Kabah (Maya site)
Kabah is south of Uxmal, connected to that site by an 18 kilometres (11 miles) long raised causeway 5 metres (16 feet) wide with monumental arches at each end. Kabah is the second largest ruin of the Puuc region after Uxmal.
The site is on
Kabah was declared a Yucatán state park in 1993.[1]
History
The name Kabah or Kabaah was first suggested by
The area was inhabited from the mid-3rd century BCE. Most of the architecture now visible was built between the 7th century and 11th centuries CE. J. E. S. Thompson used a sculpted doorjamb from Structure 2C6 to suggest the date of the ruin to be 879 CE, probably around the city's apex.[2] Another inscribed date found at the site is one of the latest carved in the Maya Classic style, in 987 CE.[1]
Architecture
The most famous structure at Kabah is the "Palace of the Masks", the façade decorated with hundreds of stone masks of the long-nosed
Masks of the rain god abound on other structures throughout the site.
The site also has a number of other palaces, low stone buildings, and step pyramid temples. While most are in the
The first detailed account of the ruin was published by John Lloyd Stephens and Frederick Catherwood in 1843.[1]
Northwest Group
The Northwest group consists of structures 1A1 and 1A2, a hilltop group with several smaller ancillary structures resting on the crest of the ridge at the western edge of the site. The group looks over the city to the east and directly faces the principal pyramid temple (Structure 1B2).[2]
West Group
The West Group consists of Structures 1A7 and 1A8 as well as the Court of Structures 2A1, consisting of Structures 2A1, 2A2, and 2A3.[2]
East or Palace Group
The East Group consists of Structures 2B1-3, Structures 2C1, 4, and 5, and Structures 2C2, 2C3, 2C6, and 2C7. This is the largest and presumably most important group of structures at Kabah.[2] These buildings are also the best preserved. The primary orientation of the assemblage is toward the west, looking over the central part of the city, and at the Northwest and West Groups on the western ridge with its main approach being from the west.[2]
Various Other Groups
There are many other groups that exist outside of the central core area. These groups include Structures 1A3-6, Structures 1B2, 1B3, and 1C1-3, and lastly, Structure 3B1.[2]
Miscellaneous Sculptures and Monuments
The miscellaneous sculptures include M1 through M7 which are various pieces of what were once statues that seem to depict people, possibly deities or rulers.[3] M1 is perhaps the most noteworthy, being the sculpture often referenced by the archaeologists who named the site as it appears to be a clenched hand which led to the name “Kabah”.[2] The site also has a number of altars, low stone buildings, and step pyramid temples. While most of the architecture and sculptures are in the Puuc Maya style, some show Chenes elements.[1] The site had a number of sculpted panels, lintels, and doorjambs, most of which have been removed to museums elsewhere. Kabah boasts more large monumental structures than any other site in the Puuc region.[2]
Research
In 1955, Karl Ruppert and A. Ledyard Smith lead a research expedition of sites within a 20-km radius of the ruins of Mayapan in order to compare the house types of those sites with those of Mayapan and to find the extent of the Mayapan type.[4] Kabah was one of a few other sites surveyed in order to obtain data on their house types. All structures investigated in Kabah were either of the single-room type, with a doorway in one wall, or were a series of adjoining single rooms each with its separate doorway.[4] Many well-cut reused stones were seen in the walls, which now stand about 40 cm (16 in) high. Some houses were situated on terraces supporting a ceremonial group; others were apart from ceremonial buildings. They occurred in groups of two, three, and four, as well as singly, sometimes on raised areas. Two architectural groups were located close to chultuns.[4]
Microbial biofilms have been found degrading stone buildings at Uxmal and Kabah. Phototrophs such as Xenococcus are found more often on interior walls. However stone degrading Gloeocapsa and Synechocystis were also present in large numbers.[3]
Gallery
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The Arch of Kabah
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Detail of stonework, building 2A1
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The "Palace"
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Tunnel under the stairs
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Pillars and galleries
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General view
References
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Kabáh :: The Mayan Kingdom
- ^ ISBN 9780873656931.
- ^ S2CID 25345460.
- ^ ISBN 9781607321590.
External links
- Kabah on MayaInfo.org with photos
- Kabáh on sci.mus.mn.us more photos
- Kabáh :: The Mayan Kingdom A photographic web-book on the Maya
- Kabah web site at Reed College. Over 300 19th - 21st century photographs of Kabah.
- Kabah And Codz Poop Photo Essay