- J. Eric S. Thompson
"For other persons named Eric Thompson, see
Eric Thompson (disambiguation) ".Sir John Eric Sidney Thompson (
31 December ,1898 –9 September ,1975 ) was an English archeologist andMayanist epigrapher, regarded as the pre-eminent mid-20th century scholar of thepre-Columbian Maya civilization . He was generally known as J. Eric S. Thompson in print and Eric Thompson to his colleagues.Thompson was born in
London and studiedanthropology at theUniversity of Cambridge .In 1925 he began working under Dr.
Sylvanus Morley of theCarnegie Institution on the archeological project atChichen Itza . He took his new bride honeymooning through the jungle by mule to make one of the first explorations of the Maya site ofCoba .Thompson was, as he himself noted, of the last generation of "generalist" archeologists in the field, engaging in activities from finding and mapping new sites, excavation, study of
Maya ceramics , art and iconography,Maya hieroglyphics , someethnology on the side, and writing books for both technical and lay audiences.Thompson conducted a number of excavations at sites in British Honduras (present-day
Belize ). He was one of the first in the field to investigate and excavate smaller sites in areas away from the elite ceremonial centers, to learn more about the lives of common Maya people.Expanding on the earlier work of
John T. Goodman andJuan H. Martinez-Hernandez , (largely neglected by other scholars at the time), Thompson developed the correlation between theMaya calendar and theGregorian calendar that became generally accepted.Thompson did considerable work in deciphering of Maya hieroglyphics, especially those related to the
calendar andastronomy , as well as identifying some new nouns. He developed a numerical cataloguing system for the glyphs (the "T-number" system), which, with some expansions, is still used by Mayanists today. He initially supported Morley's contention that history was not to be found in the inscriptions, but changed his position in light of the work ofTatiana Proskouriakoff in the 1960s.His attempted
decipherment s were based on ideographic rather thanlinguistic principles. In his later years he resisted the notion that the glyphs have a strongphonetic component, as put forward by the Russian linguistYuri Knorozov . After his death, for a time some younger Maya epigraphers blamed Thompson for holding back what became a very fruitful approach to the glyphs with his forceful and articulate disagreements. This sort of criticism seems, however, to rest on a gross overestimation of the actual power wielded by Thompson.Michael D. Coe , one of the most prominent proponents of the phonetic approach while Thompson was still alive, has said that the degree of hostility was unwarranted. In any case, the value and correctness of the phonetic approach was not so obvious in the 1960s and early 1970s as it would become in retrospect with the later progress in Maya decipherment.Thompson had an erudite but inviting writing style, often displaying a dry wit. He wrote an autobiography covering his early career in the field, "Maya Archeologist".
Thompson was knighted by Queen Elizabeth II in 1975. He died shortly thereafter the same year in
Cambridge ,Cambridgeshire .External links
* [http://www.fmnh.org/mln/thompson.html The J.E.S.Thompson collection at the Field Museum, Chicago]
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