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Inaugural art of Bird Jaguar IV : rewriting history at YaxchilanBardsley, Sandra Eleanor January 1987 (has links)
Monumental art of the Maya incorporates figural imagery and hieroglyphic texts to document dynastic and mythical history. One particular monument tells us that near the end of April in 752 A.D., Bird Jaguar IV was inaugurated as ruler of the Mayan city now known as Yaxchilan. Investigation of his sculptural programmes reveals a multiplicity of innovative solutions for Bird Jaguar's unparalleled problems in validating a tenuous claim to rulership of Yaxchilan. It appears that in order to compensate for his insufficient genealogical claim, Bird Jaguar fabricated a series of ritual events which proclaimed his political legitimacy.
This study examines the intended integration of two parallel systems of communication: the visual and hieroglyphic languages of the Maya. Analysis shows how Bird Jaguar's artists presented symbolic references which manipulated the past history, justified the current history, and established the future political history of Yaxchilan. / Arts, Faculty of / Art History, Visual Art and Theory, Department of / Graduate
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The verbal complex in classic-period Maya hieroglyphic inscriptions: its implications for language identification and changeWald, Robert F. 28 August 2008 (has links)
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The verbal complex in classic-period Maya hieroglyphic inscriptions : its implications for language identification and changeWald, Robert F. (Robert Francis), 1941- 16 August 2011 (has links)
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The fixed word, the moving tongue: variation in written Yucatec Maya and the meandering evolution toward unified normsBrody, Michal 28 August 2008 (has links)
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