Tikal (or Tik’al according to the modern Mayan orthography) is one of the largest archaeological sites and urban centers of the pre-Columbian Maya civilization.
It is located in the archaeological region of the Petén Basin in what is now modern-day northern Guatemala.
Situated in the department of El Petén, the site is part of Guatemala’s Tikal National Park and in 1979 it was declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
Tikal was the capital of a conquest state that became one of the most powerful kingdoms of the ancient Maya.
Though monumental architecture at the site dates back as far as the 4th century BC, Tikal reached its apogee during the Classic Period, ca. 200 to 900 AD.
During this time, the city dominated much of the Maya region politically, economically, and militarily, while interacting with areas throughout Mesoamerica such as the great metropolis of Teotihuacan in the distant Valley of Mexico.
Teotihuacan – Library of Rickandria
There is evidence that Tikal was conquered by Teotihuacan in the 4th century AD.[4]
Following the end of the Late Classic Period, no new major monuments were built at Tikal and there is evidence that elite palaces were burned.
These events were coupled with a gradual population decline, culminating with the site’s abandonment by the end of the 10th century.
Tikal is the best understood of any of the large lowland Maya cities, with a long dynastic ruler list, the discovery of the tombs of many of the rulers on this list and the investigation of their monuments, temples and palaces.
Etymology
The name Tikal may be derived from ti ak’al in the Yucatec Maya language; it is said to be a relatively modern name meaning “at the waterhole”.
The name was apparently applied to one of the site’s ancient reservoirs by hunters and travelers in the region.
It has alternatively been interpreted as meaning “the place of the voices” in the Itza Maya language.
At any rate, Tikal is not the ancient name for the site but rather the name adopted shortly after its discovery in the 1840s.
Hieroglyphic inscriptions at the ruins refer to the ancient city as Yax Mutal or Yax Mutul, meaning “First Mutal”.
Tikal may have come to have been called this because Dos Pilas also came to use the same emblem glyph; the rulers of the city presumably wanted to distinguish themselves as the first city to bear the name.
The kingdom as a whole was simply called Mutul, which is the reading of the “hair bundle” Emblem Glyph seen in the accompanying photo above.
Its precise meaning remains obscure, although some scholars think that it is the hair knot of the Ahau or ruler.
Location
The closest large modern settlements are Flores and Santa Elena, approximately 64 kilometers (40 mi) by road to the southwest.
Tikal is approximately 303 kilometers (188 mi) north of Guatemala City.
It is 19 kilometers (12 mi) south of the contemporary Maya city of Uaxactun and 30 kilometers (19 mi) northwest of Yaxha.
The city was located 100 kilometers (62 mi) southeast of its great Classic Period rival, Calakmul, and 85 kilometers (53 mi) northwest of Calakmul’s ally Caracol, now in Belize.
The city has been completely mapped and covered an area greater than 16 square kilometers (6.2 sq mi) that included about 3000 structures.
The topography of the site consists of a series of parallel limestone ridges rising above swampy lowlands.
The major architecture of the site is clustered upon areas of higher ground and linked by raised causeways spanning the swamps.
The area around Tikal has been declared as the Tikal National Park and the preserved area covers 570 square kilometers (220 sq mi).
The ruins lie among the tropical rainforests of northern Guatemala that formed the cradle of lowland Maya civilization.
The city itself was located among abundant fertile upland soils and may have dominated a natural east—west trade route across the Yucatan Peninsula.
Conspicuous trees at the Tikal park include:
- gigantic kapok (Ceiba pentandra) the sacred tree of the Maya
- Tropical cedar (Cedrela odorata)
- Honduras Mahogany (Swietenia macrophylla)
Regarding the:
- fauna
- agouti
- white-nosed coatis
- gray foxes
- Geoffroy’s spider monkeys
- howler monkeys
- harpy eagles
- falcons
- ocellated turkeys
- guans
- toucans
- green parrots
and leafcutter ants can be seen there regularly.
- Jaguars
- jaguarundis
- cougars
are also said to roam in the park.
For centuries this city was completely covered under jungle.
The average annual rainfall at Tikal is 1,945 millimeters (76.6 in).
One of the largest of the Classic Maya cities, Tikal had no water other than what was collected from rainwater and stored in ten reservoirs.
Archaeologists working in Tikal during the 20th century refurbished one of these ancient reservoirs to store water for their own use.
The absence of springs, rivers, and lakes in the immediate vicinity of Tikal highlights a prodigious feat: building a major city with only supplies of stored seasonal rainfall.
Tikal prospered with intensive agricultural techniques, which were far more advanced than the slash and burn methods originally theorized by archaeologists.
The reliance on seasonal rainfall left Tikal vulnerable to prolonged drought, which is thought by some to have played a role in the Classic Maya Collapse.
The Tikal National Park covers an area of 575.83 square kilometers (222.33 sq mi).
It was created on 26 May 1955 under the auspices of the Instituto de Antropología e Historia and was the first protected area in Guatemala.
Population
Population estimates for Tikal vary from 10,000 to as high as 90,000 inhabitants, with the most likely figure being at the upper end of this range.
Because of the low salt content of the Maya diet, it is estimated that Tikal would have had to import 131 tons of salt each year, based on a conservative population estimate of 45,000.
The population of Tikal began a continuous curve of growth starting in the Preclassic Period (approximately 2000 BC – AD 200), with a peak in the Late Classic with the population growing rapidly from AD 700 through to 830, followed by a sharp decline.
For the 120 square kilometers (46 sq mi) area falling within the earthwork defenses of the hinterland, the peak population is estimated at 517 per square kilometer (1340 per square mile).
In an area within a 12 kilometers (7.5 mi) radius of the site core, peak population is estimated at 120,000; population density is estimated at 265 per square kilometer (689 per square mile).
In a region within a 25 kilometers (16 mi) radius of the site core and including some satellite sites, peak population is estimated at 425,000 with a density of 216 per square kilometer (515 per square mile).
These population figures are even more impressive because of the extensive swamplands that were unsuitable for habitation or agriculture.
However, some archaeologists, such as David Webster, believe these figures to be far too high.
Rulers
History
Preclassic
There are traces of early agriculture at the site dating as far back as 1000 BC, in the Middle Preclassic.
A cache of Mamon ceramics dating from about 700-400 BC were found in a sealed chultun, a subterranean bottle-shaped chamber.
Major construction at Tikal was already taking place in the Late Preclassic period, first appearing around 400-300 BC, including the building of major pyramids and platforms, although the city was still dwarfed by sites further north such as El Mirador and Nakbe.
At this time, Tikal participated in the widespread Chikanel culture that dominated the Central and Northern Maya areas at this time – a region that included the entire Yucatan Peninsula including northern and eastern Guatemala and all of Belize.
Two temples dating to Late Chikanel times had masonry-walled superstructures that may have been corbel-vaulted, although this has not been proven.
One of these had elaborate paintings on the outer walls showing human figures against a scrollwork background, painted in:
- yellow
- black
- pink
and red.
In the 1st century AD rich burials first appeared and Tikal underwent a political and cultural florescence as its giant northern neighbors declined.
At the end of the Late Preclassic, the Izapan style art and architecture from the Pacific Coast began to influence Tikal, as demonstrated by a broken sculpture from the acropolis and early murals at the city.
Early Classic
Dynastic rulership among the lowland Maya is most deeply rooted at Tikal.
According to later hieroglyphic records, the dynasty was founded by Yax-Moch-Xoc, perhaps in the 3rd century AD.
At the beginning of the Early Classic, power in the Maya region was concentrated at Tikal and Calakmul, in the core of the Maya heartland.
Tikal may have benefited from the collapse of the large Preclassic states such as El Mirador.
In the Early Classic Tikal rapidly developed into the most dynamic city in the Maya region, stimulating the development of other nearby Maya cities.
The site, however, was often at war and inscriptions tell of alliances and conflict with other Maya states, including:
- Uaxactun
- Caracol
- Naranjo
and Calakmul.
The site was defeated at the end of the Early Classic by Caracol, which rose to take Tikal’s place as the paramount center in the southern Maya lowlands.
The earlier part of the Early Classic saw hostilities between Tikal and its neighbor Uaxactun, with Uaxactun recording the capture of prisoners from Tikal.
There appears to have been a breakdown in the male succession by AD 317, when Lady Une’ B’alam conducted a katun-ending ceremony, apparently as queen of the city.
Tikal and Teotihuacan
The eighth king of Tikal was Chak Tok Ich’aak (Great Jaguar Paw).
Chak Tok Ich’aak built a palace that was preserved and developed by later rulers until it became the core of the Central Acropolis.
Little is known about Chak Tok Ich’aak except that he was killed on 14 January 378 AD.
On the same day, Siyah K’ak’ (Fire Is Born) arrived from the west, having passed through El Peru, a site to the west of Tikal, on 8 January.
On Stele 31 he is named as “Lord of the West”.
Siyah K’ak’ was probably a foreign general serving a figure represented by a non-Maya hieroglyph of a spear thrower combined with an owl, a glyph that is well known from the great metropolis of Teotihuacan in the distant Valley of Mexico. Spear thrower Owl may even have been the ruler of Teotihuacan.
These recorded events strongly suggest that Siyah K’ak’ led a Teotihuacan invasion that defeated the native Tikal king, who was captured and immediately executed. Siyah K’ak’ appears to have been aided by a powerful political faction at Tikal itself;[41] roughly at the time of the conquest, a group of Teotihuacan natives were apparently residing near the Lost World complex.
He also exerted control over other cities in the area, including Uaxactun, where he became king, but did not take the throne of Tikal for himself.
Within a year, the son of Spear thrower Owl by the name of Yax Nuun Ayiin I (First Crocodile) had been installed as the tenth king of Tikal while he was still a boy, being enthroned on 13 September 379.
He reigned for 47 years as king of Tikal and remained a vassal of Siyah K’ak’ for as long as the latter lived.
It seems likely that Yax Nuun Ayiin I took a wife from the pre-existing, defeated, Tikal dynasty and thus legitimized the right to rule of his son, Siyaj Chan K’awiil II.
Río Azul, a small site 100 kilometers (62 mi) northeast of Tikal, was conquered by the latter during the reign of Yax Nuun Ayiin I.
The site became an outpost of Tikal, shielding it from hostile cities further north, and also became a trade link to the Caribbean.
Although the new rulers of Tikal were foreign, their descendants were rapidly Mayanized.
Tikal became the key ally and trading partner of Teotihuacan in the Maya lowlands.
After being conquered by Teotihuacan, Tikal rapidly dominated the northern and eastern Peten.
Uaxactun, together with smaller towns in the region, were absorbed into Tikal’s kingdom.
Other sites, such as Bejucal and Motul de San José near Lake Petén Itzá became vassals of their more powerful neighbor to the north.
By the middle of the 5th century Tikal had a core territory of at least 25 kilometers (16 mi) in every direction.
Around the 5th century an impressive system of fortifications consisting of ditches and earthworks was built along the northern periphery of Tikal’s hinterland, joining up with the natural defenses provided by large areas of swampland lying to the east and west of the city.
Additional fortifications were probably also built to the south.
These defenses protected Tikal’s core population and agricultural resources, encircling an area of approximately 120 square kilometers (46 sq mi).
Tikal and Copán
In the 5th century the power of the city reached as far south as Copán, whose founder K’inich Yax K’uk’ Mo’ was clearly connected with Tikal.
Copán itself was not in an ethnically Maya region and the founding of the Copán dynasty probably involved the direct intervention of Tikal.
K’inich Yax K’uk’ Mo’ arrived in Copán in December 426 and bone analysis of his remains shows that he passed his childhood and youth at Tikal.
An individual known as Ajaw K’uk’ Mo’ (lord K’uk’ Mo’) is referred to in an early text at Tikal and may well be the same person.
His tomb had Teotihuacan characteristics and he was depicted in later portraits dressed in the warrior garb of Teotihuacan.
Hieroglyphic texts refer to him as “Lord of the West”, much like Siyah K’ak’.
At the same time, in late 426, Copán founded the nearby site of Quiriguá, possibly sponsored by Tikal itself.
The founding of these two centers may have been part of an effort to impose Tikal’s authority upon the southeastern portion of the Maya region.
The interaction between these sites and Tikal was intense over the next three centuries.
A long-running rivalry between Tikal and Calakmul began in the 6th century, with each of the two cities forming its own network of mutually hostile alliances arrayed against each other in what has been likened to a long-running war between two Maya superpowers.
The kings of these two capitals adopted the title kaloomte’, a term that has not been precisely translated but that implies something akin to “high king”.
The early 6th century saw another queen ruling the city, known only as the “Lady of Tikal”, who was very likely a daughter of Chak Tok Ich’aak II.
She seems never to have ruled in her own right, rather being partnered with male co-rulers.
The first of these was Kaloomte’ B’alam, who seems to have had a long career as a general at Tikal before becoming co-ruler and 19th in the dynastic sequence.
The Lady of Tikal herself seems not have been counted in the dynastic numbering.
It appears she was later paired with lord “Bird Claw”, who is presumed to be the otherwise unknown 20th ruler.
Late Classic
Tikal hiatus
In the mid 6th century, Caracol seems to have allied with Calakmul and defeated Tikal, closing the Early Classic.
The “Tikal hiatus” refers to a period between the late 6th to late 7th century where there was a lapse in the writing of inscriptions and large-scale construction at Tikal.
In the latter half of the 6th century AD a serious crisis befell the city, with no new stele being erected and with widespread deliberate mutilation of public sculpture.
This hiatus in activity at Tikal was long unexplained until later epigraphic decipherments identified that the period was prompted by Tikal’s comprehensive defeat at the hands of Calakmul and the Caracol polity in AD 562, a defeat that seems to have resulted in the capture and sacrifice of the king of Tikal.
The badly eroded Altar 21 at Caracol described how Tikal suffered this disastrous defeat in a major war in 562.
It seems that Caracol was an ally of Calakmul in the wider conflict between that city and Tikal, with the defeat of Tikal having a lasting impact upon the city.
Tikal was not sacked but its power and influence were broken.
After its great victory, Caracol grew rapidly and some of Tikal’s population may have been forcibly relocated there.
During the hiatus period, at least one ruler of Tikal took refuge with Janaab’ Pakal of Palenque (grandfather of K’inich Janaab’ Pakal), another of Calakmul’s victims.
The Tomb of Pacal – Library of Rickandria
Calakmul itself thrived during Tikal’s long hiatus period.
The beginning of the Tikal hiatus has served as a marker by which archaeologists commonly sub-divide the Classic period of Mesoamerican chronology into the Early and Late Classic.
Tikal and Dos Pilas
In 629 Tikal founded Dos Pilas, some 110 kilometers (68 mi) to the southwest, as a military outpost in order to control trade along the course of the Pasión River.
B’alaj Chan K’awiil was installed on the throne of the new outpost at the age of four, in 635, and for many years served as a loyal vassal fighting for his brother, the king of Tikal.
Roughly twenty years later Dos Pilas was attacked by Calakmul and was soundly defeated.
B’alaj Chan K’awiil was captured by the king of Calakmul but, instead of being sacrificed, he was re-instated on his throne as a vassal of his former enemy, and attacked Tikal in 657, forcing Nuun Ujol Chaak, the then king of Tikal, to temporarily abandon the city.
The first two rulers of Dos Pilas continued to use the Mutal emblem glyph of Tikal, and they probably felt that they had a legitimate claim to the throne of Tikal itself.
For some reason, B’alaj Chan K’awiil was not installed as the new ruler of Tikal; instead, he stayed at Dos Pilas.
Tikal counterattacked against Dos Pilas in 672, driving B’alaj Chan K’awiil into an exile that lasted five years.
Calakmul tried to encircle Tikal within an area dominated by its allies, such as El Peru, Dos Pilas and Caracol.
In 682, Jasaw Chan K’awiil erected the first dated monument at Tikal in 120 years and claimed the title of kaloomte’, so ending the hiatus.
He initiated a program of new construction and turned the tables on Calakmul when, in 695, he captured the enemy king and threw the enemy state into a long decline from which it never recovered.
After this, Calakmul never again erected a monument celebrating a military victory.
This defeat of Calakmul restored Tikal’s pre-eminence in the Central Maya region, but never again in the southwest Petén, where Dos Pilas maintained its presence.
Tikal after Teotihuacán
By the 7th century, there was no active Teotihuacan presence at any Maya site and the center of Teotihuacan had been razed by 700.
Even after this, formal war attire illustrated on monuments was Teotihuacan style.
Jasaw Chan K’awiil I and his heir Yik’in Chan K’awiil continued hostilities against Calakmul and its allies and imposed firm regional control over the area around Tikal, extending as far as the territory around Lake Petén Itzá.
These two rulers were responsible for much of the impressive architecture visible today.
In 738, Quiriguá, a vassal of Copán, Tikal’s key ally in the south, switched allegiance to Calakmul, defeated Copán and gained its own independence.
It appears that this was a conscious effort on the part of Calakmul to bring about the collapse of Tikal’s southern allies.
This upset the balance of power in the southern Maya area and lead to a steady decline in the fortunes of Copán.
In the 8th century, the rulers of Tikal collected monuments from across the city and erected them in front of the North Acropolis.
By the late 8th century and early 9th century, activity at Tikal slowed.
Impressive architecture was still built but few hieroglyphic inscriptions refer to later rulers.
Terminal Classic
By the 9th century, the crisis of the Classic Maya collapse was sweeping across the region, with populations plummeting and city after city falling into silence.
Increasingly endemic warfare in the Maya region caused Tikal’s supporting population to heavily concentrate close to the city itself, accelerating the use of intensive agriculture and corresponding environmental decline.
Construction continued at the beginning of the century, with the erection of Temple 3, the last of the city’s major pyramids and the erection of monuments to mark the 19th K’atun in 810.
The beginning of the 10th Bak’tun in 830 passed uncelebrated and marks the beginning of a 60-year hiatus, probably resulting from the collapse of central control in the city.
During this hiatus, satellite sites traditionally under Tikal’s control began to erect their own monuments featuring local rulers and using the Mutal emblem glyph, with Tikal apparently lacking the authority or the power to crush these bids for independence.
In 849, Jewel K’awiil is mentioned on a stela at Seibal as visiting that city as the Divine Lord of Tikal but he is not recorded elsewhere, and Tikal’s once great power was little more than a memory.
The sites of Ixlu and Jimbal had by now inherited the once exclusive Mutal emblem glyph.
As Tikal and its hinterland reached peak population, the area suffered deforestation, erosion and nutrient loss followed by a rapid decline in population levels.
Tikal and its immediate surroundings seem to have lost the majority of its population during the period from 830 to 950 and central authority seems to have collapsed rapidly.
There is not much evidence from Tikal that the city was directly affected by the endemic warfare that afflicted parts of the Maya region during the Terminal Classic, although an influx of refugees from the Petexbatún region may have exacerbated problems resulting from the already stretched environmental resources.
In the latter half of the 9th century there was an attempt to revive royal power at the much diminished city of Tikal, as evidenced by a stela erected in the Great Plaza by Jasaw Chan K’awiil II in 869.
This was the last monument erected at Tikal before the city finally fell into silence.
The former satellites of Tikal, such as Jimbal and Uaxactun, did not last much longer, erecting their final monuments in 889.
By the end of the 9th century the vast majority of Tikal’s population had deserted the city, its royal palaces were occupied by squatters and simple thatched dwellings were being erected in the city’s ceremonial plazas.
The squatters blocked some doorways in the rooms the reoccupied in the monumental structures of the site and left rubbish that included a mixture of domestic refuse and non-utilitarian items such as musical instruments.
These inhabitants reused the earlier monuments for their own ritual activities far removed from those of the royal dynasty that had erected them.
Some monuments were vandalized and some were moved to new locations.
Before its final abandonment all respect for the old rulers had disappeared, with the tombs of the North Acropolis being explored for jade and the easier to find tombs being looted.
After 950, Tikal was all but deserted, although a remnant population may have survived in perishable huts interspersed among the ruins.
Even these final inhabitants abandoned the city in the 10th or 11th centuries and the rainforest claimed the ruins for the next thousand years.
Some of Tikal’s population may have migrated to the Peten Lakes region, which remained heavily populated in spite of a plunge in population levels in the first half of the 9th century.
The most likely cause of collapse at Tikal is overpopulation and agrarian failure.
The fall of Tikal was a blow to the heart of Classic Maya civilization, the city having been at the forefront of courtly life, art and architecture for over a thousand years, with an ancient ruling dynasty.
Modern history
In 1525, the Spanish conquistador Hernán Cortés passed within a few kilometers of the ruins of Tikal but did not mention them in his letters.
As is often the case with huge ancient ruins, knowledge of the site was never completely lost in the region.
It seems that local people never forgot about Tikal and they guided Guatemalan expeditions to the ruins in the 1850s.
Some second- or third-hand accounts of Tikal appeared in print starting in the 17th century, continuing through the writings of John Lloyd Stephens in the early 19th century (Stephens and his illustrator Frederick Catherwood heard rumors of a lost city, with white building tops towering above the jungle, during their 1839-40 travels in the region).
Because of the site’s remoteness from modern towns, however, no explorers visited Tikal until Modesto Méndez and Ambrosio Tut, respectively the commissioner and the governor of Petén, visited it in 1848.
Artist Eusebio Lara accompanied them, and their account was published in Germany in 1853.
Several other expeditions came to further investigate, map, and photograph Tikal in the 19th century (including Alfred P. Maudslay in 1881-82) and the early 20th century.
Pioneering archaeologists started to clear, map and record the ruins in the 1880s.
In 1951, a small airstrip was built at the ruins, which previously could only be reached by several days’ travel through the jungle on foot or mule.
In 1956 the Tikal project began to map the city on a scale not previously seen in the Maya area.
From 1956 through 1970, major archaeological excavations were carried out by the University of Pennsylvania Tikal Project.
They mapped much of the site and excavated and restored many of the structures.
Excavations directed by Edwin Shook and later by William Coe of the University investigated the North Acropolis and the Central Plaza from 1957 to 1969.
The Tikal Project recorded over 200 monuments at the site.
In 1979, the Guatemalan government began a further archeological project at Tikal, which continued through to 1984.
Filmmaker George Lucas used Tikal as a setting in his first Star Wars movie, Episode IV: A New Hope, released in 1977.
Temple I at Tikal was featured on the reverse of the 50 centavo banknote.
Tikal is now a major tourist attraction surrounded by its own national park.
A site museum has been built at Tikal; it was completed in 1964.
The site
Tikal has been partially restored by the University of Pennsylvania and the government of Guatemala.
It was one of the largest of the Classic period Maya cities and was one of the largest cities in the Americas.
The architecture of the ancient city is built from limestone and includes the remains of temples that tower over 70 meters (230 ft) high, large royal palaces, in addition to a number of smaller pyramids, palaces, residences, administrative buildings, platforms and inscribed stone monuments.
There is even a building which seemed to have been a jail, originally with wooden bars across the windows and doors.
There are also seven courts for playing the Mesoamerican ballgame, including a set of 3 in the Seven Temples Plaza, a unique feature in Mesoamerica.
The limestone used for construction was local and quarried on-site.
The depressions formed by the extraction of stone for building were plastered to waterproof them and were used as reservoirs, together with some waterproofed natural depressions.
The main plazas were surfaced with stucco and laid at a gradient that channeled rainfall into a system of canals that fed the reservoirs.
The residential area of Tikal covers an estimated 60 square kilometers (23 sq mi), much of which has not yet been cleared, mapped, or excavated.
A huge set of earthworks has been discovered ringing Tikal with a 6-metre (20 ft) wide trench behind a rampart.
The 16 square kilometers (6.2 sq mi) area around the site core has been intensively mapped; it may have enclosed an area of some 125 square kilometers (48 sq mi) (see below).
Population estimates place the demographic size of the site between 10,000 and 90,000, and possibly 425,000 in the surrounding area.
Recently, a project exploring the defensive earthworks has shown that the scale of the earthworks is highly variable and that in many places it is inconsequential as a defensive feature.
In addition, some parts of the earthwork were integrated into a canal system.
The earthwork of Tikal varies significantly in coverage from what was originally proposed, and it is much more complex and multifaceted than originally thought.
Causeways
By the Late Classic, a network of sacbeob (causeways) linked various parts of the city, running for several kilometers through its urban core.
These linked the Great Plaza with Temple 4 (located about 750 meters (2,500 ft) to the west) and the Temple of the Inscriptions (about 1 kilometer (0.62 mi) to the southeast).
These broad causeways were built of packed and plastered limestone and have been named after early explorers and archaeologists; the Maler, Maudslay, Tozzer and Méndez causeways.
They assisted the passage everyday traffic during the rainy season and also served as dams.
- The Maler Causeway runs north from behind Temple I to Group H. A large bas-relief is carved onto limestone bedrock upon the course of the causeway just south of Group H. It depicts two bound captives and dates to the Late Classic.
- The Maudsley Causeway runs 0.8 kilometers (0.50 mi) northeast from Temple IV to Group H.
- The Mendez Causeway runs southeast from the East Plaza to Temple VI, a distance of about 1.3 kilometers (0.81 mi).
- The Tozzer Causeway runs west from the Great Plaza to Temple IV.
Architectural groups
The Great Plaza lies at the core of the site; it is flanked on the east and west sides by two great temple-pyramids.
On the north side it is bordered by the North Acropolis and on the south by the Central Acropolis.
The Central Acropolis is a palace complex just south of the Great Plaza.
The North Acropolis, together with the Great Plaza immediately to the south, is one of the most studied architectural groups in the Maya area; the Tikal Project excavated a massive trench across the complex, thoroughly investigating its construction history.
It is a complex group with construction beginning in the Preclassic Period, around 350 BC.
It developed into a funerary complex for the ruling dynasty of the Classic Period, with each additional royal burial adding new temples on top of the older structures.
After AD 400 a row of tall pyramids was added to the earlier Northern Platform, which measured 100 by 80 meters (330 by 260 ft), gradually hiding it from view.
Eight temple pyramids were built in the 6th century AD, each of them had an elaborate roof-comb and a stairway flanked by masks of the gods.
By the 9th century AD, 43 stele and 30 altars had been erected in the North Acropolis; 18 of these monuments were carved with hieroglyphic texts and royal portraits. The North Acropolis continued to receive burials into the Postclassic Period.
The South Acropolis is found next to Temple V.
It was built upon a large basal platform that covers an area of more than 20,000 square meters (220,000 sq ft).
The Plaza of the Seven Temples is to the west of the South Acropolis.
It is bordered on the east side by a row of nearly identical temples, by palaces on the south and west sides and by an unusual triple ball-court on the north side.
Group G lies just south of the Mendez Causeway.
The complex dates to the Late Classic and consists of palace-type structures and is one of the largest groups of its type at Tikal.
It has two stories but most of the rooms are on the lower floor, a total of 29 vaulted chambers.
The remains of two further chambers belong to the upper story.
One of the entrances to the group was framed by a gigantic mask.
Group H is centered on a large plaza to the north of the Great Plaza.
It is bordered by temples dating to the Late Classic.
There are nine Twin-Pyramid Complexes at Tikal, one of which was completely dismantled in ancient times and some others were partly destroyed.
They vary in size but consist of two pyramids facing each other on an east-west axis.
These pyramids are flat-topped and have stairways on all four sides.
A row of plain stele is placed immediately to the west of the eastern pyramid and to the north of the pyramids, and lying roughly equidistant from them, there is usually a sculpted stela and altar pair.
On the south side of these complexes there is a long-vaulted building containing a single room with nine doorways.
The entire complex was built at once and these complexes were built at 20-year (or k’atun) intervals during the Late Classic.
The first Twin Pyramid Complex was built in the early 6th century in the East Plaza.
It was once thought that these complexes were unique to Tikal, but rare examples have now been found at other sites, such as Yaxha and Ixlu, and they may reflect the extent of Tikal’s political dominance in the Late Classic.
Group Q is a twin-pyramid complex and is one of the largest at Tikal.
It was built by Yax Nuun Ayiin II in 771 in order to mark the end of the 17th K’atun.
Most of it has been restored and its monuments have been re-erected.
Group R is another twin-pyramid complex, dated to 790.
It is close to the Maler Causeway.
Structures
There are thousands of ancient structures at Tikal and only a fraction of these have been excavated, after decades of archaeological work.
The most prominent surviving buildings include six very large Mesoamerican step pyramids, labeled Temples I – VI, each of which support a temple structure on their summits.
Some of these pyramids are over 60 meters high (200 feet).
They were numbered sequentially during the early survey of the site.
It is estimated that each of these major temples could have been built in as little as two years.
The majority of pyramids currently visible at Tikal were built during Tikal’s resurgence following the Tikal Hiatus (i.e., from the late 7th to the early 9th century).
It should be noted, however, that the majority of these structures contain sub-structures that were initially built prior to the hiatus.
Temple I (also known as the Temple of Ah Cacao or Temple of the Great Jaguar) is a funerary pyramid dedicated to Jasaw Chan K’awil, who was entombed in the structure in AD 734, the pyramid was completed around 740-750.
The temple rises 47 meters (150 ft) high.
The massive roof-comb that topped the temple was originally decorated with a giant sculpture of the enthroned king, although little of this decoration survives.
The tomb of the king was discovered by Aubrey Trik of the University of Pennsylvania in 1962.
Among items recovered from the Late Classic tomb were a large collection of inscribed human and animal bone tubes and strips with sophisticated scenes depicting deities and people, finely carved and rubbed with vermilion, as well as jade and shell ornaments and ceramic vessels filled with offerings of food and drink.
The shrine at the summit of the pyramid has three chambers, each behind the next, with the doorways spanned by wooden lintels fashioned from multiple beams.
The outermost lintel is plain, but the two inner lintels were carved, some of the beams were removed in the 19th century and their location is unknown, while others were taken to museums in Europe.
Temple II (also known as the Temple of the Mask) in was built around AD 700 and stands 38 meters (120 ft) high.
Like other major temples at Tikal, the summit shrine had three consecutive chambers with the doorways spanned by wooden lintels, only the middle of which was carved.
The temple was dedicated to the wife of Hasaw Chan K’awil, although no tomb was found.
The queen’s portrait was carved into the lintel spanning the doorway of the summit shrine. One of the beams from this lintel is now in the American Museum of Natural History in New York.
Temple III (also known as the Temple of the Jaguar Priest) was the last of the great pyramids to be built at Tikal.
It stood 55 meters (180 ft) tall and contained an elaborately sculpted but damaged roof lintel, possibly showing Dark Sun engaged in a ritual dance around AD 810.
The temple shrine possesses two chambers.
Temple IV is the tallest temple-pyramid at Tikal, measuring 70 meters (230 ft) from the plaza floor level to the top of its roof comb.
Temple IV marks the reign of Yik’in Chan Kawil (Ruler B, the son of Ruler A or Jasaw Chan K’awiil I) and two carved wooden lintels over the doorway that leads into the temple on the pyramid’s summit record a long count date (9.15.10.0.0) that corresponds to C.E. 741 (Sharer 1994:169).
Temple IV is the largest pyramid built anywhere in the Maya region in the 8th century, and as it currently stands is the tallest pre-Columbian structure in the Americas although the Pyramid of the Sun at Teotihuacan may originally have been taller, as may have been one of the structures at El Mirador.
Temple V stands almost 190 feet (58 m) tall and is still covered with vegetation.
Temple VI is also known as the Temple of the Inscriptions and was dedicated in AD 766.
It is notable for its 12-meter (39 ft) high roof-comb. Panels of hieroglyphs cover the back and sides of the roof-comb.
The temple faces onto a plaza to the west and its front is unrestored.
Temple 33 is a funerary pyramid erected over the tomb of Siyaj Chan K’awiil I (known as Burial 48) in the North Acropolis.
It started life in the Early Classic as a wide basal platform decorated with large stucco masks that flanked the stairway.
Later in the Early Classic a new superstructure was added, with its own masks and decorated panels.
During the Hiatus a third stage was built over the earlier constructions, the stairway was demolished and another royal burial, of an unidentified ruler, was set into the structure (Burial 23).
While the new pyramid was being built another high-ranking tomb (Burial 24) was inserted into the rubble core of the building.
The pyramid was then completed, standing 33 meters (110 ft) tall.
Structure 34 is a pyramid in the North Acropolis that was built by Siyaj Chan K’awiil II over the tomb of his father, Yax Nuun Ayiin I.
The pyramid was topped by a three chambered shrine, the rooms situated one behind the other.
Structure 5D-43 is an unusual radial temple in the East Plaza, built over a pre-exiting twin pyramid complex.
It is built into the end of the East Plaza Ballcourt and possessed four entry doorways and three stairways; the fourth (south) side was too close to the Central Acropolis for a stairway on that side.
The building has a talud-tablero platform profile, modified from the original style found at Teotihuacan.
In fact, it has been suggested that the style of the building has closer affinities with El Tajin and Xochicalco than with Teotihuacan itself.
The vertical tablero panels are set between sloping talud panels and are decorated with paired disc symbols.
Large flower symbols are set into the sloping talud panels, related to the Venus and star symbols used at Teotihuacan.
The roof of the structure was decorated with friezes although only fragments now remain, showing a monstrous face, perhaps that of a jaguar, with another head emerging from the mouth.
The second head possesses a bifurcated tongue but is probably not that of a snake.
The temple, and its associated ball-court, probably date to the reign of Nuun Ujol Chaak or that of his son Jasaw Chan K’awiil I, in the later part of the 7th century.
Structure 5C-49 possesses a clear Teotihuacan-linked architectural style; it has balustrades, an architectural feature that is very rare in the Maya region, and a talud-tablero facade; it dates to the 4th century AD.
It is located near to the Lost World pyramid.
Structure 5C-53 is a small Teotihuacan-style platform that dates to about AD 600.
It had stairways on all four sides and did not possess a superstructure.
The Lost World Pyramid (Structure 5C-54) lies in the southwest portion of Tikal’s central core, south of Temple III and west of Temple V.
It was decorated with stucco masks of the sun god and dates to the Late Preclassic; this pyramid is part of an enclosed complex of structures that remained intact and un-impacted by later building activity at Tikal.
By the end of the Late Preclassic this pyramid was one of the largest structures in the Maya region.
It attained its final form during the reign of Chak Tok Ich’aak in the 4th century AD, in the Early Classic, standing more than 30 meters (98 ft) high with stairways on all four sides and a flat top that possibly supported a superstructure built from perishable materials.
Although the plaza later suffered significant alteration, the organization of a group of temples on the east side of this complex adheres to the layout that defines the so-called E-Groups, identified as solar observatories.
Structure 5D-96 is the central temple on the east side of the Plaza of the Seven Temples.
It has been restored and its rear outer wall is decorated with skull-and-crossbones motifs.
Group 6C-16 is an elite residential complex that has been thoroughly excavated.
It lies a few hundred meters south of the Lost World Complex and the excavations have revealed elaborate stucco masks, ballplayer murals, relief sculptures and buildings with Teotihuacan characteristics.
The Great Plaza Ballcourt is a small ball-court that lies between Temple I and the Central Acropolis.
The Bat Palace is also known as the Palace of Windows and lies to the west of Temple III.
It has two stories, with a double range of chambers on the lower story and a single range in the upper story, which has been restored.
The palace has ancient graffiti and possesses low windows.
Complex N lies to the west of the Bat Palace and Temple III.
The complex dates to AD 711.
Altars
Altar 5 is carved with two nobles, one of whom is probably Jasaw Chan K’awiil I.
They are performing a ritual using the bones of an important woman.
Altar 5 was found in Complex N, which lies to the west of Temple III.
Altar 8 is sculpted with a bound captive.
It was found within Complex P in Group H and is now in the Museo Nacional de Arqueología y Etnología in Guatemala City.
Altar 9 is associated with Stela 21 and bears the sculpture of a bound captive.
It is located in front of Temple VI.
Altar 10 is carved with a captive tied to a scaffold.
It is in the northern enclosure of Group Q, a twin-pyramid complex and has suffered from erosion.
Lintels
At Tikal, beams of sapodilla wood were placed as lintels spanning the inner doorways of temples.
These are the most elaborately carved wooden lintels to have survived anywhere in the Maya region.
Lintel 3 from Temple IV was taken to Basel in Switzerland in the 19th century.
It was in almost perfect condition and depicts Yik’in Chan K’awiil seated on a palanquin.
Stelae
Stelae are carved stone shafts, often sculpted with figures and hieroglyphs.
A selection of the most notable stele at Tikal follows:
Stela 1 dates to the 5th century and depicts the king Siyaj Chan K’awiil II in a standing position.
Stela 4 is dated to AD 396, during the reign of Yax Nuun Ayiin after the conquest of Tikal by Teotihuacan.
The stela displays a mix of Maya and Teotihuacan qualities, and deities from both cultures. It has a portrait of the king with the Underworld Jaguar God under one arm and the Mexican Tlaloc under the other.
His helmet is a simplified version of the Teotihuacan War Serpent.
Unusually for Maya sculpture, but typically for Teotihuacan, Yax Nuun Ayiin is depicted with a frontal face, rather than in profile.
Stela 5 was dedicated in 744 by Yik’in Chan K’awiil.
Stela 6 is a badly damaged monument dating to 514 and bears the name of the “Lady of Tikal” who celebrated the end of the 4th K’atun in that year.
Stela 10 is twinned with Stela 12 but is badly damaged.
It described the accession of Kaloomte’ B’alam in the early 6th century and earlier events in his career, including the capture of a prisoner depicted on the monument.
Stela 11 was the last monument ever erected at Tikal; it was dedicated in 869 by Jasaw Chan K’awiil II.
Stela 12 is linked to the queen known as the “Lady of Tikal” and king Kaloomte’ B’alam.
The queen is described as performing the year-ending rituals, but the monument was dedicated in honor of the king.
Stela 16 was dedicated in 711, during the reign of Jasaw Chan K’awiil I.
The sculpture, including a portrait of the king and a hieroglyphic text, are limited to the front face of the monument.
It was found in Complex N, west of Temple III.
Stela 19 was dedicated in 790 by Yax Nuun Ayiin II.
Stela 20 was found in Complex P, in Group H, and was moved to the Museo Nacional de Arqueología y Etnología in Guatemala City.
Stela 21 was dedicated in 736 by Yik’in Chan K’awiil.
Only the bottom of the stela is intact, the rest having been mutilated in ancient times.
The surviving sculpture is of fine quality, consisting of the feet of a figure and of accompanying hieroglyphic text.
The stela is associated with Altar 9 and is located in front of Temple VI.
Stela 22 was dedicated in 771 by Yax Nuun Ayiin II in the northern enclosure of Group Q, a twin-pyramid complex.
The face of the figure on the stela has been mutilated.
Stela 23 was broken in antiquity and was re-erected in a residential complex.
The defaced portrait on the monument is that of the so-called “Lady of Tikal”, a daughter of Chak Tok Ich’aak II who became queen at the age of six but never ruled in her own right, being paired with male co-rulers.
It dates to the early 6th century.
Stela 24 was erected at the foot of Temple 3 in 810, accompanied by Altar 7.
Both were broken into fragments in ancient times, although the name of Dark Sun survives on three fragments.
Stela 29 bears a Long Count date equivalent to AD 292, the earliest surviving Long Count date from the Maya lowlands.
The stela is also the earliest monument to bear the Tikal emblem glyph.
It bears a sculpture of the king facing to the right, holding the head of an underworld jaguar god, one of the patron deities of the city.
The stela was deliberately smashed during the 6th century or sometime later, the upper portion was dragged away and dumped in a rubbish tip close to Temple III, to be uncovered by archaeologists in 1959.
Stela 30 is the first surviving monument to be erected after the Hiatus.
Its style and iconography are similar to that of Caracol, one of the more important of Tikal’s enemies.
Stela 31 is the accession monument of Siyah Chan K’awil II, also bearing two portraits of his father, Yax Nuun Ayiin, as a youth dressed as a Teotihuacan warrior.
He carries a spear-thrower in one hand and bears a shield decorated with the face of Tlaloc, the Teotihuacan war god.
In ancient times the sculpture was broken, and the upper portion was moved to the summit of Temple 33 and ritually buried.
Stela 31 has been described as the greatest Early Classic sculpture to survive at Tikal.
A long hieroglyphic text is carved onto the back of the monument, the longest to survive from the Early Classic, which describes the arrival of Siyah K’ak’ at El Peru and Tikal in January 378.
It was also the first stela as Tikal to be carved on all four faces.
Stela 32 is a fragmented monument with a foreign Teotihuacan-style sculpture apparently depicting the lord of that city with the attributes of the central Mexican storm god Tlaloc, including his goggle eyes and tasseled headdress.
Stela 39 is a broken monument that was erected in the Lost World complex.
The upper portion of the stela is missing but the lower portion shows the lower body and legs of Chak Tok Ich’aak, holding a flint axe in his left hand. He is trampling the figure of a bound, richly dressed captive.
The monument is dated to AD 376. The text on the back of the monument describes a bloodletting ritual to celebrate a Katun-ending.
The stela also names Chak Tok Ich’aak I’s father as K’inich Muwaan Jol.
Stela 40 bears a portrait of Kan Chitam and dates to AD 468.
Burials
Burial 1 is a tomb in the Lost World complex.
A fine ceramic bowl was recovered from the tomb, with the handle formed from three-dimensional head and neck of a bird emerging from the two-dimensional body painted on the lid.
Burial 10 is the tomb of Yax Nuun Ayiin.
It is located beneath Structure 34 in the North Acropolis.
The tomb contained a rich array of offerings, including ceramic vessels and food, and nine youths were sacrificed to accompany the dead king.
A dog was also entombed with the deceased king. Pots in the tomb were stuccoed and painted and many demonstrated a blend of Maya and Teotihuacan styles.
Among the offerings was an incense-burner in the shape of an elderly underworld god, sitting on a stool made of human bones and holding a severed head in his hands.
The tomb was sealed with a corbel vault, then the pyramid was built on top.
Burial 48 is generally accepted as the tomb of Siyah Chan K’awil.
It is located beneath Temple 33 in the North Acropolis.
The chamber of the tomb was cut from the bedrock and contained the remains of the king himself together with those of two adolescents who had been sacrificed in order to accompany the deceased ruler.
The walls of the tomb were covered with white stucco painted with hieroglyphs that included the Long Count date equivalent to 20 March 457, probably the date of either the death or interment of the king.
The king’s skeleton was missing its skull, its femurs and one of its hands while the skeletons of the sacrificial victims were intact.
Burial 85 dates to the Late Preclassic and was enclosed by a platform, with a primitive corbel vault.
The tomb contained a single male skeleton, which lacked a skull and its thighbones.
The dynastic founder of Tikal, Yax Ehb’ Xook, has been linked to this tomb, which lies deep in the heart of the North Acropolis.
The deceased had probably died in battle with his body being mutilated by his enemies before being recovered and interred by his followers.
The bones were wrapped carefully in textiles to form an upright bundle.
The missing head was replaced by a small greenstone mask with shell-inlaid teeth and eyes and bearing a three-pointed royal headband.
This head wears an emblem of rulership on its forehead and is a rare Preclassic lowland Maya portrait of a king.
Among the contents of the tomb were a stingray spine, a spondylus shell and twenty-six ceramic vessels.
Burial 116 is the tomb of Jasaw Chan K’awiil I.
It is a large, vaulted chamber deep within the pyramid, below the level of the Great Plaza.
The tomb contained rich offerings of jadeite, ceramics, shell and works of art.
The body of the king was covered with large quantities of jade ornaments including an enormous necklace with especially large beads, as depicted in sculpted portraits of the king.
One of the outstanding pieces recovered from the tomb was an ornate jade mosaic vessel with the lid bearing a sculpted portrait of the king himself.
Burial 195 was flooded with mud in antiquity.
This flood had covered wooden objects that had completely rotted away by the time the tomb was excavated, leaving hollows in the dried mud.
Archaeologists filled these hollows with stucco and thus excavated four effigies of the god K’awiil, the wooden originals long gone.
Burial 196 is a Late Classic royal tomb that contained a jade mosaic vessel topped with the head of the Maize God.