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Related: About this forumAztec and Maya civilizations are household names - but it's the Olmecs who are the 'mother culture'
Aztec and Maya civilizations are household names but its the Olmecs who are the mother culture of ancient MesoamericaPublished: June 7, 2023 8.24am EDT
An extremely important 1-ton sculpture, sometimes referred to by archaeologists as an Earth Monster or Monument 9, was repatriated to Mexico from a private collection in Colorado in May 2023, according to an announcement from Mexicos Consul General in New York. The monument features the head of a front-facing creature with a gaping mouth: a supernatural being that represented the living, animate earth to an ancient culture in Central America and Mexico.
This sculpture was reportedly found at the base of a hill at Chalcatzingo, an archaeological site some 80 miles (130 kilometers) south of Mexico City, and dates to roughly 600 B.C. Chalcatzingo is closely related to Olmec culture, one of the earliest in ancient Mesoamerica.
I am an archaeologist specializing in Mesoamerica: an area that encompassed present-day southern Mexico, parts of Costa Rica and all of Guatemala, Belize, Honduras, El Salvador and Nicaragua. I have visited Chalcatzingo many times while researching the development of this rich cultural region.
Colorado Lt. Gov. Dianne Primavera, left, is shown a photograph of Monument 9 before it was returned to Mexico. AP Photo/David Zalubowski
Many scholars regard the Olmec as the mother culture of ancient Mesoamerica, a civilization where particular types of monumental architecture, sculpture and gods originated. Among the later Maya, for example, the gods of wind, rain and corn or more precisely, maize are clearly derived from the earlier Olmec culture.
Elaborate art
The Olmec heartland was in what are now the Mexican states of Tabasco and southern Veracruz, along the southern coast of the Gulf of Mexico. Much of their influence was based on economic wealth from corn.
Of Olmec art that has survived the centuries, their carved heads are particularly striking and well known. By 1000 B.C., Olmec sculptors at San Lorenzo, Mexico, had fashioned no fewer than 10 colossal heads, all over 6 feet high. Archaeologists believe these are individualized portraits of rulers, each with their own specific headdress: depictions of specific people, which is quite rare in New World art.
More:
https://theconversation.com/aztec-and-maya-civilizations-are-household-names-but-its-the-olmecs-who-are-the-mother-culture-of-ancient-mesoamerica-206380
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Aztec and Maya civilizations are household names - but it's the Olmecs who are the 'mother culture' (Original Post)
Judi Lynn
Jun 2023
OP
TlalocW
(15,624 posts)1. One of my undergrad degrees was Spanish
My university had a program that you could go on to Mexico (a professor from the department also went) for about five weeks, and he would teach any class you needed. After spending a few days in Mexico City, we went to Oaxaca where we stayed with host families. I paid extra for a side trip to Palenque, but it was the mid 90s, and once we flew into Villa Hermosa to spend the night and then catch a bus, we learned the Zapatistas were stopping buses "asking" for donations to their revolution. We decided not to chance it. There wasn't much in Villa Hermosa, but there was a zoological area that had some Olmec heads so we went there then flew back to Oaxaca.