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The Postclassic to Spanish-Era Transition in Mesoamerica: Archaeological Perspectives PDF

274 Pages·2005·23.207 MB·English
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The Postclassic to Spanish-Era Transition in Mesoamerica The Postclassic to Spanish-Era Transition in Mesoamerica Archaeological Perspectives Edited by Susan Kepecs and Rani T. Alexander University of New Mexico Press l Albuquerque ©2005by the University ofNew Mexico Press All rights reserved.Published 2005. Printed in the United States ofAmerica 09 08 07 06 05 1 2 3 4 5 Library ofCongress Cataloging-in-Publication Data The postclassic to Spanish-era transition in Mesoamerica : archaeological perspectives / edited by Susan Kepecs and Rani T.Alexander. p.cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. isbn 0-8263-3739-2(cloth :alk.paper) 1. Indians ofCentral America—Antiquities. 2. Excavations (Archaeology)—Central America. 3. Central America—Antiquities. I.Kepecs,Susan,1946– II.Alexander,Rani T.,1962– F1434.P682005 972.8’01—dc22 2005015321 Book and jacket design and typography by Kathleen Sparkes This book was typeset using Minion 10/13;2column 17p7 The display type is the Univers family Contents FOREWORD Matthew Restall xi ONE The Postclassic to Spanish-Era Transition in Mesoamerica: An Introduction Rani T.Alexander and Susan Kepecs 1 TWO The Aztec Palace under Spanish Rule: Disk Motifs in the Mapa de México de 1550 (Uppsala Map or Mapa de Santa Cruz) Susan Toby Evans 13 THREE Consumption and the Varied Ideologies of Domination in Colonial Mexico City Enrique Rodríguez-Alegría 35 FOUR The Basin of Mexico A.D. 1450–1620: Archaeological Dimensions Thomas H.Charlton,Cynthia L.Otis Charlton, and Patricia Fournier García 49 FIVE From Imperial Core to Colonial Periphery: The Lake Pátzcuaro Basin 1400–1800 Helen Perlstein Pollard 65 SIX The Consequences of Spanish Colonial Rule for the Indigenous Peoples of Chiapas, Mexico Janine Gasco 77 SEVEN On the Margins of Peripheries: The Consequences of Differential Incorporation in the Colonial Southwest Mark T.Lycett 97 EIGHT Mayas, Spaniards, and Salt: World Systems Shifts in Sixteenth-Century Yucatán Susan Kepecs 117 NINE Sixteenth- and Seventeenth-Century Maya Political Geography in Central Petén, Guatemala Don S.Rice and Prudence M.Rice 139 TEN Isla Cilvituk and the Difficulties of Spanish Colonization in Southwestern Campeche Rani T.Alexander 161 ELEVEN Postcolonial Conquest of the Southern Maya Lowlands, Cross-Cultural Interaction, and Lacandon Maya Culture Change Joel W.Palka 183 REFERENCES CITED 203 CONTRIBUTORS 253 INDEX 255 Figures 2.1 The tecpan-calliglyph 14 2.2 Changing political organization in central Mexico 15 2.3 Tenochtitlán–Mexico City:Codex Osunatecpan 17 2.4 Tlatelolco:Códice del tecpan Santiago Tlatelolcotecpan 18 2.5 Tenochtitlán:Motecuzoma’s tecpan 20 2.6 Mapa de México,about 1550 21 2.7 Mapa de México,Sectors I and II 22 2.8 Mapa de México,Sectors III and IV 28 2.9 Mapa de México,Sector VI 29 2.10 Mapa de México,Sectors V,VIII,and IX 31 2.11 Mapa de México,Sectors VII,X,and XI 32 3.1 Map ofthe Centro Histórico ofMexico City 40 3.2 Majolica sherds excavated by the Programa de Arqueología Urbana 42 3.3 Red Ware sherds excavated by the Programa de Arqueología Urbana 43 4.1 Basin ofMexico with relevant sites 51 4.2 Eastern Teotihuacán Valley with Otumba and dependencies 53 5.1 The Tarascan empire 67 5.2 Late Postclassic settlements listed in documentary sources 68 5.3 Late Postclassic settlements from archaeological survey 69 6.1 Location ofstate ofChiapas in southern Mexico 78 6.2 Map ofChiapas 79 6.3 Linguistic map ofChiapas 80 6.4 Map ofa portion ofChiapas highlands 85 7.1 The location ofNew Mexico in northern New Spain 98 7.2 The Rio Grande Valley 104 7.3 San Pedro,feature map 108 7.4 San Pedro,feature associated with copper production in plan and section 110 vii 8.1 Chikinchel in Yucatán 119 8.2 The Late Postclassic world system 123 8.3 The Chan Tzucub 125 8.4 Chikinchel in the Late Postclassic 127 8.5 Emal 128 8.6 Tases paste groups at Loche,San Fernando Aké,and Emal 130 8.7 Chikinchel in the Transitional Era 131 8.8 The Maya economic world,ca.1540–1640 134 9.1 Mapped Postclassic and Colonial period sites in the central Petén Lakes region 142 9.2 Late seventeenth-century Maya political territories in the central Petén Lakes region 143 9.3 The peninsular site ofNixtun-Ch’ich’in the western basin of Lake Petén Itzá 145 9.4 Sixteenth- and seventeenth-century Maya language distribution 151 10.1 Location ofthe study area 163 10.2 Ecological zones in southwestern Campeche 168 10.3 Site plan ofIsla Cilvituk 169 10.4 A sector at Isla Cilvituk 171 10.5 Site setting 174 10.6 Sahcabchén,eighteenth-century church interior 177 10.7 Sahcabchén,earlier chapel,possibly seventeenth century 178 10.8 Sahcabchén,Noria 178 11.1 Map ofthe southern Maya Lowlands and archaeological sites 186 11.2 Lacandon ceramics from El Caobal,Petén 190 11.3 Lacandon chert blades and arrowheads 191 11.4 Lacandon trade goods from El Caobal 192 11.5 God pot from El Mangal 194 11.6 Ceramics from La Palmera,Petén 195 11.7 Chert artifacts from La Palmera 195 11.8 Trade items from La Palmera 196 11.9 Metal artifacts from La Palmera 196 viii Tables 2.1 Architectural forms ofthe Mapa de México 23 2.2 Mapa de Méxicobuildings with disk friezes,by sector 24 3.1 Cross tabulation ofceramic ware per house in the PAUsites 45 4.1 Population changes a.d.1521–1620:Basin ofMexico 52 4.2 Population changes a.d.1521–1620:Otumba city-state 57 5.1 Phases ofthe Lake Pátzcuaro Basin 70 5.2 Population history ofthe Lake Pátzcuaro Basin 1500–1750 73 7.1 Missions established among the Rio Grande Pueblos during the seventeenth century 105 7.2 Excavated mission sites discussed in the text 107 10.1 Distribution ofstructure types,their area,and volume by spatial sector 172 11.1 Quantities and densities ofartifacts from El Caobal 193 11.2 Quantities and densities ofartifacts from La Palmera 197 ix

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