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In Times of Trouble, the Maya Rejected Divine Kingship. This Newly Discovered Public Building Reveals How the Transition to Shared Power Unfolded

Smithsonian Magazine·Meilan Solly·about 1 month ago
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Archaeologists in northern Guatemala unearthed a colonnaded open hall that may have served as a council house, where local leaders and everyday people met to discuss political issues This colonnaded open hall—unearthed in the Maya city of Ucanal in 2024—may have been a council house. Christina Halperin Around 810 C.E., a man named Papmalil rose to power in Ucanal , a Maya city in what is now northern Guatemala. Linguistic evidence and artifacts unearthed at the site suggest he may have hailed from a Nahua-speaking community in Central Mexico, making him a “powerful outsider” at a time of great upheaval for the Maya, anthropologist Simon Martin wrote for Expedition magazine in 2024. Papmalil’s ascent coincided with the end of the Classic period , which began around 300 C.E. and is widely considered the height of Maya civilization. Now, a study published in the journal Antiquity offers new insights into this tumultuous transition.…

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