
Maya Daykeeping
Three Calendars from Highland Guatemala
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Maya Daykeeping
Three Calendars from Highland Guatemala
About this book
The use of such calendars is mentioned in historical and ethnographic works, but very few examples are known to exist. Each of the three calendars transcribed and translated by John M. Weeks, Frauke Sachse, and Christian M. Prager - and housed at the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology - is unique in structure and content. Moreover, except for an unpublished study of the 1722 calendar by Rudolf Schuller and Oliver La Farge (1934), these little-known works appear to have escaped the attention of most scholars. Introductory essays contextualize each document in time and space, and a series of appendixes present previously unpublished calendrical notes assembled in the early twentieth century.
Providing considerable information on the divinatory use of calendars in colonial highland Maya society previously unavailable without a visit to the University of Pennsylvania's archives, Maya Daykeeping is an invaluable primary resource for Maya scholars. Mesoamerican Worlds Series
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Information
Table of contents
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Preface
- 1: Three K’iche’an Divinatory Calendars
- 2: Calendario de los indios de Guatemala, 1685
- 3: Calendario de los indios de Guatemala, 1722
- 4: Calendario de Vicente Hernández Spina, 1854
- Appendix one: Notes on Highland Maya Calendars
- Appendix two: Notes on the Correlation of Maya andGregorian Calendars
- Appendix three: Agricultural Cycle and the K’iche’an Calendar
- Notes
- References
- Index