Chunchucmil

Chunchucmil
Archaeological mounds of ancient Chunchucmil
Chunchucmil is located in Yucatán (state)
Chunchucmil
Location within Yucatán
LocationMaxcanú
RegionYucatán, Mexico
Coordinates20°38′18.82″N 90°11′24.79″W / 20.6385611°N 90.1902194°W / 20.6385611; -90.1902194
Area25–65 square kilometres (9.7–25.1 sq mi)
History
PeriodsMiddle Preclassic - Terminal Classic
CulturesMaya
Map of Mesoamerica highlighting the location of Chunchucmil

Chunchucmil was once a large, sprawling pre-Columbian Maya city located in the western part of what is now the state of Yucatán, Mexico.

Although the famous explorer and author John Lloyd Stephens traveled within a few kilometers of Chunchucmil during his historic journey across the Yucatán Peninsula (he even met with the owner of the nearby haciendas),[1] the archaeological site went relatively unnoticed by Maya scholars for more than a century because virtually no monuments (stelae) or other grand sculptures have been found there. The lack of royal monuments, combined with other archaeological data, may indicate that Chunchucmil was not a city ruled by a single divine king, as most other Maya polities. Instead, it may have been a commercial center, organized by various lineages and focused upon funneling goods between regions—such as the trade between the Gulf of Mexico and the interior of the Yucatán Peninsula.

Chunchucmil was most populous in the Middle Classical Period (400-650 AD), with an estimated 31,000 - 43,000 (within the central 25 km2 area) people.

  1. ^ Stephens 1962 (1842).

Chunchucmil

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