The earliest date lifted from the site is A.D. 564 (the inscription on a stele) This places Tulum within the Classic period, though we know that its heyday was much later (1200 - 1521 A.D.) during the Late Post-classic period. Tulum was a major link in the Maya's extensive trade network. Both maritime and land routes converged here. Artifacts found in or near the site testify to contacts that ranged from Central Mexico to Central America and every place in between: copper rattles and rings from the Mexican highlands; flint and ceramics from all over the Yucatán jade and obsidian from Guatemala and more. The first Europeans to see Tulum were probably Juan de Grijalva and his men as they sailed reconnaissance along the Eastern coast of Yucatán in 1518. The Spaniards later returned to conquer the Peninsula unwittingly bringing Old World diseases which decimated the native population. And so Tulum, like so many cities before it, was abandoned to the elements.
The lad is back.....This time Sarah accompanies him on this adventure that begins in the rum fields of Jamaica then moves to the city of my dreams--- Havana and ends in Mayan heaven in Tulum Mexico. Sarah will be blogging along with her own unedited views. May the gods watch over me!
Thursday, January 17, 2013
Tulum: History
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment