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The Palenque mapping project: settlement and urbanism at an ancient Maya cityBarnhart, Edwin Lawrence 15 March 2011 (has links)
Not available / text
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Factors affecting the development or absence of the civil-religious hierarchy among the Tarascan and Yucatec Mayan Indians of Mexico / Civil-religious hierarchy among the Tarascan and Yucatec Mayan Indians of Mexico.Manijak, Diane January 1980 (has links)
This thesis has probed the influences of selected variables which operated to encourage the development of hierarchy among the Tarascans, but in contrast, acted to the deter any development of the hierarchy among the Mayans. Due to Tarascan successful interaction with their physical world, they developed a centralized state with formal institutions. This fact allowed the Spaniards to easily eradicate Tarascan political and religious power centers, and to replace them with Spanish contemporaries. As a defensive reaction to their complete subjugation by the Spaniards, the Tarascans molded a Spanish religious and political organization to meet their needs for the survival of their Tarascan identity.On the other hand, the Mayans were subject to the harshness of their environment in cultivating and harvesting milpa. These peasant Indians could only maintain their society in a decentralized condition whether political, religious, or social. Their heritage solely revolved around milpa cultivation. The Spaniards found it difficult to subdue them and they could never subvert the cultural core of the peasant Mayans with their religious and social institutions and values. The Mayans had no need to develop the hierarchy as a weapon against the intrusion of Spanish culture. They always found their identity, unity, and independence in their practices of milpa cultivation and ritual.
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Animal utilization by the Cozumel Maya: interpretation through faunal analysisHamblin, Nancy Lee January 1980 (has links)
No description available.
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