- Teuchitlan tradition
The Teuchitlan tradition was a pre-Columbian complex society that occupied areas of the modern-day
Mexican state s ofNayarit andJalisco . Although evidence of Teuchitlan tradition architecture appears as early as 300 BCE, its rise is generally dated to the end of the Formative period, 200 CE. [See Smith, p. 24.] The tradition is rather abruptly extinguished at the end of the Classic era, ca. 900 CE. [Beekman (2000) abstract.
*Also Weigand and Beekman (1999).]The Teuchitlan tradition is notable for its circular central plazas and conical step pyramids. According to researcher Phil Weigand, these unusual structures are "unique in the Mesoamerican architectural repertoire and indeed are not found anywhere else in the world". [Weigand (2001), p. 402.
: Michael E. Smith says "The circular layoutsthat structure these settlements are unique within Mesoamerica" but mentions the "circular capitals" of the Parthian and Sassanian cultures, p. 22.]The Teuchitlan tradition is an outgrowth of the earlier shaft tomb tradition, but with a shift away the smaller centers to larger sites such Los Guachimontones. [Beekman (1994) p. 3.]
Guachimontones
The
Guachimontones archaeological site, just outside modern-dayTeuchitlán , Jalisco, is the largest and most complex site within the Teuchitlan tradition. [Weigand and Cárdenas.] The center of the ancient village was occupied by three circular areas, each of with a multi-level circularstep pyramid at its center. There are a total of 10 such "Circles" within Teuchitlan, along with four rectangular plazas and twoballcourt s among many other smaller structures. [Weigand and Beekman (1999).]The circular pyramids are thought to be
cosmogram s, representing the mythological structure of the universe, and the circular poles that were set into their center theMesoamerican world tree . Based on the many ceramic tableaus that have been recovered, it is similarly thought thatvolador ceremonies were conducted from the pole. [Weigand and Beekman (1999).]ocietal structure
There are several characteristics of a ranked society present within Teuchitlan tradition societies — the circular plazas, for example, were restricted to the elite. [Weigand and Beekman (1999).] However, based semi-fortified sites excavated in key
mountain pass es on the edge of the Teuchitlan core area, it is thought that the larger Teuchitlan tradition area was politically fragmented. [Beekman, 1994. Beekman, 1996.]The last of the tradition
The onset of the Postclassic era in western Mexico, as elsewhere in Mesoamerica, was marked by abrupt changes. In roughly 900 CE, the circular pyramids, plazas, and concentric groupings began to be replaced by the more prosaic rectangular architecture [Weigand and Cárdenas.] – the Teuchitlán tradition had suffered a "total and definitive collapse", a change so abrupt that it has been assumed that it was driven from outside, perhaps by the ascending
Tarascan state . [Williams.]Notes
References
*aut|Beekman, Christopher S (1994) " [http://carbon.cudenver.edu/~cbeekman/articles/saa94pap.pdf A Classic Period Political Boundary in the Sierra La Primavera Region, Jalisco, Mexico] ", presented at the 59th Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, Anaheim.
*aut|Beekman, Christopher S (1996) " [http://carbon.cudenver.edu/~cbeekman/articles/am96pap.pdf Political Boundaries and Political Structure: the Limits of the Teuchitlan Tradition] " in "Ancient Mesoamerica", Vol 7, No 1, pp. 135-147.
*aut|Smith, Michael E. (2007) "Form and Meaning in the Earliest Cities: A New Approach to Ancient Urban Planning" in "Journal of Planning History", Vol. 6, No. 1, pp. 3-47.
*aut|Weigand, Phil (2001) "West Mexico Classic" in "Encyclopedia of Prehistory", Vol 5, Peter Peregrine (ed), ISBN 978-0306462597.
*aut|Weigand, Phil C. and Christopher S. Beekman (1999) "La Civilización Teuchitlan" in "La Jornada, Suplemento Cultural", vol 210, no 1-4. Accessed May 2008.
*aut|Weigand, Phil and Efraín Cárdenas, " [http://carbon.cudenver.edu/~cbeekman/research/guachimonton.html Proyecto Arqueológico Teuchitlán] ", accessed May 2008.
*aut|Williams, Eduardo, " [http://www.famsi.org/research/williams/index.html Prehispanic West México: A Mesoamerican Culture Area] ", Foundation for the Advancement of Mesoamerican Studies, Inc., accessed May 2008.
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