Maya ruins in Belize offer peek at ancient wealth inequality
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[March 26, 2021]
By Will Dunham
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - An examination of
numerous houses excavated at two sites in southern Belize is providing
insight into gaping wealth inequality in ancient Maya cities - a
disparity that researchers believe was closely linked to despotic
leadership.
Archaeologists on Wednesday said they studied remains of 180 homes in
the medium-sized city of Uxbenká and 93 homes in the smaller nearby city
of Ix Kuku'il, which both flourished during the so-called Classic Maya
period from roughly 250 to 900 AD.
During this time, the Maya produced soaring pyramids and wondrous works
of sculpture and painting, employed hieroglyphic writing and excelled at
calendar-making and mathematics.
The researchers gauged wealth inequality based on the mix of large and
smaller homes, along with the size and nature of the structures.
"Wealth inequality was dispersed across the landscape, with larger
houses surrounded by smaller houses in neighborhoods far from the
monumental core of the cities," said archaeologist Amy Thompson, a
postdoctoral fellow at the Field Museum in Chicago and lead author of
the study published in the journal PLOS ONE.
The findings, the researchers said, help shed light on the phenomenon of
wealth inequality in human societies from antiquity to the present day,
with the ancient Maya holding no monopoly on such disparities.
Researchers are trying to understand how inequality forms, manifests
itself in ancient cities and is perpetuated, said University of New
Mexico anthropology professor and study co-author Keith Prufer, director
of the Uxbenká Archaeological Project.
"Wealth inequality is a hallmark of all ancient civilizations, and has
its origins with the development of food production - agricultural
surplus - that allowed certain individuals to control disproportionate
shares of resources and to compel, through persuasion or coercion,
others to provide labor and goods to increase wealth inequality," Prufer
said.
Generally the more despotic the system, the more wealth inequality
exists, Prufer added.
"With despotic governance, the principals do not depend on their local
populace for support. Hence, there is less concern with the well-being
of those people or the efficiency of their production," said study
co-author Gary Feinman, the Field Museum's MacArthur curator of
anthropology.
The researchers compared their findings to other studies of homes in
contemporaneous ancient cities in Mesoamerica, a region from central
Mexico through Central America.
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Archeologist Amy Thompson excavates at the ancient Maya site of
Uxbenka, Belize in April 2012. Picture taken in April 2012. Keith
Prufer/Handout via REUTERS
Classic Maya locales, known for autocratic leadership dominated by
strong kings, appeared to have had greater wealth inequality than
other Mesoamerican cultural and language groups. For instance, in
Mexico's Oaxaca Valley, where more collective forms of governance
existed, there was less disparity in homes.
"Even the largest Classic period Mesoamerican city, Teotihuacan in
central Mexico, had lesser degrees of inequality as measured by
domestic space than did the Classic Maya sites," said Feinman.
Uxbenká's population was 3,000 to 5,000 people while Ix Kuku'il's
was about 1,800, smaller than the biggest Maya cities like Tikal in
Guatemala with tens of thousands of people. Teotihuacan's population
reached perhaps 200,000 people.
Uxbenká and Ix Kuku'il, about 25 miles (40 km) from the Caribbean
coast, boasted monumental architecture including temples about 30
feet (10 meters) tall.
The houses once had perishable wooden superstructures, now lost to
time, over foundations of stone, dirt and plaster. Foundations of
the small houses often measured roughly 13 by 20 feet (4 by 6
meters) and the large ones reached approximately 40 by 66 feet (12
by 20 meters).
The larger ones had more elaborate architecture and imported and
luxury goods including jade, marine shell, personal adornments and
the volcanic glass called obsidian, used for blades and other
purposes.
Classic Maya society featured social groups including royal
leadership, nobles, merchants, artisans and crafts people, and a
larger number of farmers and laborers.
"We assume the full spectrum of social groups were present at
Uxbenká and Ix Kuku'il and have evidence for royalty and nobles
living in the larger houses in the district centers, as well as
farmers living in smaller houses," Thompson said.
(Reporting by Will Dunham, Editing by Rosalba O'Brien)
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