- Topoxte
Topoxte (or Topoxté in
Spanish orthography ) is apre-Columbian Mayaarchaeological site in what is now Department of Petén in northernGuatemala . As thecapital of the Ko’woj Maya, it was the largest of the few PostclassicMesoamerica n sites in the area. Topoxte was located on a formerisland (now apeninsula ) in the Yaxhalagoon across from the Classic period center ofYaxha . The name of the site, Topoxte, means “Ramón tree 's seed.” The Ramón tree, commonly known asbreadnut , was an important component of the ancient Maya diet.The site was first occupied in the Late Classic by
elite families fromYaxha . Burial 49, which dates to AD750 , indicates a marriage of the Lady Twelve Guacamaya from Topoxte with a prince fromTikal . The site was abandoned by the end of the Classic period (ca.900 ) and reoccupied in during the Postclassic at approximately1350 . After being inhabited for about acentury , it was finally abandoned in1450 .Ten different construction phases are apparent in the archaeological record of Topoxte. There are three distinctive groups at the site, two 5 meter tall platforms, and a low residential area consisting of more than 100 structures. The site’s central plaza is bounded by 3
temple s constructed in the Postclassic architectural style (incorporating vertical walls,column s and flat stone ceilings).There were two other islands Canté and Poxte, now also part of the main land, that where also occupied by people from Topoxte, the site was abandoned ca 1450, when the Ko’woj Maya, moved their capitol west to
Zacpetén Island in the Salpetén lake, near thePeten Itza lake.External links
* [http://www.authenticmaya.com/topoxte1.htm Topoxte History and Photo Gallery]
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