Archaeologist Francisco Perez Ruiz said there were no known
residential groups in Chichen Itza, meaning the housing complex
would represent "the first residential group where a ruler lived
with his entire family."
The area, known as Chichen Viejo, is expected to be integrated
in the near future into the visitor area of the Chichen Itza
archaeological site, a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
The newly discovered complex includes the entrance arch, the
House of the Snails, the House of the Moon, and the so-called
Palace of the Phalluses.
Researchers from the National Institute of Anthropology and
History (INAH) hope that this area and those yet to be uncovered
can provide information on what life was like for the people who
inhabited the city.
"There must be more residential groups that have not been
explored yet. The study of these peripheral groups, around the
central part, could tell us about other families, other groups
that made up this great city," said archaeologist Jose Osorio
Leon.
The area has been under exploration since 1998.
Around 2 million people visit Chichen Itza site in southeast
Mexico each year, according to official data.
It was founded as a Mayan pilgrimage center by the Itza, or
"water sorcerers."
(Reporting by Lorenzo Hernandez, Writing by Isabel Woodford;
Editing by David Gregorio)
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