Tenam Puente

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

LocationChiapas, Mexico
Coordinates16°7′59″N 92°5′50″W / 16.13306°N 92.09722°W / 16.13306; -92.09722
TypeCultural
Area30 ha
Tenam Puente
Structure 7
Interactive map of Tenam Puente
LocationChiapas, Mexico
Coordinates16°7′59″N 92°5′50″W / 16.13306°N 92.09722°W / 16.13306; -92.09722
TypeCultural
Area30 ha
History
Periods3001200 AD, Classic and Early Postclassic
CulturesMaya

Tenam Puente (Tenam Puente Archaeological Zone) [1] is an archaeological site of the Maya culture located in the Balum Canan valley, in the municipality of La Trinitaria, 12 kilometers south of Comitán, Chiapas, in Mexico. It is accessed by a deviation from Federal Highway 190 that leads to La Trinitaria.

The word Tenam is a hybrid toponymic: Tenam derives from the Nahuatl tenamitl which means 'wall' or 'fortress', while the word Puente alludes to the name of an old farm existing at the beginning of the 20th century, whose land today constitutes the Francisco Sarabia ejido, where this attraction is now located.[2]

History

Although the site dates back to the classic period (between 300 and 600 AD), everything indicates that its main period of occupation corresponds to the early Postclassic (approximately between 900 and 1200 AD), when the Mayan sites of the central area were abandoned, which today occupies the department of Petén, in Guatemala.[3]

The site represents the transition from the Classic Period to the Postclassic, being one of the least studied stages of Chiapas archaeology.

It was contemporary with the splendor of the Toltec culture of Chichén-Itzá. The last date of registration of the place is around the year 874 AD.[4]

The Mayan collapse in the 9th century was far more detrimental to lowland Maya centers such as Palenque and Yaxchilán, than smaller highland centers like Tenam Puente. In fact, the highland cities that survived the initial collapse may even have benefited from the abrupt decline of their lowland competitors. Tenam Puente, as well as nearby Chinkultic, were a modest power on the western fringe of the Maya world's highlands, and appear to have survived until around 1200 AD, before finally being abandoned, for reasons that are still unclear.[5]

Trade

The strategic location of Tenam Puente allowed its inhabitants to have access to and exercise control over the route of the important commercial networks that linked the highlands of Chiapas and Guatemala with the central depression of Chiapas. The ceramic collections from the site's excavations show a very active trade with other areas far removed from the Comitán region, such as snails from the Gulf of Mexico.

On the other hand, the discovered burials show the presence of great characters to whom numerous offerings were deposited, such as vessels, jade objects (ya'ax chich'), ornaments made of shell and spine of stingray. Thanks to all these excavations, burials and explorations.

With the findings, it has been possible to confirm that Tenam Puente participated in the last stage of the Classic Mayan culture, which represents the transition to the Early Postclassic, when the metallurgy becomes stronger and objects made of alabaster appear.

Scans

Description

References

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