El Mirador: The “Holy” Mayan City
A vast civilization, the Mayans, expanded across South America for centuries. Specifically, impressive Mayan artifacts and sites exist in southern Mexico, Honduras, El Salvador, and Guatemala. One of those sites is Guatemala’s El Mirador which people call the Holy City.
Antiqua Archeologia
El Mirador, or the Window/the Balcony, is close to a much more famous Mayan site Tikal. Due to Tikal’s popularity, the city was an obscure and remote place for a long time. So much so that archeologists could not discover it until 1926.
Urban Walker
Although the initial discovery was in 1926, for more than 30 years, El Mirador remained a mystery because of the terrain and heavy forests. When the true extent of El Mirador came to the surface, it changed the entire basic knowledge of the history of Mayans.
El Mirador is at least 4000 years old, far more than historians ever thought that the Mayan civilization went back. Moreover, the city was not just a small town with a small population. It was a legit social and cultural center with a population of tens of thousands living inside big buildings.
Throughout its history, El Mirador had its ups and downs. While the city continuously flourished for 600 years, towards the end of the 9th century it saw its end, as people abandoned it for which historians have a couple of guesses.
The remains of walls around the settlement ranging from 3 to 8 meters suggest that the people of El Mirador were thre...
Source:
themindcircle
URL:
http://themindcircle.com/category/architecture/
-------------------------------- |
Bijoy Jain in conversation with Rem Koolhaas and David Gianotten | VDF x MPavilion | Dezeen |
|