More on Name on Mayan King Pakal’s tomb decoded

Date:

Share post:

Sixty-three years since the discovery of the tomb of Mayan King Pakal located inside the Temple of Inscriptions in Palenque, Chiapas (southern state of Mexico), the researcher Guillermo Bernal Romero from the Maya Studies Center, of the Institute of Philological Investigations of the National University of Mexico (UNAM), deciphered the T514 glyph meaning YEJ: “sharp edge.”

More on Name on Mayan King Pakal's tomb decoded
Sarcophagus lid of the Maya ruler of Palenque, King Pakal the Great, also 
known as K’inich Janaab’ Pacal (23 March 603 CE – 31 March 683 CE)
[Credit: enkispeaks]

The scholar explained that “the name is related to the nine warriors depicted on the walls of the tomb, also refers to the war, capturing prisoners, and conquering cities. The tomb itself is a glorification of war, has a symbolic relationship with various elements, for example, the nine levels of the Mayan underworld. “

The YEJ glyph is associated with Te’ which means “spear,” so this finding allows to can read, for the first time the name of the chamber where the sacred tomb of the ruler is: “The House of the Nine Sharp Spears .”

More on Name on Mayan King Pakal's tomb decoded
A reconstruction of Pakal’s tomb in the Museo Nacional de Antropología 
[Credit: WikiCommons]

The enigma was solved by studying different elements, including the jaguar, sacred animal of the Mayan universe; by analyzing various skulls and observe their molars, the researcher related the information with the glyphs and determined that the glyph in question, is the schematic representation of the upper molar of a jaguar, which is at least registered in more than 50 Mayan inscriptions with a war focus.

The researcher, Bernal Romero, explained that after 1700 years of being hidden, by using the glyph YEJ it can also deciphered the full name of the “C House of the Palenque Palace:” The House of the Sharp Spear,” which is the residence of Mayan King Janaahb K’inich ‘Pakal.

More on Name on Mayan King Pakal's tomb decoded
The Yej glyph was found 63 years ago at the top of the Temple of the Inscriptions
 in Chiapas, Mexico, which holds the tomb of the most famous king of Palenque, 
K’inich Janaab’ Pakal. Once translated, the glyph, or badge, was identified in
 more than 50 other inscriptions “depicting events like taking war prisoners,
 military entries to cities and other martial events of the Maya Classic period” 
[Credit: Investigacion y Desarrollo]

“This finding provides a leap in accuracy and understanding of Mayan life. Today we know that there few wars, but they had a warrior philosophy, that is why deciphering this glyph helps determine the rate of wars in the late classic, between 700 and 800 AD, full cycle of the Mayan” the doctor in Mesoamerican Studies also highlighted.

Is important to note that there are about 20,500 Mayan glyphs, 80 percent have already been decoded; from those at Palenque, 90 percent are already interpreted.

See also: Name on Mayan King Pakal’s tomb decoded

Source: Investigacion y Desarrollo [July 23, 2015]

ADVERTISEMENT

spot_img

Related articles

Secrets of 1491 map revealed via multispectral imaging

Henricus Martellus, a German cartographer working in Florence in the late 15th century, produced a highly detailed map...

An ignoble end for Mosul’s al-Nuri Mosque and Minaret

The news of the destruction of the 12th-century Great Mosque of al-Nuri and the adjacent al-Hadba Minaret left...

Mysterious skeleton revealed to belong to an anchoress

The rare and unusual life of an anchoress, a woman who devoted her life to prayer while living...

Bones of hunted mammoth show early human presence in Arctic

The remains of a mammoth that was hunted down about 45,000 years ago have revealed the earliest known...

First evidence of social beer consumption found in 7,000-year-old town in Jordan Valley

Israeli researchers say they have discovered the first evidence of social beer consumption within communities in the ancient...

St Mark’s mosaic restoration completed

For five years, restorers worked on the mosaics on the dome of the narthex, the entrance to St....

Metal detectorist finds 1,500 year-old treasure in Denmark

A metal detectorist made a remarkable find on muddy land on the island of Hjarnø near Horsens. Over...

World’s oldest cheese found in Egyptian tomb

Aging usually improves the flavor of cheese, but that's not why some very old cheese discovered in an...