monte alban
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2021 ◽  
pp. 220-246
Author(s):  
Gary M. Feinman ◽  
Richard E. Blanton ◽  
Linda M. Nicholas
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Verónica Pérez Rodríguez

Urban societies have been defined as stratified, and sometimes literate, societies that build large, densely populated, and monumental centers that serve specialized political, economic, and ritual functions for their regions. Mesoamerica is one of six world regions where urban societies developed, independently, in antiquity. Mesoamerican cities sometimes fit traditional definitions, and other times defy them. There are examples of dispersed low-density urban settlements (Classic Maya, Veracruz) or cities where evidence of writing remains elusive (Teotihuacan). Functional urban definitions have led to debates regarding the urban standing of earlier, Middle Formative Olmec centers, as no contemporary settlements match the monumentality and regional prominence of La Venta or San Lorenzo. The regional settlement studies that have proliferated in the Basin of Mexico and Valley of Oaxaca since the 1960s have helped scholars demonstrate the demographic and political might of Late Formative, Classic, and Postclassic cities such as Monte Albán, Teotihuacan, and Tenochtitlan. Urbanism was demonstrably shown to be a regional phenomenon, one that developed from autochthonous processes as settlements became prominent population centers whose functions, monuments, and institutions served and ruled over their larger regions. While some of the best-known Mesoamerican cities were the capitals of large regional states (Teotihuacan, Tenochtitlán, Monte Albán, and Tzintzuntzan), researchers have documented an even greater number of city-states, which are defined as small states socially and territorially centered around their capital city. The Classic and Postclassic cities of the Maya lowlands, the Postclassic polities or altepemeh of the Basin of Mexico, and the kingdoms of Postclassic Oaxaca are examples of city-states. Among Mesoamerican cities, there was diversity in the form of government, ranging from cities where rulers’ names and royal tombs appear prominently in the archaeological record (Classic Maya cities, Postclassic Oaxacan city-states), to cities where, despite decades of research, no single royal palace or tomb has been found (Teotihuacan). The material record of cities of the latter type suggests that they were governed through more corporate forms of political organization. In the early 21st century research has focused on the role of collectives in city construction, configuration, and governance and the challenge of archaeologically identifying neighborhoods, districts, or other suprahousehold social groups (tlaxilacalli and calpolli, social units above the household in Postclassic Nahuatl polities). Although Classic period Maya centers were not originally considered urban, thanks to settlement studies and, later on, LiDAR technology, scholars have demonstrated that beyond their monumental acropolises there was extensive low-density settlement that was unmistakably urban. The Maya model of low-density lowland urbanism features dispersed populations and extensive urban footprints that integrate complex webs of agricultural areas, terraces, raised fields, hydraulic features, and house mounds. This model may have useful applications for modern-day planning efforts in low-lying cities that need to adapt to climate change. Indeed, Mesoamerican urbanism has much to contribute as the world’s population becomes increasingly urban. Humanity must learn from its past successes, and failures, with urban living.


2021 ◽  
Vol 51 ◽  
pp. 11-32
Author(s):  
Emiliano Ricardo Melgar Tisoc ◽  
Reyna Solís Ciriaco ◽  
Hervé Monterrosa Desruelles ◽  
María Jesús Puy y Alquiza ◽  
Juan Carlos Meléndez Mollinedo
Keyword(s):  
A Priori ◽  

En diferentes sitios de Mesoamérica fuera del área maya se han recuperado objetos lapidarios de piedra verde de tonalidades brillantes y lustre vítreo, muchos de ellos con decoración o iconografía maya, por lo cual se les han identificado a priori como jadeítas y se atribuye su elaboración a artesanos mayas o que ya vienen manufacturados desde aquella región. Sin embargo, son escasos los análisis detallados que evalúen y confirmen estas propuestas. Por ello, en este estudio mostraremos los análisis tecnológicos aplicados a 243 objetos lapidarios con estas características hallados en Teotihuacan, Monte Albán, Teteles de Santo Nombre, Tula, Tamtoc y el Templo Mayor de Tenochtitlan. De esta manera, se identificó un patrón muy estandarizado que comparte la tecnología artesanal lapidaria maya de las Tierras Bajas. Además, su origen foráneo y distribución restringida hizo que otros grupos mesoamericanos los consideraran bienes de prestigio, emblemas de poder y dones sagrados.


2020 ◽  
pp. 1-23
Author(s):  
Marc N. Levine ◽  
Scott W. Hammerstedt ◽  
Amanda Regnier ◽  
Alex E. Badillo

In this article, we present the most significant results of the Monte Albán Geophysical Archaeology Project. Using ground-penetrating radar, gradiometry, and electrical resistance, we carried out a systematic survey of the site's Main Plaza to identify buried prehispanic features that might shed light on Monte Albán's early history. The most important discoveries include three buried structures dating between the Danibaan (500–300 BC) and Nisa phases (100 BC–AD 100). We argue that the largest structure, measuring 18 × 18 m, was probably a temple platform and that all three of the structures were razed and buried by the end of the Nisa phase at the latest. Furthermore, we contend that these events were part of a major renovation and expansion of the site's Main Plaza that occurred during a pivotal period of dramatic sociopolitical transformation in the Zapotec capital.


2020 ◽  
Vol 1 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Rocío Arroyo-Belmonte

Este artículo analiza el manejo por parte del Estado mexicano de la zona arqueológica de Monte Albán a partir de que fue declarada Patrimonio de la Humanidad en 1987. Asumiendo que existen pocas propuestas metodológicas en este tema en concreto, se propone empíricamente un estudio basado en la perspectiva teórica de las capacidades estatales en donde se considera: la participación del Estado en interrelación con distintos actores, la regulación a través de normas e instituciones vigentes y el proceso encaminado hacia la toma de decisiones. Con la aplicación de estas directrices se obtienen algunas premisas respecto al Estado mexicano frente al manejo del patrimonio mundial en su territorio en el caso de Monte Albán, como la concentración de acciones gubernamentales en el ámbito federal; un marco normativo restrictivo que excluye la participación de actores locales; una agobiante desatención presupuestal; una des-coordinación interinstitucional; una falta de continuidad gubernamental. Todo en conjunto demuestra la necesidad de seguir trabajando con la construcción epistemológica de las capacidades estatales frente al tema transversal y horizontal del patrimonio común de la humanidad.


Author(s):  
Kaushik Basu

The book ranges over a vast canvas of experience, from the world of economics, covering glimpses of life and thought in academe and universities, to policymaking and politics. The author comments on contemporary debates in economics and politics and presents his own ideas and criticisms. The book is interspersed with commentaries on personalities, places, and theories of economics. The personalities we encounter here range from Nobel laureates, Kenneth Arrow, Paul Samuelson, and Amartya Sen, to the author’s mother at the age of 90. The places described in the book range from Jerusalem and Florence, to the foothills of Mount Fuji in Japan to Monte Alban in Mexico. In this book, the author talks about his encounters both philosophical and comical. This expanded edition of An Economist’s Miscellany also contains author’s literary forays with translations of two Bengali short stories and a four-act play about a professor of philosophy. This book brings together an eclectic collection of writings on the world of academe, politics, policy, travel, and more.


2020 ◽  
Vol 242 ◽  
pp. 122475
Author(s):  
M. Ortega-Avilés ◽  
D. Tenorio-Castilleros ◽  
I.L. Segura-Venzor ◽  
José G. Miranda-Hernández ◽  
M.A. Velasco
Keyword(s):  

2020 ◽  
Vol 54 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Geraldine Guadalupe Granados Vázquez ◽  
Lourdes Márquez Morfín
Keyword(s):  
De Re ◽  

<p>Monte Albán fue un asentamiento zapoteco (aC-850 dC) localizado en los Valles Centrales de Oaxaca. En este sitio arqueológico la variedad y cantidad de los depósitos mortuorios encontrados es muy diversa, dadas las diferentes estrategias de excavación, el tratamiento mortuorio diferencial y los procesos tafonómicos. De lo anterior podemos preguntarnos, la serie esquelética que analizamos (n=410) ¿a qué parte de la población representa en el sentido estadístico y sociodemográfico? y ¿qué criterios de selectividad encontramos? El objetivo de este trabajo es discutir y reflexionar sobre aspectos de re-<br /> presentatividad y selectividad, aunados al contexto arqueológico de los individuos de Monte Albán. Se utilizó el análisis de conglome-<br /> rados para mostrar las diferencias en la composición de los edificios excavados en esta ciudad dependiendo de variables como número de cuartos excavados, número de individuos, sexo y edad. Los resultados muestran una problemática compartida por toda Mesoamérica, donde se observan grandes sesgos en la composición de la muestra según la temporalidad y el espacio, lo que nos lleva a discutir la selectividad de la muestra y el papel de los elementos óseos aislados.</p>


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