- Spearthrower Owl
"Spearthrower Owl" (or Atlatl Cauac) is the name commonly given to a
Mesoamerica n ruler from the Early Classic period inMesoamerican chronology , who is identified in Maya inscriptions and iconography. Although thepolity over which Spearthrower Owl ruled is uncertain, most researchers and experts [For example, Stuart (1998)] have supposed that he was a ruler ofTeotihuacan at the start of height of its influence across Mesoamerica in the 4th and5th century . Inscriptions on the Marcador monument at thePetén Basin center ofTikal record that he ascended to the throne on a date equivalent to4 May ,374 (already an adult at the time), and the long-lived ruler died on9 June ,439 . As no Teotihuacan records are deciphered, he is only known from references in inscriptions in the Maya cities ofTikal ,Uaxactun ,Yaxchilan , andTonina .Under his rule Teotihuacan armies subjected much of the central Maya area to client states. His general
Siyaj K'ak' (formerly known by the nickname "Smoking Frog" prior to phonetic decipherment of the Classic Maya hieroglyphs) conquered the Petén.Nun Yax Ayin (one of his sons), was installed as king ofTikal in379 and Siyaj K'ak' was installed as king ofUaxactun . Maya rulers were still mentioning their descent from Spearthrower Owl on monuments five generations later.Spearthrower Owl is among the first major figures in a supposed "foreign intrusion" into the Maya heartland of the Peten beginning in the 4th century AD. However, little evidence is presented of his actual physical presence in the region, leading to speculation that he was lord of Teotihuacan at the time of the intrusion. Much like the later
Quetzalcoatl , subsequent Maya kings would claim a legitimizing descent from Spearthrower Owl; and through these later Maya Kings, many other centers such as Copan and Quirigua would begin to show Highland Mexican (that is, Teotihuacan) influence in their public iconography.Controversy
It should be noted that the idea of direct, physical intrusion of Central Mexican personages into Tikal and other Classic Maya cities only began appearing in the late 1990s and is not universally supported. Linda Schele, for example, proposed that military technology and a "Venus-Tlaloc" ritual system of warfare were imported from Central Mexico, but the importation was done by emissaries, not invaders.
Notes
References
: cite web |author=aut|Stuart, David |authorlink=David Stuart (Mayanist) |year=1998 |title="The Arrival of Strangers": Teotihuacan and Tollan in Classic Maya History |url=http://www.mesoweb.com/pari/publications/news_archive/25/strangers/strangers.html |work=PARI Online Publications: Newsletter # 25 |format=Extract of October 1996 paper |publisher=Precolumbian Art Research Institute |accessdate=2007-01-18: cite book |author=aut|Freidel, David A. |coauthors=aut|
Linda Schele and aut|Joy Parker |year=1995 |title=Maya Cosmos: Three Thousand Years on the Shaman's Path |edition=Reissue edition |publisher=Harper Paperbacks |location=New York |isbn=0-688-14069-6
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