Stephens and Catherwood: adventurers discovering the ancient Maya

Top Image : Main temple at Tulum with hieroglyphic stairway by Frederick Catherwood, from Views of Ancient Monuments

The astounding journeys of John Lloyd Stephens and Frederick Catherwood to Central America in 1839 to 1842 introduced the ancient, unrecognized Maya civilization to the rest of the world. Their life-threatening adventures saw them fighting their way through hundreds of miles of thick jungle vegetation, suffering from the sweltering heat, suffocating humidity, and soul-soaking rains. They were obstructed by the civil war of General Santa Anna and blocked by threatening politicians exercising their illusionary power. Despite the enormous struggles, they managed to locate and explore numerous ruined cities that flourished during the Classic Period of Maya history, from the third to the 10th centuries.  They were caught in the midst of a violent revolution, their endurance tested by bats, snakes, biting insects, malaria, flesh-eating parasites, and days without food or water. The adventurers were the first English speakers to visit these areas of Central America and the first to record many of the ancient monuments. Along their hazardous journey they met and documented many descendants of the ancient Maya, some who still spoke the same ancient language. Many natives were anxious to assist the explorers in their discoveries, despite their primitive living conditions.

Panoramic View of UxmalPanoramic View of Uxmal

A detailed description of their treacherous journey, along with their amazing discoveries, appeared in their joint two-volume book, Incidents of Travel in Central America, Chiapas, and Yucatan, published in 1841. Their travel book became an instant best seller with 12 editions printed in only three months which was unheard of at that time. Stephen’s first-person account and lively text revealed the scoop and complexity of the Maya cities; Catherwood’s colorful artworks illustrated the variety of buildings, the precise details of their carvings and the intricacy of hieroglyphic writings. These ruins were indeed created by a totally unknown culture. Stephens and Catherwood uncovered not merely new architectural wonders and buried cities but an entire unknown civilization, buried in the tropical jungles for over 1,000 years.

John Lloyd Stephens from the British edition of Incidents of travel in Central America, Chiapas and Yucatan published in 1854John Lloyd Stephens from the British edition of Incidents of travel in Central America, Chiapas and Yucatan published in 1854

John Lloyd Stephens Meets Frederick Catherwood

John Lloyd Stephens (1805-1852) was American, living in New York, where he became a lawyer, but he much preferred travel and the search for adventure in uncharted territories to practicing law. In 1834 Stephens set off for a grand tour of the usual European sights, but that did not satisfy his wanderlust. Extending his tour, he searched for ancient cities throughout Greece, Turkey, Jordan and Egypt.

For the rest of this article please go to source link below.

REGISTER NOW

By Dr Marion Dolan

Dr Marion Dolan is retired from the University of Pittsburgh where she was an adjunct professor in the history of art and architecture and lectured for the Osher Lifelong Learning program at Carnegie-Mellon University for many years. She published a book on astronomical art, Astronomical Knowledge Transmission Through Illustrated Aratea Manuscripts. This book on astronomical manuscripts investigates the transmission of ancient knowledge carried in a Greek poem on astronomy written in the third century BC. It tracks the astronomical content and artworks as they changed through the Middle Ages and the Renaissance and how that information was received and taught. She has also written two historical novels, one on the life of Emperor Frederick II and one on the British Raj in India. Her most recent publication is Decoding Astronomy in art and Architecture (Springer Praxis Books), October 2021.

Dr. Dolan received her BS, MFA and PhD from the University of Pittsburgh, majoring in medieval manuscripts, minoring in medieval architecture and history of astronomy. Now an independent scholar, she continues her research on the transmission of astronomical knowledge and teaches art history at the NSU Museum of Art, Fort Lauderdale, where she also serves as a docent. Archeoastronomy has been a lifelong area of study; she has taught the subject many times, including aboard a ship during a cruise around the world as faculty member for Semester at Sea based at the University of Virginia.

(Source: ancient-origins.net; October 28, 2022; https://tinyurl.com/4xtpdz44)
Back to INF

Loading please wait...