Saturday, May 2, 2020

The longest Ancient Highway road in Yucatan built by Warrior Mayan Queen

Credit foto: Traci Ardren (University of Miami)/ Proyecto Sacbe Yacuna-Coba/ Cultural Heritage Engineering Initiative





The road was built about 1,000 years ago.

In the 1930s, scientists at the Carniege Archaeological Institute in Washington discovered a road connecting the cities of Cobá and Yaxuná in the Yucatan Peninsula, Mexico. Due to the materials used to build roads in this region, they were called "white roads", and the reason for their existence fascinated researchers.

A recent study, in which excavations were used but also aerial observations with the help of lidar, three-dimensional scanning with the help of laser, brings new evidence related to who ordered its construction. Travis Stanton, an archaeologist at the University of California Riverside, explains that the road was most likely ordered by K'awiil Ajaw, a warrior Mayan queen who ruled Cobá more than 1,000 years ago.  Live Science.

Maya warrior queen may have built the longest 'white road' Live Science


"Given the warlike nature of its monuments, it is possible that it was the leader who extended the road to extend his control to Yaxuná," explains Stanton.

Scientists who have studied the material culture of the Mayan civilization explain that these "white roads" were common throughout their territory, but that between Cobá and Yaxuná is the longest and has been a massive logistical effort, both in terms of time, but also of resources.

"We tend to interpret them as a kind of activity that presents the power of a political regime, or at least the alliance between two centers of power," said Traci Ardren, an archaeologist at the University of Miami.

A complicated political situation

Historians believe that Cobá's invasion of Yaxuná was caused by an increase in the military and political power of a third city: Chichen Itza. This city was about 23 kilometers from Yaxuna and, according to archaeological evidence, this city was the main political force in the center of the Yucatan Peninsula.

The death of Queen K'awiil Ajaw was followed by the decline of the military and political power of the city of Cobá. Arden explains that Cobá was a city in which only one family had a monopoly on political power, which means that the increase or decrease of influence in the region depended, to a large extent, on a strong central figure. Instead, Chichen Itza was, according to archaeological evidence, a more decentralized state, with several centers of power that stretched throughout.



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500 years since the death of the great Leonardo Piero da Vinci

Decoding Da Vinci Limelight Magazine

501 years have passed since Leonardo da Vinci, a prominent figure in the Renaissance, passed away. His genius allowed him to leave his mark on the era, being a painter, sculptor, architect, musician, engineer, inventor, anatomist, geologist, cartographer, botanist and writer.

Leonardo da Vinci's personality also proved to be tender 500 years after his death, on May 2, 1519.

Two Italian experts will perform a DNA test using a strand of hair believed to belong to da Vinci. The strand comes from a private collection in the United States and will be exhibited starting Thursday at the Leonardo Davinci Museum of Ideals in Vinci, the city in Tuscany where the famous artist was born.

Decoding Da Vinci Death 500 years tribute Limelight Magazine


Scientists believe that the DNA analysis could dispel any doubts about the artist's remains, which are said to have been discovered in a tomb in Amboise, France.

Da Vinci was originally buried in the chapel of Saint Florentin in the Amboise Castle in the Loire Valley. But the tomb was destroyed during the French Revolution and the bones are believed to have been moved to a smaller chapel (Saint-Hubert) of the same castle. However, so far it has never been established with certainty that these are Leonardo's remains.

Leonardo da Vinci's Tomb Atlas Obscura


Leonardo Da Vinci lived in France for the last three years of his life, at the invitation of King Francis I.

Born on April 15, 1452, Leonardo is considered one of the most important personalities of the Renaissance. Famous both as a painter and as a sculptor, architect, musician, engineer, inventor, anatomist, geologist, cartographer, botanist and writer, da Vinci reflected his aspirations for a practical approach to the theoretical fields specific to his time.

Chapel of Saint Hubert, Amboise (Illustration) - Ancient History Encyclopedia

We have all heard of "The Vitruvian Man" and "The Mona Lisa", some of the works that made da Vinci known throughout the world. Mona Lisa has always generated discussion among scientists and artists, all trying to find out more about the woman with the look "following you around the room" and has an unmistakable smile.

According to the most widespread hypothesis, the model of the painting was named Lisa Gherardini, born in 1479, in Florence. A descendant of a modest family, she married at the age of 16 the son of a cloth merchant, himself a merchant, Francesco di Bartolomeo del Giocondo, and gave him three children.

When, in 1503, Francesco del Giocondo moved to a more spacious apartment on Via del Stufa and decided to make a portrait of his wife, he turned to Leonardo da Vinci. Francesco never received his commissioned work.


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