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HISTORY
Chichn Itz, la cultura maya, del Clsico Tardo, 11 y 13 dC
El sitio se desarroll entre los siglos 6 y 14. Los primeros habitantes (AD 600-900) fueron los
Itz, un grupo maya. Chichn Itz parece haber sido abandonada durante el siglo 10, peroposteriormente reubicados en torno al ao 1000. El segundo grupo de colonos pudieron haber
sido el original Itz, toltecas de Tula (cerca de la Ciudad de Mxico), o una fusin de ambos
grupos.
Los arquelogos han reconocido influencias mayas y toltecas en la arquitectura: la mayora creeque los toltecas influido en la Itza, pero algunos afirman que la influencia fue en la otra
direccin.
Fue fundada en el ao 514 de nuestra era por el sacerdote LAKIN CHAN tambin llamado
Itzamn. Esta es la razn por su pueblo fueron llamados desde la fundacin, Chanes o Itzaes.
El nombre de Chichn Itz, se deriva de la lengua maya: "Chi" - boca "Chen" - bueno y "Itz" -
la tribu que habitaba la zona. Cuando los espaoles llegaron a Chichn - Itz, que haba sido
abandonada como consecuencia de la guerra civil que se desat con Mayapn. Entre 1196 y 1441el colapso final de esta cultura tuvo lugar en el norte de la pennsula.
Los conquistadores encontraron los edificios de Chichn Itz, parcialmente en ruinas y sus
nombres y el uso real eran desconocidos, por eso los nombres actuales son suposiciones.
El Castillo, Chichen Itza. Charnay Desiree,
1860Source >>
Cather's drawings of El Castillo
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El Castillo (old photo) El Caracol (old photo)
About 60% of El Castillo pyramid has been restored almost fully from the decaying condition in
which it was re-discovered by John L. Stephens in 1841 although the eastern and southern facesare still partially eroded by the forces of time and erosion. There are no plans to restore these two
faces of the pyramid as those that restored the other portions wish for future generations to see
the condition in which it was originally discovered.
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Drawings of the Nunnery
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Artist's rendering of central Chichen Itza around the year AD 1,000.View is from the north with the Castillo Pyramid in the center,
Temple of the Warriors to the east, and a sacbe to the Sacred Cenote in the foreground.
Source:http://maya.csuhayward.edu/archaeoplanet/97GprGra/97Photos/Fig06.htm
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Credits for the following segment:http://campus.northpark.edu/history/WebChron/Americas/ChichenItza.CP.html
Chichen Itza is the most impressive and intact ruins of Mayan civilization that the modern world
has. This now popular tourist attraction is located on the Yucatan Peninsula of Mexico and has
fast become the best restored record of the spiritual, domestic, and agricultural lives of these
people. Mayan ruins in central America, such as Chichen Itza, are remnants of cities that wereabandoned long before Columbus reached the area; yet this culture has influenced many areas of
architecture, art, and astronomy, that live on even in our modern world.
The Mayan people are most famous for their brilliant and advanced astronomical knowledge andtheir resiliency. Stone remnants of their civilization are currently being preserved at various sites
in Mexico; in Tilkal, Guatemala; in Altun Ha, Belize; and in Copan, Honduras. Mayan
civilization spread from their origin on the Yucatan Peninsula to the rain forests of Mexico
eastward and the other surrounding countries. Today, mostly on the Yucatan Peninsula and in thestate of Chiapas, Mayan culture is still thriving with four to six million people, over 30
languages, and many ethnic backgrounds represented. Modern Mayans still continue many of the
traditions of their ancient culture, such as speaking their ancient dialects instead of Spanish,growing their traditional crops (corn, beans, chile, tomatoes, and squash) with the same
techniques, and using herbal medicinal treatments instead of modern medicine. Many spiritual
aspects of Mayan life, the purpose for their ancient cities, is still exercised with many offeringsand pilgrimages to modern churches, sometimes fusing Catholicism with Mayan beliefs from
antiquity.
Around 550 AD, Mayans settled Chichen (translated "the mouth of the well") around two wells;
one sacred and one "profane," used for everyday use. These underground wells and subsequentwaterways, known as "cenotes", were the lifeblood of the community. Chichen Itza was
primarily a rain forest area settled on flat, porous limestone that rain seeped through to became
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trapped in the insolvent bedrock below. These cenotes were, therefore, the oasis of the society,
full of rain and run off water for their living needs. Chichen Itza, like most Mayan centers, was
primarily a spiritual, ceremonial site instead of a commercial area. The loose arrangement ofdecentralized farming communities came together for offerings, sacrifices, and ceremonies in the
town. Some trade, education, and recreation were also performed there. Exhumed from the
sacred well were many ceremonial objects, skulls, and entire skeletons.
Evidence suggests that Chichen Itza was abandoned by the Mayans in the tenth century. This isconcurrent with evidence of all Mayan cities being abandoned around this period. The
abandonment has not yet been fully explained. The Mayans returned to and resettled their cities
around 1000 AD. Chichen Itza's architecture is seen to have two distinctive styles; traditionalMayan architecture, and more recent Toltec architecture. The Toltecs were another more warlike
tribe who invaded Chichen Itza around the year 800 AD. The Toltecs were much more fierce
than the Mayans and human sacrifice was a large part of their rituals. It is quite easy to decipherwhich structures in Chichen Itza were built before and after 800 AD.
Chichn ItzArchitecture
The architectural characteristics ofChichen Itza have a direct relationship with theMayan Toltec style. All of its buildings: "El Castillo", "El juego de la Pelota", "El
Grupo de las Mil Columnas", "El tzompantli", El Edificiode las Aguilas", "El templo
de los Guerrerros", and "El Mercado", have the same decoration motives found in
Tula.
The archaeological site is divided into 3 areas: the Northern group (distinctly Toltec), the Centralgroup (early period) and the Southern area known as the Old Chichen (located far away from the
other buildings and its visit requires a guide).
El Castillo
"The Castle", aka "The Pyramid of Kukulkan", or the "Pyramid of Quetzalcoatl" (another
name for Kukulkan from the Toltecs) believed to be built before 800 AD, is easily the mostimpressive and widely recognized of the structures in Chichn Itz or indeed anywhere in the
Mayan region. A true masterpiece of the Toltec-Mayan architectural genius.
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El Castillo(Photo World-Mysteries.com )
"El Castillo" ("castle" in Spanish) sheds light on the Mayans impressive astronomical
knowledge. It is, in reality, a solar calendar. There are 91 steps on each side and 1 for the
roof/altar. Each day's shadows fall upon a different step.
Learn more about El Castillo >>
It was surely the place where the ceremony of the descent of Kukulkan was held. The pyramidhas special astronomical layout so that agame of light and shadow is formed. On March 21st the
body of the serpent metaphorically descends from the temple on top of the pyramid and arrives at
the heads at the foot of the staircase.
3View the 3D model of El Castillo and animation of the shadow >>
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"El Castillo", western side of the pyramid.For a thousand years, the slanting rays of the setting sun have played a spectacular shadow game
with this great Mayan pyramid. At the appointed hour, the shadow of the Feathered Serpent,
Kukulcan slides down the northern stairway...and vanishes.
The northern and eastern faces of El Castillo. The Northern stairs have
the large stone heads of Kukulkan at the base and the eastern face (on the left) is the un-restored side.The main stairway is easily distinguished by the presence of two large serpent heads,
representing the god Kukulkan, at the base. This is the northern-most staircase and faces towards
the Platform of Venus as well as the Sacred Cenote.
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This is a view of El Castillo on a sunny day.
This photo is showing the symmetry of this structure.
It shows several uniquely Mayan attributes that went into the construction:
1. It reveals the nine tiers, split by the stairway to give 18 smaller tier sections,the same as the number of months in the Mayan calendar.
2. It shows the twenty six rectangular panels on either side of the stairway(about three or four per tier). Adding to fifty-two panels, the same as thenumber of years in a Mayan cycle.
3. Though not feasable to show here, there are 91 steps on each of the fourstairways leading up to the top of the structure with a common step at thetop to all four sides, leading to a total of 365 steps... same as the number ofdays in a year.
4. An overhead view of the structure shows that it is skewed exactly 18degrees, same as the number of months in the calendar.
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There are 91 steps on each side of the pyramid of Kukulkan(Photo World-Mysteries.com )
El Castillo was primarily built to represent Snake Mountain, the mystic place where creation first
occurred in Mayan folklore. Snake mountain is a design practice adopted in Teotihuican as well
as the Aztec capital of Tenochtitlan. Though brought to its full artistic maturity in Chichn Itz,the design is much older than any of these cities. There are examples of the Snake Mountain
design at Waxaktun and at Cerros as early as 100 BC. The upright bodies of the snakes that act
as supports for the upper temple are meant to represent the "Kuxan Sum" or "Living cord" that
connected the rulers of the earth with their gods. Nowhere in the Mayan world is there a larger ormore impressive representation of the Snake Mountain design than in El Castillo, nor one with as
much functionality as is detailed below. Snake Mountain was also where Xmucane, the first
mother, used maize dough to mold the first humans at the beginning of the fourth creation.
The visible structure seen today is at least the second temple built at this spot. Beneath the huge
outer structure is a smaller temple of similar design. A small doorway on the west face of the
northern stairs is the only access up a small stairway to the inner temple beneath. In this inner
temple is another Chaac Mool and a jaguar throne, sealed off to tourists by an iron gate.
The Maya were known to be great mathematicians and are credited with the invention of the
"zero" in their counting system. They were also great astronomers, and EL Castillo is a perfectmarriage of their sciences with their religion. By far the most amazing aspect of the pyramid is
the accuracy, significance, and relevance it has within the Mayan calendar and social system.There are many numerical details regarding the location of this structure that could not have all
occurred by accident. Each side of the pyramid is made up of nine larger tiers or layers with a
staircase in the center of each side leading to the temple at the top. Each stairway consists ofninety one steps, with one step at the top common to all four sides, for a total of three hundred
and sixty five steps, the exact number of days in a solar year. Each side of the pyramid has fifty
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two rectangular panels, equal to the number of years in the Mayan cycle (at the conclusion of
which they typically constructed a newer structure over an older one). The stairways divide
the tiers on any given side into two sets of nine for a total of 18 tiers which corresponds to the 18months in the Mayan calendar. The "square" that makes up the overall base of the structure is
exactly 18 degrees from the vertical. Every aspect of the structure relates in some way to the
Maya and their culture. The very physical presence of this structure and the shadows it casts, arealso significant within the Mayan culture and are more fully explained in here the section
detailing the Shadow Of The Equinox. The Maya universe was comprised of 13 "compartments"
in 7 levels with each compartment being ruled over by a different god. El Castillo reflects thesebeliefs as seen in the shadows it casts. 7 levels are shown in the 7 light triangles. 7 Triangles of
light and 6 darker triangles give 13 triangles in all corresponding to the 13 overall levels of the
underworld.
Suffice it to sum up here and say, the pyramid casts unique and identifiable shadows on the exactdays of the year that represent the solstice and equinox that occur twice a year. This shows the
Maya were aware of the rotation of the sun and the exact length of a year. Indeed, we know that
the Mayan Calendar was more accurate than the one we use today.
On the west side of the base of the northern staircase there is an entrance to a smaller innerstructure. This inner structure existed alone and was a pyramid similar to the main outer one that
was covered over after the 52 year cycle was complete. This inner temple resembled the outer
one in that it also was made up of a nine terraced pyramid with a temple at the top. There areonly sixty one steps to this inner structure and the temple contains a stone statue of the reclining
Chaac-Mool (which means"red claw") That can also be found at the portico of the Temple of the
Warriors. Also with Chaac-Mool in this antechamber is a stone Jaguar, also worshipped by the
Maya after the Toltec influenced them in this belief, that may have served as the throne for aleader or high priest. When first found, this throne had a delicately wrough Turquise mosiac disk
sitting on it. The staircase leading up to this inner chamber is enclosed by the larger structureover top of it and it is a very small stairway by modern standards. Barely six feet high and threefeet wide, with slick damp stones for steps, some may find it difficult to enter and it is not for the
claustrophobic. The stairs are smooth and slick and are narrow enough that people going up may
not be able to pass people on the way down.
Apart from the religious and ceremonial significance to the structure, it is believed to have anadditional, more sinister purpose to its design.
It is believed that maya priests would sacrifice hundreds of captured enemy warriors at the top of
its steps and, in some cases before the body had completely died, would throw the bodies down
the steep steps. Now, before they were cast down they typically had their hearts cut out soensuring their demise with such a horrific fall wasn't in question. More likely it was symbolic of
the priests in casting the enemy away from the sacred temple atop of El Castillo, signifying that
the unfortunate prisoner was not worthy to stand upon Snake Mountain.
The base of the steps would be heaped with dozens of bodies after such a ceremony.
Learn more about El Castillo>>
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Templo de los Guerreros / Temple of the Warriors
"Templo de los Guerreros" is a temple with the typical Toltec entrance columns. Another one
of the buildings that has a Toltec seal without is the "Muro de los Craneos". These buildings
were destined to be the mausoleums of the tying up the years. Every 52 years the ancient Mayansand other cultures would tie up a sheaf of years to end a cycle.
Temple of the Warriors and Group of the One Thousand Columns(Photo Shaun Tennant )
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Temple of the Warriors
(Photo World-Mysteries.com )
Group of the One Thousand Columns
(Photo World-Mysteries.com )
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El Caracol
Another important buildings is "El Caracol", an astronomical observatory.
El Caracol (conch shell) is another astronomy-oriented structure. It is a giant observatory dome
where many rituals and celebrations took place. The dome has many windows pepperedthroughout. Stars can be seen through different windows on specific dates. This structure is one
of the pinnacles of Mayan architecture. Creating a stone dome is hard work, but creating it withwindows at precise points takes an enormous amount of time and skill. El Caracol
simultaneously displays the Mayans' expertise in both astronomy and engineering. This is one of
the main attractions of Chichen Itza today.
El Caracol and Castillo from Nunnery.(Photo Copyright Clive Ruggles, University of Leicester )
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El Caracol from NW (Photo 2006 by World-Mysteries.com )
El Caracol from N (Photo 2006 by World-Mysteries.com)
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El Caracol - inside wall (Photo 2006 by World-Mysteries.com)
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El Caracol - The dome (left) and windows 3 and 2 (right)
(Photos Copyright Clive Ruggles, University of Leicester )
El juego de la Pelota / Great Ball Court
El juego de la Pelota, the largest Ball Court in Mesoamerica is found in Chichen Itza. It is 168meters in length and 70 meters in width. In Mesoamerica, the Ball Game was an entertainment,
but it also had a ritual side in which the losers were sacrificed.
___
Chichen Itza's Ball Court is the largest in Mexico. Ball Courts were part of almost every Mayancity. The courts were designed very much like today's soccer fields. Raised stone hoops were
placed at each end. The Mayans would play a game very much like a cross between soccer andbasketball. A hard rubber ball (the Mayans had rubber in this era) was used. The teams weresupposed to keep the ball in play using everything but their hands, and score by putting the ball
through the hoop. The Chichen Itza Ball Court measures 272 by 199 feet, about the dimensions
of a football field. After the invasion of the Toltecs, the Ball Court took on a more somber note,
with the losing team often being sacrificed. Chichen Itza must have been home to the finestathletes due to the size of their court. The size of it often indicates that many important games
were played at Chichen Itza.
Text copyright 1998 by David W. Koeller.
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"El juego de la Pelota", the largest Ball Court in Mesoamerica is found in Chichen Itza. (Photo World-Mysteries.com)
One of the two stone rings used during the game.(Photo World-Mysteries.com)
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Nunnery
Eastern Annex of Nunnery facade.
(Photo Copyright Clive Ruggles, University of Leicester)
El Osario - Tomb of the Great Priest
Tomb of the Great Priest owes its name to the tombs found inside.
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The Tomb of the Great Priest
(Photo Copyright 2006 by World-Mysteries.com)
El Chichancob - Colored House
One of the oldest and best preserved structures in Old Chichen.
Colored House - El Chichancob
(Photo Copyright 2006 by World-Mysteries.com)
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El Castillo - Computer Model
World-Mysteries.com
Computer Model of El Castillo - the shadow of the Feathered Serpenton the northern stairway on March 21 (different viewing angle)
World-Mysteries.com
Computer Model of El Castillo - the shadow of the Feathered Serpent
on the northern stairway on March 21 - Detail (different viewing angle)
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Dimensions
A.D. ( between 550-900 A.D. )from true North: 19 degp platform (+6m with the temple)
amid is essentially a nine-step structure culminating in a flat platform
two-story temple. The height to the top platform is 24 m,ng another 6 m.
Image Source: http://www.newodysseyart.co.uk/maya_art_kukulkan.html
sign is thought to relate to the Mayan calendar. Each of the four faces incorporates a broad, steep staircase consistin
nds to the top platform. Counting the top platform as an additional step gives a total of365 steps: 1step for each
ise at an angle of 45 degrees to the horizontal, while the average inclination of the stepped pyramid itself is 53.3 de
al steps are sloped at a greater angle, approximately 73 degrees.
platforms of the pyramid are thought to represent the 18 months of the haab, and the 52 panels represent the numb
ndar round date to recur.
mary
24m - top platform (+6m with the temple)
ple at the top of the pyramid is 6 m high, 13.42 m wide, and 16.5 m long.
es rise at an angle of 45 degrees to the horizontal
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rage inclination of the stepped pyramid itself is 53.3 degrees.
s of the individual steps are sloped at a greater angle, approximately 73 degrees.
WidthMeters Zapalequivalent Conversion factor
Top 19.52 13 1.50
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Base 55.3 37 1.49
Temple 13.42 9 1.49
Stairs 8.85 6 1.48
Kukulcn's pyramid is notable for the fact that at the spring and fall equino
(March 21 and September 22) the sun projects an undulating pattern of
the northern stairway for a few hours in the late afternoona pattern ca
the angle of the sun and the edge of the nine steps that define the
pyramid's construction.
These triangles of light link up with the massive stone carvings of snake head
base of the stairs, suggesting a massive serpent snaking down the structur
Additionally, when one looks at the western face during the winter solstice, th
appears to climb up the edge of the staircase until it rests momentarily directlthe temple before beginning its descent down the other side. The orientation o
pyramid is approximately 17 degrees east of magnetic north, in an area wheredeclination is approximately 2 degrees east, so the actual orientation is aroun
s east of true north. Several other major structures on the site are oriented in approximately the same way.
Read more aboutcelestial alignments >>
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Chichen Itza at Spring Equinox.Image Source >>
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Vernal Equinox Animation. This animation can be viewed as:Flash Movie(452KB), orAnimated GIF(424KB)
View our3D Model of El Castillo>>
Chichen Itza Photos
metry of the sunset at Chichen Itza on the Vernal Equinox
llowing images are the result of amazing hi-tech combination of satellite images with program called The Photogrameriswhich shows you the exact direction of where the sunrise and moonrise will be at any particular location and ti
e maps.
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Geometry of the sunset at Chichen Itza on the Vernal Equinox (March 21, 2010). Click to enlarge.
Image generated by The Photographers Ephemeris (TPE) - stephentrainor.com/tools
Geometry of the sunset at Chichen Itza on the Summer Solstice (June 21, 2010). Click to enlarge.
Image generated by The Photographers Ephemeris (TPE) - stephentrainor.com/tools
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The Photographer's Ephemeris
hotographers Ephemeris (TPE) is a free application forWindows/Linux designed for landscape photographers. It shows you the
direction of where the sunrise and moonrise will be at any particular
n and time using Google maps. Landscape photographers typically wishing
n their shoots around the times of sunrise/sunset or twilight, or alternativelythe moon is in a particular place or a particular phase. Click on the logo to
more and download this free program.rainor.com/tools
parison of Khufu and Kukulcan
aig B. Smith, P.E., and Kelly E. Parmenter
yramids built by the pharaohs of ancient Egyptespecially the magnificent
of the Fourth Dynastys Khufu, or Cheopshave prompted extensive
y through the ages. Not so the pyramids erected by other ancient peoplesof the Maya, for example. But the pyramids of the MayaKukulcns
g themreveal much about the sophisticated skills of their builders.
d Kukulcn: Read feature|Read Abstract
ding Kukulkan's Longitude
kan Pyramid. When the world's pyramids were built, their longitudes were
ned from a very ancient Prime Meridian (0/360 longitude) that ran fromo pole across the Great Pyramid at Giza, Egypt, a full 31 degrees, 08
es, 00.8 seconds to the east of our modern Greenwich Prime Meridian.
er to "read" our western pyramids this 31 08' 00.8" longitudinal variancee factored in to our present-day longitudes for these western monuments.
Munck - Archaeocryptography
Munck's work is extensive! Here's but one pyramid decoded. (For the
es of posting this on our Web page, Carl chose one of the simplest
ments to decode.) What follows is copyrighted Carl Munck 1996:
he other pyramids of the Western Hemisphere, the Kukulkan Pyramid at
http://stephentrainor.com/toolshttp://www.pubs.asce.org/ceonline/ceonline04/0404abs.html#abs0http://www.pubs.asce.org/ceonline/ceonline04/0404feat.htmlhttp://www.pubs.asce.org/ceonline/ceonline04/0404feat.htmlhttp://www.pubs.asce.org/ceonline/ceonline04/0404abs.html#abs0http://www.pubs.asce.org/ceonline/ceonline04/0404abs.html#abs0http://stephentrainor.com/toolshttp://www.pubs.asce.org/ceonline/ceonline04/0404abs.html#abs0http://www.pubs.asce.org/ceonline/ceonline04/0404feat.htmlhttp://www.pubs.asce.org/ceonline/ceonline04/0404abs.html#abs07/29/2019 HISTORY of Chinchen Itza
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an Itza was a terraced monument as opposed to being a true pyramid form such an we see in Egypt. There were clea
s departure from Egyptian architectural practice because in the West, pyramids convey specific numbers which can
ee why they were built where they were upon the earth.
ecoding process is generally quite simple, the only exceptions apparently having been at Tikal where the decoding pthout certain complexities, otherwise the decoding is a simple process. The Kukulkan is a classic example of this.
KUKULKAN PYRAMID at Chichen Itza on Mexico's Yucatan .
Also known as the El Castillo (The Castle) and Quetzalcoatl,
Kukulkan Pyramid has staircases on all four sides.
With each staircase comprising 91 steps, the four
show 364 steps with the upper platform being the 365th step.
CORNER VIEW FROM THE GROUND
3/4 view from ground level., notice that the pyramid shows us nine terraces. This, the first number we use to assem
la for the decoding process.
cond number is 365. Kukulkan has four staircases, one on each side of the monument, on each staircase are 91 step
that totals to 364 steps with the top platform of the pyramid being the 365th step. We now have our second number
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OVERHEAD VIEW
overhead view, we see that the pyramid has four sides, and four staircases. We now have all the numbers shown by
ect and can put the decoding formula together:
9 terraces x 365 steps x 4 sides x 4 stairways = 52,560
are also other numbers which also multiply to 52,560. These are 119, 42 and 10.51620648. Two rational numbers a
nal, but these are not shown on the pyramid. These appear only on maps.
the world's pyramids were built, their longitudes were reckoned from a very ancient Prime Meridian (0/360 longitm pole to pole across the Great Pyramid at Giza, a full 31 degrees, 08 minutes, 00.8 seconds to the east or our mod
wich Prime Meridian. In order to "read" our western pyramids this 31 08' 00.8" longitudinal variance must be facto
esent-day longitudes for these Western monuments, viz:
, those other three numbers of 119, 42, and 10.51620648 shown above, are the elements of Kukulkan's original longmultiply to its GRID longitude which was left to us in the 4-4-9-365 message conveyed by the Kukulkan itself.
ght 1996 - 2004, Carl Munck. All Rights Reserved.http://www.pyramidmatrix.com/kukulkan_pyramid.htm
yramid of Kukulcan - a Precessional Alarm Clock
http://www.pyramidmatrix.com/kukulkan_pyramid.htmhttp://www.pyramidmatrix.com/kukulkan_pyramid.htmhttp://www.pyramidmatrix.com/kukulkan_pyramid.htm7/29/2019 HISTORY of Chinchen Itza
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the Toltec people moved to Chichen Itza, they merged their own zenith cosmology with the Mayan system, and the
e Pyramid of Kukulcan. This has been designed so that every year, on Spring Equinox, the afternoon sun causew play so that it appears that a huge serpent is descending from the sky, down the pyramid. However, John Ms shows that the pyramid is much more than an equinox indicator. It is a PRECESSIONAL CLOCK WITH ITS A
OR THE TWENTY-FIRST CENTURY.
Photo from souvenir book
The Pyramid of Kukulcan at Chichen Itza.
This image shows the Seven Triangles of Light and Shadow as they appear on the west face of thenorthern staircase of El Castillo between 4:30 and 5:00 PM during the Spring equinox on March 21st.
Our computer model animation can be seenHere>>
s says that Kukulcan, (orQuetzalcoatl, the plumed serpent), was the symbol of a sun-Pleiades-zenith conjunction. Exacfter the Spring Equinox, on May 20, the zenith passage of the sun takes place over Chichen Itza. The Crotalus rattlepattern is constantly used in Mesoamerican art, has a marking on it which is identical to the Solar Ahau glyph of
and its rattle was called tzab, which is the same word used for the Pleiades star cluster
http://www.world-mysteries.com/chichenitza_sn.htmhttp://www.world-mysteries.com/chichen_kukulcan.htm#Quetzalc%C3%B3atlhttp://www.world-mysteries.com/chichenitza_sn.htmhttp://www.world-mysteries.com/chichen_kukulcan.htm#Quetzalc%C3%B3atl7/29/2019 HISTORY of Chinchen Itza
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From John Major Jenkins' essential book,Maya Cosmogenesis 2012
- The True Meaning of the Maya Calendar End-Date
oving snake on the Pyramid is an annual reminder of a conjunction of the zenith sun with the Pleiades over Chichen
an event which will only occur during a 72-year time window, from 1976 to 2048. Right at the centre of this time war 2012, when the Great Cycle ends. On May 20 2012, the zenith passage combines with a solar eclipse, on the Tzo
chan, which means serpent. The winter solstice end-point will be 4 Ahau in the Tzolkin calendar, meaning Lord/Su
n in the Haab calendar, which means snake-day.
d link:http://www.diagnosis2012.co.uk/5.htm
hadow of the Equinox
mary of Events Reflected by El Castillo
cle of the sun and how it interacts with the pyramid El Castillo at Chichn Itz.
ates that are all approximately 91 days apart from each other.
Event
6
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/1879181487/worldmyster07-20http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/1879181487/worldmyster07-20http://www.diagnosis2012.co.uk/5.htmhttp://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/1879181487/worldmyster07-20http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/1879181487/worldmyster07-20http://www.diagnosis2012.co.uk/5.htm7/29/2019 HISTORY of Chinchen Itza
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f Mayan new year. Add 52 days to this date (the same as the number of years in Maya "cycle" and you arrive at Sep
th
ne triangles of light are visible between 5 and 5:30 PM.
2quinox (Day and night equal length) when seven triangles are visible. This is 92 days from previous summer solstic
h
angles visible between 4 and 4:30 PM.
1r solstice, longest night of the year. (91 days from Sept 22 fall equinox) North and East sides in total darkness while
outh are in daylight. 91 Days from fall equinox
5
angles visible between 4 and 4:30 PM.
21
Equinox. (Day and night equal length) Seven triangles between 4:30 - 5 PM. 91 days (same as stairs on the pyram
mber 21 solstice.
6riangles between 5 and 5:30 PM All possible triangles visible at this time.
1er solstice. Longest day of the year. (91 days from the March 21 show of seven triangles) South and West sides in t
ess between 7 and 7:30 AM.
al information on the phenomenon
ayans succeeded in an almost impossible mission with the completion of their structures at Chichn Itz. A poeticnation of form, style, function, religion, philosophy, mathematics and geometry. A true symbiosis of all of their inte
t in one location, to be studied and admired by all that visit. By far the most impressive aspect of the Pyramid of Ku
ationship with the sun and how it reflects the equinoxes and solstices of our solar year with stunning accuracy. Befolly understand the workings of the Shadow of the Equinox, a few basics on astronomy need to be reviewed.
uinox occurs twice each year when our sun, in its orbit around the earth in a fashion unique to these times of the yea
y over the Earth's equator and the length of the daylight and evening hours is equal. Hence the word equinox is deri
tin for "equal" aequus, and nox meaning "night". The spring equinox occurs on March 21. Six months later, on Sephe Fall Equinox. The summer solstice occurs on June 21st. On this day earth sees the longest duration of daylight. S
s later is the winter solstice on December 22, when we see the shortest daylight and the longest night of the year. O
he sun almost seems to pause in its orbit before resuming its course, and it is why the word solstice is based on the Lun", and sistere or "to cause to stand". This cycle then repeats itself as the Earth continues to rotate around the sun. I
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ting to note that there are exactly 91 days between each of these events, and 92 days between the June 21 summer s
e September 21 equinox. This adds up to a 365 day solar year with the 91 days between each event matching the 91
ide of the pyramid (described here).
of these solar events, the two solstices and the two equinoxes, can be measured and predicted using the patterns of liw that fall on EL Castillo at various times of the year. It is believed that the Mayans used the various shadows and d
d by the Pyramid to signal the beginning of a harvest or of a planting, to predict the best dates to be married or to be
r other various ceremonial reasons. The cycles of the sun also play out to another Mayan tradition of the number 52coincidence that this is the number of weeks in our standard year. But to the Maya it represented, in years, the time
".
ayan Calendar began on on the first day ofPop month, or our July 16th.
kept a count of 52 days (breaking down into 2 months with 20 days each,ks with 5 days each, and 2 additional days.
ount puts us in the 12th day of the 3rd month called Sip, or September 6th by our calendar.
was the day the Mayans held their most significant ceremonies at the base of the pyramid as September 6th (as well awhen the complete nine triangles of shadow and lightcan be seen on the western side of the north staircase. Ni
les being the most complete example of the phenomenon, with eight visible on the staircase and the ninth
nating the head of Kukulkan.
Photo from souvenir book
mage shows the Seven Triangles of Light and Shadow as they appear on the west face of the northern staircase of El Castillo between 4:30
ring the Spring equinox on March 21st. Also visible just to the right of the illuminated serpent head is the entrance to the inner antechamb
smaller structure over which the larger one was constructed.
the 12th day ofSip (or September 6th) count foreword three weeks (Mayan weeks with 5 days in each) and one add6 days total) and we arrive at the 9th day in the 4th month Zoodz (or September 22). On this date there are sevenles on the same side of the main staircase which indicated to the Mayan astronomers that the Earth had completed i
d the sun.f the triangles seen on September 6th completely shift off the pyramid and are projected onto the ground at the floo
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se. On the 6th day in the month ofTseek(October 9th or 17 days after September 22nd) there are 6 triangles visibl
are several dates and variations of the shadows and triangles as the sun approached the positions for which the pyra
They all had varying degrees of significance within the Mayan culture and I have only focused on the "main" ones.
Source: http://www.isourcecom.com/maya/cities/chichenitza/shadowof.htm
Related Link:Hypothesis of how the the location for the pyramid was derived
Chichen Itza at Spring Equinox. Image Source >>
egend of Quetzalcatl
alcoatl: "Feathered Snake." Quetzalcoatl is one of the major deities of the Aztecs, Toltecs, and other Middle American people
oes that he descended to Mictlan, the underworld, and gathered the bones of
man beings of the previous epochs. Upon his return, he sprinkled his own blood
hese bones and thus fashioned the humans of the new era. After he banned
from earth, and was burned while traveling on the ocean, the heart of
lcoatl became the morning-star. According to legend, Quetzalcoatl, described
-skinned and bearded, would return one day to rule over his people and
y his enemies (Tezcatlipoca). Thus, when the Spanish conqueror Hernn
appeared in 1519, the Aztec king, Montezuma II, was easily convinced that
was the returning god.
ing to Aztec legend, Ometecutli, "Lord of Duality," and Omecihuatl, "Lady of," initially created all life and produced four sons, Quetzalcoatl, Tezcatlipoca,
http://www.isourcecom.com/maya/cities/chichenitza/shadowof.htmhttp://www.isourcecom.com/maya/cities/chichenitza/shadowof.htmhttp://www.flickr.com/photos/9381661@N06/4407675190/sizes/l/http://www.isourcecom.com/maya/cities/chichenitza/shadowof.htmhttp://www.isourcecom.com/maya/cities/chichenitza/shadowof.htmhttp://www.flickr.com/photos/9381661@N06/4407675190/sizes/l/7/29/2019 HISTORY of Chinchen Itza
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opochtli and Tonatiuh, who represented different cardinal directions and who were associated with different colors. These sonswerful, ruling gods.
lcoatl was a benevolent god, and the founder of agriculture, industry, and the arts. Tezcatlipoca was the patron of evil and sothe night, omnipotent and multiform. Tezcatlipoca had transformed himself into the first sun, wanting to light the world. Becaus
e other gods were not pleased, and Quetzalcoatl struck Tezcatlipoca down into the sea, causing Tezcatlipoca to assume the fn the darkness that followed, the tiger Tezcatlipoca devoured all the giants and humans.
lcoatl then became the second sun. He ruled until one day Tezcatlipoca reached up with his tiger paw from the ocean and pucoatl down to earth. The fall of Quetzalcoatl caused a hurricane, which uprooted all growing things and destroyed man (agains that survived were turned into monkeys.
her gods then banished the two quarrelers, Quetzalcoatl and Tezcatlipoca, from the sky and made Tlaloc, god of rain and head sun. But angry Quetzalcoatl caused a rain of fire to devastate the earth, drying up all the rivers and destroying man (yet agan who did not perish were transformed into birds.
lcoatl then made the goddess Chalchiutlicue, "She of the Jade-Green Skirts," the fourth sun. But jealous Tezcatlipoca sent a y both the sun and the earth, and most of humanity perished(for the fourth time). Those who survived became fish.
onse to the darkness, all of the gods assembled in Teotihuacan to offer sacrifice so that there might be light again. Two gods elves, such a large offering that, because of the sacrifice, a brilliant moon appeared. The gods, angered at the moon's nerve, tat it, causing the dark holes in the moon that form the shape of a rabbit. The sacrifice was, after all, successful, and light return
lcoatl then descended to the underworld and collected all of the bones of the humans who had been destroyed. He fashioneds by sprinkling the bones with his own blood. Thus the Aztec people are the direct descendants of Quetzalcoatl himself.
ipoca, still angry, laced Quetzalcoatl's drink with a poisonous mushroom, causing him to commit incest with his sister. Being auetzalcoatl was so overcome with shame that he left Teotihuacan, never to return.
d has it that Quetzalcoatl's raft caught on fire on the ocean when the sun was especially hot one day, and his ashes turned intrried his heart back into the sky. This is how Quetzalcoatl became the god of the morning star.
tec people believed that one day, Quetzalcoatl would return to destroy his enemies and reign once again. In anticipation, eveas named Quetzalcoatl. Unfortunately, this messianic belief was exploited by the Spaniards who, upon arrival in Mexico, spokosperity, causing the Aztecs to believe that Quetzalcoatl himself had returned in the shape of the Spanish priests. Instead, therds took advantage of the vulnerability of the Aztecs and the Aztecs, despite their military might, were ruthlessly slaughtered.
Source: http://pages.pomona.edu/~tlm02000/www/aztec_religion.html
The legend of Quetzalcatl is well known to Mexican children. It is the origin of how
plumed serpent god, originally from the Toltec region of central Mexico, came to be k
the Maya.
Quetzalcoatl ("feathered snake") is the Aztec namefor the Feathered-Serpent deity of ancient Mesoamerica,one of the main gods of many Mexican and northernCentral American civilizations.
tells of a man who was revered as a great mystical leader much in the same ilk as Brit
King Arthur. Though there is some evidence to suggest that Quetzalcatl was actually
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hat ruled the Toltecs. He first appeared to the people of Teotehuican near current day Mexico City, and taught the T
r arts and science and became their ruler and led thir city to great prosperity and importance. He eventually fell in d
lating his own laws and set himself on fire. He rose in flames to become the planet Venus and vowed to return one ople.
his event, all priests in the Toltec cult were given the title of Quetzalcatl. One such priest by the name of Ce Acatl
zin rose to power and proclaimed himself as the second coming of Quetzalcatl returning as promised, and in 968 A
e king of the Toltec people once again. He reigned for decades and built the Toltec capital of Tula. Eventually he wed of by his enemies and this time sailed east on a raft of snakes, vowing, like the first Quetzalcatl, to return one d
ople. It is this snake reference that has caused the artwork depicting Quetzalcatl as emerging, or being "reborn" as
es from the mouth of a serpent.
aft of snakes carried Quetzalcatl east and south across the gulf of Mexico to a Yucatan beach. By coincidence, the were, at this time, expecting the return of their plumed serpent god Kukulkan. Kukulkan, in the same fashion as
alcatl, promised to return to rule his people after being forced to leave, and he was greeted as the returning Kukulk
hat discovered him. Topiltzin-Quetzalcatl-Kukulkan became the king of the Itz Maya and rebuilt the ancient capn Itz. Massive stone sculptures reflecting his image as the plumed serpent god were built in his honor and can be s
portion of their artwork.
emies eventually caught up with him again and he fled to Uxmal where he committed suicide and, according to leg
under the Temple of the Dwarf where he remains to this day, though no burial plot has yet been discovered.
d Link: http://weber.ucsd.edu/~anthclub/quetzalcoatl/que.htm
Chirping Pyramid
ts delight in the strange chirping echoes they produce when they clap their hands at the base of the steep staircases
up the face of Kukulkan, a 1,300-year-old Mayan pyramid in the Yucatan. While amusing themselves, the tourists
ingly be replicating an ancient Mayan ritual, says David Lubman, an acoustical consultant based in California. Theily reminiscent of the call of the quetzal, a bird the Maya considered a representative of the gods.
ng-tailed quetzal of Mexico and Central Americasociated by the ancient Maya and Aztecs withmed serpent god Quetzalcoatl.sed its magnificent tail feathers in religious ceremonies.
an recorded the enigmatic echoes while on vacation in Mexico and analyzed them when he
ed home. The echoes sound like chirps, he realized, because the sound from the tappingt hit a solid wall but hundreds of small steps, producing hundreds of echoes. The difference
distance traveled by echoes bouncing off lower steps is rather small, so the echoes followther closely and make a high-pitched sound; the distances and intervals between successive
returning from the higher steps, however, are longer, so their pitch is lower. When the
reach a listener's ear, the change in pitch sounds like a chirping bird.
mensions of the steps, it turns out, are the key to the effect. Each step is tall, but the tread,
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where the foot is pl
doesn't cut deeply i
pyramid. If the staideeper and not so h
effect on the echoenot be as great, and
wouldn't sound like
That Lubman notic
similarity between
and the quetzal's ca"lucky hunch," he s
the Maya, he thinks
exactly what they w
doing when they bu
staircase at Kukulkabout 1,000 years b
this, they had been stone staircases in t
where you are goin
an echo," he says. "would take is one p
1,000 years to notic
when you shorten t
staircase tread, the the tone rises."
The Maya could ha
the sound in ceremconducted at the py
which was clearly l
the sacred bird. Ku
a Mayan deity whoshares the same roo
Mayan word for "q
and who is often dewith the bird on his
Archeologists had a
considered hand-cl
tourists a nuisance Kukulkan, but now
admitting that Lubm
theories are possiblMaya were people
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where it was really important to listen," Lubman says. "The visual sense has been dominant in our culture, but ther
gained if historians learn that ears were more than mere pegs for jewelry."
GHT 1999 Discover, COPYRIGHT 2000 Gale Grouphttp://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1511/is_2_20/ai_53631750
tial Alignments
h other ancient cultures, observatories, pyramids and temples were erected based on celestial alignments.
o the Maya rising to power circa 400 AD in Central America and Mexico, there is evidence that the Olmec people h
y begun to use astronomical orientations to direct the layout of several ceremonial centers, with the Pyramids of theoriented to observing and predicting the motions of the Sun and Mon. As with the Egyptians, we can deduce that M
omical endeavors, heavily relied upon the ritual and ceremonial worlds of the culture, however, here we have a wea
ce to substantiate such claims. Left behind are codices, or systems of hieroglyphic recordings of the Maya, and whi
e celestial sightings and how these sightings and predictions are woven into the entire cultural complex.
resden Codex' has perhaps proved the most fruitful in helping to recreate the ancient environment, and containing aate calendar used to record the observations of Venus, which seems to be an object of utmost importance to them. W
oth a solar calendar and a ritual calendar, the ancient Maya imparted much meaning in the helical rising of Venus, w
evident in the structure of several ceremonial centers throughout the area. Unlike the Megalithic and Egyptian compfic observation can be better deciphered here, because of the elaborate records left behind, and because of the fact t
of the deductions the Maya made so closely resemble recent calculations of the same recorded cycles.
he Egyptians, the Maya had devised two calendars, one solar and one ritual which interacted and depended upon on
for the dictation of certain ritual events to be carried out. The sky for the Mayseeming personification of Gods and deities who played important roles in the
lives of the population. Most significantly, the relationship between the Sun an
(talked about previously in the helical rising, conjunction, phases) was represeof Kutaikcan, the God of Venus , and "symbolizes the cyclic myth of departur
return or death and resurrection." (Aveni 1984). In addition other objects may
been tracked in order to predict certain 'natural' phenomenon in accordance to
changes therefor placing major importance on the accurate predictions underta
better predict the earthly events thought to be under the control of the Gods.
great many structures are indicative of the devotion to and dependence upon V
the Maya, and can be found in the architecture ceremonial centers throughout
region. Caracol, at Chichen Itza sits atop a large earthen mound and is a structobviously intended for observing Venus at its most extreme points on the hori
Just as famous, is the Governor's Palace at Uxmal, constructed so that it would
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helical rising of Venus at its southernmost point during the eight year cycle it follows. Such an alignment can be fu
ntiated by the fact that the Palace deviates from the remainder of the buildings at Uxmal by twenty degrees, indicat
ken to insure the sight lines of the observation windows. The careful planning inherent in the design and building oures is made evident in the precision of their alignments, however this precision was indispensable to the planning o
and the prediction of natural processes that so dictated the lives of the Maya.
chen Itza, in Mexico there is a celestial observatory to the stars that was aligned along the line of the summer and w
e. It was built by the ancient Maya and / or their God Quatzequatl. The western orientation of the Castillo at Chichewithin a degree the zenith passage sunset. The east faces sunrise at the time of solar nadir.
pper Temple of the Jaguars and the Temple of the Warriors align to the zenith sunset. The Castillo has 365 steps. T
ol at Chichen Itza is recognized as an astronomical observatory (Milbrath 1988). The Caracol has three Venus alignm
ing the building's alignment to the northerly extremes of Venus. A pair of turret window alignments and a pair of baments point to Venus' western horizon standstills around 1000 A.D. The Caracol's platform, an irregular rectangle, h
nal directed toward the winter solstice sunset and summer solstice sunrise (Broda 1986). The platform staircase face
extreme north position.
nomical alignments are also obvious in Peru. One of Machu Picchu's primaryons was that of astronomical observatory. The Intihuatana stone (meaning
ng Post of the Sun') has been shown to be a precise indicator of the date of the
uinoxes and other significant celestial periods. The Intihuatana (also called theor Sukhanka stone) is designed to hitch the sun at the two equinoxes, not at the
e (as is stated in some tourist literature and new-age books). At midday on
21st and September 21st, the sun stands almost directly above the pillar,ng no shadow at all. At this precise moment the sun "sits with all his might upon
lar" and is for a moment "tied" to the rock. At these periods, the Incas held
onies at the stone in which they ?tied the sun? to halt its northward movement iny.
is also an Intihuatana alignment with the December solstice (the summer solstice
southern hemisphere), when at sunset the sun sinks behind Pumasillo (the
s claw), the most sacred mountain of the western Vilcabamba range, but the
itself is primarily equinoctial.
anic legends say that when sensitive persons touch their foreheads to the stone,
ihuatana opens one's vision to the spirit world (the author had such an
ence, which is described in detail in Chapter one of Places of Peace and Power,
web site, www.sacredsites.com). Intihuatana stones were the supremely sacreds of the Inca people and were systematically searched for and destroyed by the
ards. When the Intihuatana stone was broken at an Inca shrine, the Inca believed that the deities of the place died or
paniards never found Machu Picchu, even though they suspected its existence, thus the Intihuatana stone and its resremain in their original position.
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The mountain top sanctuary fell into disuse
abandoned some forty years after the Span
Cuzco in 1533. Supply lines linking the masocial centers were disrupted and the great
came to an end. The photograph shows theMachu Picchu in the foreground with the s
peak of Wayna Picchu towering behind. Padown the northern side of Wayna Picchu is
called Temple of the Moon inside a cavern
the ruins of Machu Picchu, there is noarchaeological or iconographical evidence
substantiate the new-age assumption that th
was a goddess site.
The Intihuatana Stone - The Hitching Post
Sun Source:Machu Picchu >>
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