Cahal Pech

Cahal Pech
Location San Ignacio, Cayo District, Belize
Region Cayo District
History
Founded 1200 BCE
Abandoned 900 CE
Periods Classic
Cultures Maya
Site notes
Excavation dates 1988 - 2000
Archaeologists

Jaime Awe

National Institute of Archaeology (NICH)
Architecture
Architectural styles Classic
Responsible body: Belize Department of Archaeology

Cahal Pech is a Maya site located near the town of San Ignacio in the Cayo District of Belize. The site was a palatial, hilltop home for an elite Maya family, and though most major construction dates to the Classic period, evidence of continuous habitation has been dated to as far back as 1200 BCE during the Early Middle Formative period (Early Middle Preclassic), making Cahal Pech one of the oldest recognizably Maya sites in Western Belize.[1][2]

Location

The site rests high above the banks of the Macal River and is strategically located to overlook the confluence of the Macal River and the Mopan River. The site is a collection of 34 structures, with the tallest temple being about 25 meters in height, situated around a central acropolis. The site was abandoned in the 9th century CE for unknown reasons.

Archaeology

The earliest pottery in western Belize is found here.

"Emerging information from western Belize suggests that ceramic-using populations may have been in place as early as ca. 1200 B.C. at Cahal Pech and perhaps elsewhere (Awe 1992; Clark and Cheetham 2002; Garber et al. 2004; Healy and Awe 1995). While these complexes, termed "Cunil" at Cahal Pech and "Kanocha" at Blackman Eddy, remain to be broadly documented across the Belize River Valley, they are the earliest established ceramic technologies recorded in western Belize."[3]

The name Cahal Pech, meaning "Place of the Ticks" in the Yucatec Maya language,[4] was given when the area was used as pasture during the first archaeological studies in the 1950s, led by Linton Satterthwaite from the University of Pennsylvania Museum. It is now an archaeological reserve, and houses a small museum with artifacts from various ongoing excavations.

The primary excavation of the site began in 1988. Restoration was completed in 2000 under the leadership of Dr. Jaime Awe, Director of the National Institute of Archaeology (NICH), Belize.[5]

Other nearby Mayan sites include Chaa Creek, Xunantunich, Baking Pot, and Lower Dover.

See also

Notes

  1. Awe et al. (1990)
  2. Awe (2000)
  3. Jon C. Lohse, Jaime Awe, Cameron Griffith, Robert M. Rosenswig, and Fred Valdez, Jr., Preceramic Occupations in Belize: Updating The Paleoindian and Archaic Record. Latin American Antiquity, 17(2), 2006, pp. 209-226
  4. Awe (2006)
  5. Awe (2006)

References

Awe, Jaime; Cassandra Bill; Mark Campbell; David Cheetham (1990). "Early Middle Formative Occupation in the Central Maya Lowlands: Recent Evidence from Cahal Pech, Belize" (PDF online reproduction). Papers from the Institute of Archaeology. London: UCL Institute of Archaeology. 1: 1–5. ISSN 0965-9315. OCLC 231692266. 
Awe, Jaime (June 2000). "Cahal Pech". Archaeology Magazine. 
Awe, Jaime (2006). Maya Cities and Sacred Caves. Cubola Productions. ISBN 978-976-8161-10-9. 
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Coordinates: 17°08′45″N 89°04′27″W / 17.1457°N 89.0741°W / 17.1457; -89.0741

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