Tuesday, November 6, 2012

Post 1 Script



Script for tour

 

 

I am writing a script for a tour bus operator, and it will be different than any tour the operator now offers. Instead of just being a bus tour to the ruins of some abandoned city, it will be like an Indiana Jones adventure.  The tour operator’s guide on the bus will narrate the tour as though the tourists are archeologists searching for evidence to discover why the ancient Mayans mysteriously abandoned this city, and show where they went afterward.

The guide will repeat for the tourists a folklore tale a Mayan villager told to a tourist in 2003.  According to that tale “evil spirits live here”, at a pyramid.  That tourist was an author who had written a book about folklore, and he recognized that this Mayan folklore tale held a scrap of truth in it (he says all folklore tales do).  He believed that tale held the answer to the Mayan Mystery of why those ancient people abandoned their cities a thousand years ago.   This author returned to Belize four times, searching for the scrap of truth in that tale.  He found it, and he wrote a book telling the story of his search and what he discovered about the abandonment of the cities.

The guide will show the tourists the book this author wrote, and explain that on this tour they will pretend they are taking an Indiana Jones style adventure.  They will be given hints so they can look for the clues the author found.  At the end of the tour, the tourists will tell the guide what they discovered, and they will try to solve the Mayan Mystery themselves. 

The guide will then briefly summarize the discoveries the author describes in his book, and will say they can buy the book and follow the author all the way through his search.

The tour is called ‘Mayan Mystery Tour’, and will be far different than a normal bus trip to the ruins of an abandoned Mayan city.  Do you believe many of your passengers would sign up for this mystery tour?
           
To read a summary of the book the tour guide recommends, go to the website below.  You can read the summary in five minutes or less.  After you read the summary, click the red X at the top right of the screen to return to this page.

 


 

This website needs a few corrections for links for other websites, and the changes will be made in a couple of weeks, but the summary is correct.


 

Post 2 Greeting



The Greeting

 

Welcome to the Mayan Mystery Tour.

 

Have you ever wanted to be an archeologist like Indiana Jones, and explore ancient Mayan pyramids and the ruins of cities that were abandoned a thousand years ago for the jungle to take over? 

 

(Ask some of the tourists to respond.  If someone says “Yes’ the guide can say “Are you sure, an archeologist’s life is in ruins, you know,” and hope they laugh.)

 

Today is your lucky day, today that dream comes true.  The Indiana Jones adventures were in Belize, you know.  Today you will be an archeologist assistant for MayaLand Belize, and we will search the ancient Mayan city of Altun Ha, trying to discover clues that will help us understand the reason the Mayan cities were abruptly abandoned a thousand years ago and the people never returned to them, not even to retrieve their valuables or their tools or cook pots they left behind.

 

(At this time, guide will pass out MayaLand archeologist-for-a-day certificate.  It will give the address of  MayaLand website, so it is actually an advertisement.  The tourist will probably take it home and show to friends when they ask how the trip was.  If the tourist says good things about this tour, perhaps it will lead to additional people taking this tour, or it could lead this tourist to return by air on next year’s vacation to take a longer Mystery tour.)

 

(The guide will be describing places of interest as the bus passes them, same as without this script.  When a break comes and the guide has time available, then work in the following information about history of the Mayans.  This script does not replace the normal tour narrative.  This script adds to it history not known by most people, it prepares the tourist to understand what they will be seeing, and it ties this tour to the book, Mayan Mystery Unveiled, which the tourist can purchase if they want to read a longer adventure tour in great detail.)
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                       

Post 3 Mayan Empire



                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                     

What was the Mayan Empire?


 

When we visit the abandoned Mayan pyramids and review the amazing achievements of these mysterious people, we may wonder about the origin of the Mayans. How did they assemble their great empire by connecting together many cities, and what happened to cause these people to abruptly abandon their magnificent cities, and where did they go afterward.   Our understanding of these people is far from complete, research into the history and life of the Maya is still in its infancy.  That’s why archeologists like us are still studying it.

We have recognized the Mayan achievements in architecture, art, city planning, government organization, agricultural science, mathematics (they understood the concept of zero, the ancient Greeks did not), and astronomy, to name a few.  They developed a calendar that was the most accurate in the world, and still has not been surpassed. This brief summary I give you today is not an attempt to provide a detailed description of all known facts, it is merely an introduction to help you understand what you are seeing when you visit the Mayan ruins in Belize.

The Mayan Empire suddenly appeared in the jungle lowlands of Guatemala and Belize about 380 BC, stretched from what is now Honduras, south of Belize, to the northern tip of the Yucatan in Mexico and lasted until after the year 1000 AD.  Then the cities were abandoned, one after another, until only a few remained in Mexico when the Spanish arrived.   Like most empires, the Mayan empire seems to have been created by conquest, one kingdom after another was conquered and brought under the central control. 

Let’s begin our search for the origin of the empire by looking at several theories for how these native people arrived in Central America.

A large religious group centered in the western United States holds the belief that native Americans (called Indians) descended from an ancient group of Hebrews who became disenchanted with the leadership of their faith.  According to sacred documents of this religious group, these ancient Hebrew people believed their leaders had deviated from the true beliefs and practices of their faith, so they set off in search of a new land where they could practice their religion in its true form and they found that land in America.  According to that religious group, these ancient Hebrews were the original Americans, the Mayans and American Indians were their descendants.

Like many religious beliefs, this theory has been proven false by science, especially by DNA testing that indicates most native Americans migrated from Asia, with the exception of a few that trace back to Europe.  In physical appearance, Mayans look much like people from southeast Asia.

The generally accepted theory of how they migrated from Asia takes us back to the Ice Age, when the arctic ice cap expanded southward and formed a bridge over the Bering Sea between Asia and North America.  According to that theory, the Asians walked across to Alaska, then spread all the way to South America.

A variation of that theory involves the way they traveled, they may not have walked.  Some Asians were fishermen, and they would have traveled by boat, they would have sailed along the edge of the land and the ice and gone ashore occasionally to hunt and to exercise their legs.  Traveling by boat would have enabled them to move long distances much more quickly and carry their tools and possessions to their new homeland.  When they reached a climate similar to the one they had left, they would settle.  They would find that suitable climate in Central America.  From their settlements along the Pacific coast, they would spread eastward to the land that became the site of the Mayan empire.

You choose the theory you prefer.

The theory of traveling by boat along the edge of the ice also accounts for some native American DNA tracing back to Europeans (as it does), because the ice sheet covered the North Atlantic as well as the Bering Sea between Asia and Alaska. People from France, for example, could have sailed along the edge of the ice to eastern Canada.

 


 


Origin of Mayan cities.


 

The ancient people would find a desirable place, such as beside a stream, and several families would build their homes close together in a village so they could help each other.  They would choose a leader, perhaps the man who was the best hunter or they thought was the wisest, but often they chose a shaman, someone who claimed that he knew how to communicate with the spirit gods, the unseen deities who controlled the unseen forces they feared, such as sickness and famine.  As the village grew into a city, this shaman became their king and their spiritual leader as well.

This king needed assistants to help him lead and govern the people, so he appointed helpers and gave them authority over his subjects.  They became the aristocrats, his overseers for the work that needed to be done.  They collected taxes for him and they helped him lead the religious services.  The king directed that the people build a palace for him, fine homes for the aristocrats and a pyramid as a place to worship their spirit gods.

Now they had cities, each with a king and a government and an official religion, and the cities did trade with each other, but they did not yet have an empire.  This apparently peaceful and laid back era of Mayan history is known as the Pre-Classic period.   Achievements came slowly.  The empire was formed later, during the creative Classic period, and researchers are still attempting to determine if some event or some person initiated the change, because it was drastic and seemed to occur suddenly.

 

 

 

 


 

Origin of Mayan empire.


 

During the Pre-Classic period, Mayan cities seemed to enjoy a peaceful coexistence, with change coming slowly.  Pyramids constructed during that era were adorned by pleasant art.  For example, a huge sculpture of a peaceful head (called a mask) is found at the Mask Temple in the old city of Lamanai.  The Classic period, when it arrived, brought much war, and the achievements came more quickly (achievements come quickly during time of war, such as rockets into space during the Cold War between the USA and USSR).  Also, the art became very violent.  For example, we know that the Mask temple in Lamanai was enlarged, and its peaceful art was covered with a layer of steps.  The purpose of art in the Classic period seemed to have become propaganda, intended to emphasize the power of the king and to intimidate any who may question his authority.  During this period, the religion became quite brutal and ritual human sacrifice became a part of their ceremonies.  This change of attitude was depicted in the art, and peaceful themes were replaced by violent.

When this Classic period ended, The Mayans mysteriously began to abandon their cities in Belize and the jungle overcame the magnificent palaces and the pyramids.  When the Spanish arrived, a few Mayan cities remained in the Yucatan area, the northern part of the Empire.

Early researchers believed that the ancient Mayans left no written records, but that is not true.  When the Spanish conquered the Mayan cities that had not yet been abandoned, they were disgusted by the brutal religious rituals.  Spanish priests saw that the Mayan documents written on paper and animal skins were filled with killing and bloody sacrifices, and they assumed that these were mostly religious documents.  They believed these documents were works of the devil and burned them.  A few survived and are now entrusted to museums in Europe.

The Spanish priests, however, did not destroy all Mayan historical records.  The ancient Mayans recorded important events on stone columns called stela that they erected in their cities, and these carvings did not show the brutal rituals so the priests did not destroy them.  When the Mayan language was decoded, these stela gave researchers an accurate description of major historic events and important people in a city.  Since the stela were authorized by the ruler, they treated him kindly, sometimes included a sculpture depicting him. 

The Maya invented a very accurate calendar and this was used by all their cities, so the records carved on stela often contained the exact date an important event occurred.  By comparing the stela of different cities, researchers could determine if some event involved more than one city and could even trace the movement of an important person from one city to another.

These stela are proving to be very useful to researchers attempting to determine the cause of the drastic change that ended the peaceful Pre-Classic period and brought in the more violent, creative Classic period.

Before the Maya, a peaceful people named the Olmec occupied Central America. These Olmec seemed to be much like the Maya, except their art showed a more peaceful existence and their achievements came slowly.  Did the Mayans conquer the Olmec and occupy their cities, or did these Olmec suddenly change and become the violent Maya?

A stela found among the ruins of an ancient city in Guatamala may answer that question, and also reveal the events that ended the Pre-Classic period and abruptly ushered in the Classic period.

 

Post 4 Periods of Empire


Beginning of the Classic period.


 

On the date of January 8, 378 AD an envoy and a band of warriors from a powerful city in the highlands of Mexico entered the city of Waka in what is now Guatemala.  His name was Fire-Is-Born, and the event was important enough that it was recorded on a stela in the city of Waka.  This envoy was welcomed by Sun-Faced-Jaguar, the ruler of Waka, and the two quickly formed an alliance.

According to a stela in the nearby city of Tikal, Fire-Is-Born arrived there on January 16, a mere 8 days later, with his band of warriors strengthened by warriors from Waka.  They swept aside the defenders and quickly conquered the city, and a stela at Tikal tells that the ruler of the city died that day, obviously murdered.  This king was replaced with a young king, and Fire-Is-Born was the overlord. 

Stela in nearby ruins of other cities indicate that Fire-Is-Born quickly moved from one  to another and gained control of the entire region, either by alliances or by conquest, and the Mayan empire began to form around the hub city of Tikal.  Each city had its own ruler, but all cities were welded together by a single, forceful religion.  As the empire grew to include distant territories, other hub cities became the centers of further growth.

A hub city in Mexico spurred growth northward from Tikal.  Copan, in present day Honduras, became a hub for growth southward.  Other cities, such as Caracol in Belize, also became hubs.  The smaller cities became vassals of the hub cities, protecting the large cities from outlying rivals and providing taxes to the hub.

The rapid growth in accomplishments began as these hub cities competed with each other for dominance of a region.  For example, the city with the largest pyramid would be viewed as the city with the most powerful god and smaller cities would want to form an alliance with a more powerful city.  The building of pyramids reached its zenith, with new layers of stone steps making older pyramids taller to show the importance of their powerful king and their god.

The previously independent Mayan cities from the jungle lowlands of Honduras to the northern Yucatan became a single empire, held together by a vicious and tyrannical religion where each city was ruled by a powerful king the people believed to be a god, assisted by his aristocrats and his priests.  This civilization dominated the region for more than 500 years, and then it began to slide into decline. Several theories have been offered for the collapse of this once-powerful empire during what we call the Post-Classic period.  

 

 

 

Post 5

The Post-Classic period.


 

This Post-Classic era stretched out until about the year 1000, when all semblances of the once-mighty Mayan empire that began in the jungles of eastern Guatemala and western Belize faded out.   When the Spanish arrived, only a few cities remained and they were on the Yucatan, far from where the empire began around the city of Tikal.

The most popular theories for the reaason the empire collapsed are war, disease, and starvation.  Some people used to believe the Spanish destroyed the Mayan empire that centered in the lowlands of Guatemala and Belize, but when researchers recognized that all the cities of these lowlands had been abandoned before the Spanish arrived, that was no longer considered a possibility.  The Spanish found villages of thatched huts, the cities with their stone palaces were mere ruins covered with jungle.

War then becomes the most likely possibility.  Researchers now recognize that the larger cities began fighting for domination of the region, but we must recognize that this theory suffers from a major flaw.  If war between the cities for domination caused the collapse, what happened to the winner?  The winning city would not have been abandoned, and the cities that had been conquered would have been made vassal states, because no profit comes from totally destroying a defeated city.  If all cities except the winner had been destroyed, then the conquering city would have no other people to dominate, no value to doing that.

Disease then becomes the most likely possibility, but the cities were abandoned over a period of hundreds of years.  A disease contagious enough to wipe out the entire population of a city would have spread quickly, and since active trade was occurring between the Mayan cities, all cities in a region would have been abandoned at the same time, and the disease would not have waited hundreds of years to spread to other regions.

Starvation would not have caused the cities to be totally abandoned and never again populated.  The Mayans developed very advanced techniques of agriculture, including irrigation, so their crops should not have totally failed.  If the population of a city had grown to where the surrounding farms could no longer feed it, then everybody would not have abandoned the city.  After enough people left the city so the food was sufficient, the remaining people would have stayed.  If a famine had caused a food shortage, when the famine ended, people would have returned.  These were marvelous cities but they were abandoned totally and abruptly, as if the residents had fled in panic, and they never returned.  People do not leave abruptly because of a famine and never return.

Which of these theories do you like, or do you want to search for another?

(Guide will ask for responses.)

An oral history tale passed down for generations in village near an abandoned city in western Belize, near Tikal, may hold the answer to this mystery.  The tale was told to an author with an interest in folklore, and he knew that every folklore tale has a scrap of truth hidden in it.  He believed this tale was based on a scrap of truth that could tell why the city was abandoned.  This author spent five years searching for that truth, and his book, Mayan Mystery Unveiled, explains what he discovered.

(Guide holds up the book). 

Could he have found something the archeologists missed during their decades of research?  That is possible.  The archeologists were excavating the ruins and looking at artifacts in search of clues.  They would not find the truth behind a folklore tale by digging holes in the dirt.


Post 5 Scrap of Truth


Search for the Scrap of Truth.


 

 

 

(The guide asks the tourists what they will look for that could help them find the answer to the Mayan Mystery, why the ancients abandoned their cities.  What do we know that can help us find the answer?)

 

1.      We know the ancient Mayans carved their history on monuments called stela.  Did you see any of these monuments?  Perhaps, but all cities do not have them.

2.      Did you see any Mayan art?  If you visit Lamanai, you will see a huge sculptured head.  Lamanai is a very old city.  Ancient people probably lived there about the time Moses led the Hebrews out of Egypt.  This head was probably carved during the Pre-Classic period.

3.      Do we know who had the power in a Mayan city?  The king had the power.  The king was a god, nobody can question what a god says or does.  He can be as demanding and cruel as he wants.

4.      How did the king get this power?  The king said he knew how to communicate with the unseen spirits, they brought rains to make crops grow and protected everybody from sickness and danger.

5.      We know who made the decisions for the city.  The king decided what was to be done, such as build a new temple or go to war, the king decided the amount of taxes people were to pay, and the king decided on the religious rituals the people must perform to honor him and to please the unseen spirits who lived at the temple.

6.      We know how the government worked.  The king chose aristocrats who supervised the people as they did the work, chose the warriors and led them into battle, and collected taxes from the people.  The king chose priests who led the religious ceremonies and made sure the people were remaining loyal to the king.

7.      What happened if someone did not obey the priests?  The unseen spirits would punish them.  If the disobedience of someone was severe, the priests would say the unseen spirits told them to take that person to the top of the temple (the pyramid) and sacrifice them in front of the crowd gathered in the plaza before the pyramid.  This was to show the people that they should always obey the priests and the king.  This was an act of intimidation by the king and priests.

 

(The guide asks the tourists if they can now imagine how the Mayan city works and if they can imagine a religious ceremony.  Ask:

 

1.       What would the king do if he wanted a better palace, or wanted more luxury for his family or his aristocrats and priests?  Obviously, he king would announce higher taxes and the aristocrats would collect them.  The priests would make sure the people obeyed.  

2.      Who lived in the cities?  The king, the aristocrats and the priests lived in the cities.  Aristocrats lived near the king, they worked for him.  Priests lived near the temple, that’s where they worked.

3.      Where did the farmers and the other commoners live?  Most of them lived in villages, the farmers lived in villages near their fields.

4.      When the cities were abandoned, who abandoned them?  Not all Mayans, only the royal family, the aristocrats and the priests lived there.

5.      What would the farmers and the other commoners do if the kings and aristocrats placed on them a burden too great for them to bear?  They would do the same as other people have done throughout history.  They would start a rebellion.   The American colonies rebelled against the king of England, the French rebelled against their king, cut off the heads of all the royalty and the aristocrats.  Can you picture the farmers and other commoners going on a rampage?  Who would be left in the city after the killing ended?  Nobody.

6.      Where would the farmers and other commoners go after a rebellion?  They would go back to their villages.  They feared the unseen spirits that lived in the pyramid and would take revenge because they killed the king and his priests.  The commoners would flee the city as quickly as they could, never come back, and would warn their children to stay away. 

7.      Can you see how the folklore tale about unseen spirits started? The national motto of Guatemala is “Live free or die!  Can you see how that motto may have started?  It became popular when Guatemala was fighting for independence from Spain, but do you see how this attitude of the people may have begun when they revolted against their Mayan dictator and his priests.

8.      Do you believe we have discovered the answer to the Mayan Mystery?

 

Post 6

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