At the
visitors' center at Chichén Itzá there are several informative
displays including a model of the city
and this placard with a brief description of the city's history:
Chichén Itzá,
the ancient city whose name means "in the mouth at the Itzáe's
Well", was, in its time of grandeur (between 800 and 1200 A.D.),
the centre of political, religious and military power in Yucatán,
if not all of South-eastern Meso America.
In its architecture one can observe a gradual
change in style, starting with the Puuc style, also shared
with Uxmal and other sites in the Penninsula and cluminating with
the so-called Mayan Toltec style, due to the architectural
similiarities with Tula, capital of the Ancient Toltecs, and with
other sites in Central Mexico, such as Oaxaca and the Gulf Coast.
Chichén Itzá was a large city
with a great many inhabitants, distributed around the architectural
nucleii which we observe as ruins, who had a relatively easy access
to the water coming from the various caves and Cenotes of the
region.
Sign at the entrance of Chichén
Itzá
Click
on this graphic
or any of the smaller photos on this site to see enlarged drawings
and phtographs of Chichén-Itzá
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The city is
divided into two principal areas: Chichén Viejo (Old Chichén)
and Chichén Nuevo (New Chichén). Click on the green
image to see sample illustrations of each of the two areas.
Chichén Viejo
was founded about 400 A.D. by the Maya and governed by priests.
Here the architecture is characterized by many representations of
the god Chaac, the Maya rain god.
Chichén Nuevo
began about 850 A.D. with the arrival of the Itzá from Central
Mexico. The city was rebuilt by the Itzá and is charactorized
by images of the god Kukulcán, the plumed serpent. Around
1150 A.D. a new wave of Itzá took over the city and ruled
for another 150 years until Chichén Itzá was finally
overtaken by the rival city of Mayapan.
The Itzá were politically and commercially
more aggressive than the earlier Maya rulers and the city's history
under their rule was marked by many bloody battles.
Chichén Itzá was abandoned suddenly
around 1400 A.D. perhaps because of internal fighting or for lack
of food. There are many theories but nobody knows for certain.
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