[Aztlan] Inquistion records yeild clues to Mayan cave network
Ryan Kashanipour
rykash at hotmail.com
Fri Nov 7 18:06:08 CST 2008
Otra vez,
Let me clarify my inquiry. I am presently working with 18th-century Inquisition records that deal with medicine, healing, and witchcraft. I know a bit about the local contexts of the insitution. But, by far, the best work on Mayas in the Inquisition has been done by John Chuchiak. Chuchiak has worked on caves and cenotes, but the level of specificity indicated in this earlier post is even beyond his work. I am wondering about which Inquisition records, specifically, have yielded such direct information. Further, correlating historical texts to archaeological sites is an interesting methodology, particularly since much of the work seems to be subterranean.
Best Wishes,
Ryan
> From: rykash at hotmail.com
> To: troycabo at yahoo.com; aztlan at lists.famsi.org
> Date: Fri, 7 Nov 2008 17:28:20 +0000
> Subject: Re: [Aztlan] Inquistion records yeild clues to Mayan cave network
>
>
> Hola mayistas,
>
> This is a very curious and interesting post. Anyone have more information on this? Which Inquisition records? From when? Submerged altar? Details would be greatly appreciated.
>
> Cordialmente,
> Ryan
>
> R.A. Kashanipour
> Ph.D. Candidate
> Department of History
> The University of Arizona
>
>
> > Date: Thu, 6 Nov 2008 17:13:02 -0800
> > From: troycabo at yahoo.com
> > To: Aztlan at lists.famsi.org
> > Subject: [Aztlan] Inquistion records yeild clues to Mayan cave network
> >
> > Tzibichen Cenote, Yucatan Associated press, Nov. 5, 2008, Mexican Archaeologist Guillermo de Anda using long forgotten testimony from the Spanish Inquisition spent 5 years combing the 450 year old records of the Inquisition trials the Spaniards held against Indian "heretics" in Mexico. A network of underground chambers, roads and temples beneath farmland and jungle on the Yucatan peninsula suggests the Maya fashioned them to mimic the journey to the underworld, or Xibalba. de Anda introduced "an extremely important ingredient" by using historical records to locate and connect a series of sacred caves and link them with the concept of the Mayan road to the afterworld. Among de Anda's discoveries are a broad, perfectly paved, 100-yard underground road leading west the direction to the afterlife, a submerged temple, walled-off stone rooms, a collapsed and submerged altar with carvings
> > indicating it was dedicated to the God of death and the passage to Xibalba. Mario F. Malo
> >
> >
> >
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