Water, Cacao, and the Early Maya of Chocolá

Regular price €112.99
A01=Federico Paredes Umana
A01=Jonathan Kaplan
ancient hydraulics
ancient surplus
ancient trade
Archaeological Operations
art
Author_Federico Paredes Umana
Author_Jonathan Kaplan
cacao
Cacao and the Early Maya
Category=JHM
Category=NK
ceramics
Classic
coffee
cultural geography
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Features
Federico Paredes Umana
figurines
flora and fauna
Germans in Guatemala
Great Southern Maya sites
intensive agriculture
Jonathan Kaplan
management
Maya archaeology
Maya origins
Mesoamerica
Mounds
New World archaeology
piedmont rainforest
Plazas
Postclassic
pottery
Preclassic
Robert Burkitt
sculpture
sequence
soils
Southern Maya Region
tectonics
type variety system
volcanoes
wares
Water
water control
water resources

Product details

  • ISBN 9780813056746
  • Weight: 915g
  • Dimensions: 155 x 233mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Jun 2018
  • Publisher: University Press of Florida
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This exciting book brings the often-overlooked southern Maya region of Guatemala into the spotlight by closely examining the ""lost city"" of Chocola. Jonathan Kaplan and Federico Paredes Umana prove that Chocola was a major Maya polity and reveal exactly why it was so influential.

In their fieldwork at the site, Kaplan and Paredes Umana discovered an extraordinarily sophisticated underground water-control system. They also discovered cacao residues in ceramic vessels. Based on these and other findings, the authors believe that cacao was consumed and grown intensively at Chocola and that the city was the center of a large cacao trade. They contend that the city’s wealth and power were built on its abundant supply of water and its command of cacao, which was significant not just to cuisine and trade but also to Maya ideology and cosmology. Moreover, Kaplan and Paredes Umana detail the ancient city's ceramics and add over thirty stone sculptures to the site's inventory.

Because the southern Maya region was likely the origin of Maya hieroglyphic writing and the Long Count calendar, scholars have long suspected the area to be important. This pioneering field research at Chocola helps explain how and why the region played a leading role in the rise of the Maya civilization.
Jonathan Kaplan, director of the Chocola Project, is coeditor of The Southern Maya in the Late Preclassic: The Rise and Fall of an Early Mesoamerican Civilization.

Federico Paredes Umana is professor at the Center for Anthropological Studies at the Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico.