while the gods were pleased with the people, whereas misfortune and unpredictable events were 'explained as the actions of vengeful deities expressing their displeasure with human failings' to observe prescribed rituals and make appropriate offerings. Cycles of time, as marked by the predictable movements of celestial gods, held a place of 'central importance in the world order.' That is, 'in the ancient Mayan scheme of things, time itself was animate and provided the fundamental order for the universe.'

Religion
Classic Mayan religion is thought to have emerged from ancient shamanistic tradition, which 'can be traced back to Asia and probably arrived in the Americas with the first migrants into this new continent.' The earliest Mayan priests are thought to have been specialised or elite shamans, devoted 'to the management of the calendar to maintain the world order, public divination, and other rituals performed to ensure success and prosperity.' As Mayan society grew more complex, religion and the clergy became institutionalised, with priests differentiating themselves from shamans by exclusive recruitment from the elite class, literacy and the development of codified esoteric knowledge, and a monopoly on 'the performance of rituals for the state.' This fusion of church and state was further personified in the divine king, whose 'spectatular public ceremonies' and private blood sacrifices were aimed to 'inspire awe and obedience in the populace,' protect subjects from misfortune, divine the will of gods (and thus the future), ensure the success of the state, and maintain the cosmos itself.

State
The size and nature of Classic states remain uncertain, with proposals ranging from a few regional-scale entities administered by centralised governments, to a multitude of small city-states with local government.

The head of state and government of Classic city-states was the k'uhul ajaw or divine king, though these were sometimes beholden to foreign over- or high kings ie especially powerful patron kings in a patron–client relationship. Sovereigns usually held absolute temporal authority, notably including authority to tax or claim tribute of subjects and subordinate states or settlements, to claim corvée labour, to conduct affairs with other states, to preside over ritual sacrifices of prisoners of war, and sometimes further including authority to regulate the production and distribution of certain commodities. Further, a 'mantle of supernatural sanctions protected all of these powers,' as a sovereign's divine right to rule was commonly accepted and assiduously fostered by royal houses. On the other hand, sovereigns were commonly held responsible for engaging and appeasing the many deities of the Mayan pantheon, as this was thought necessary for the good order and fortune of the state and the wider universe.

A sovereign's court or privy council is thought to have almost always been constituted by members of the royal house or other elite families. Candidates may have included the heir apparent, various lords and ladies, and other non-titled elites. The council in particular is thought to have been 'an ancient institution, with roots as far back as the Preclassic.' Whereas the office of divine kingship peaked in the Late Classic and crumbled in the Terminal, 'the power of these governing councils increased, even becoming the ultimate authority in some polities during the Postclassic.'

Other offices of state included military and ecclesiastical ones. At the top of the military hierarchy (other than the sovereign) were two war captains, one hereditary and one appointed to office for three year periods, both of whom 'discussed the affairs of war and put them in order.' Heading the ecclesiastical order was a high priest, charged with advising the king, keeping sacred books, training new priests, and appointing them to their respective parishes.

Relations
Differences in 'resources, wealth, and military forces clearly made some kings [and their city-states] far more powerful than others' in the Lowlands, with the sovereigns of Tikal and Calakmul explicitly recognised 'as overlords by a number of rulers of less-powerful polities,' like Caracol. Even as these regional powers waged wars over centuries to dominate the Lowlands, peripheral states 'attempted with varying degrees of success to avoid direct involvement in this conflict, while conducting their own versions of power politics to maintain or increase their wealth and authority.' Small city-states in the Belize River Valley (like Buenavista and Cahal Pech), for instance, 'produced fine polychrome vessels in palace workshops that were used as currency to maintain alliances and trading partnerships with the royal house of Naranjo [Peten] and other kingdoms [in an attempt to avoid direct military engagement],' while those in the Mopan Valley (Peten) waged their own small game of thrones.

Warfare
Classic warfare is thought to have played an increasingly crucial role in the rise or fall of a state's wealth and power. As in the Preclassic, warfare early in the Classic Period is thought to have been limited to small-scale raids undertaken for acquire booty, tribute, and captives for labour and sacrifice, with weaker states or settlements usually targetted (rather than stronger rival states). However, as the Classic Period progressed, these limited raids morphed into large-scale, intense battles, with wars being increasingly waged for military prestige. Some of the most destructive and bloodiest examples of the latter were star wars, waged by powerful states against a rival state with the aim of conquering it, often via the capture of its sovereign.

Sites
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Scholarship
The earliest amateur work on Mayan sites in Belize, possibly Preclassic ones, is attributed to George Henderson, a Bayman, who in 1809 published 'a tantalisingly short description of mounds along the Belize River.' Site-focussed excavations were begun by Thomas Gann in 1894, and presented to the Society of Antiquaries of London on 16 May 1895. However, 'the rudimentary beginnings of archaeological research were not followed by similar efforts in Belize for a good many years,' ie until 1925–1939 work by the British Museum, the Carnegie Institution, Field Museum, and J. E. S. Thompson, among others.