Dynastic Genealogies from Tikal, Guatemala: Implications for Descent and Political Organization
- 20 January 1977
- journal article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in American Antiquity
- Vol. 42 (1) , 61-67
- https://doi.org/10.2307/279461
Abstract
Building upon the work of several other people, Clemency Coggins has recently presented a tentative reconstruction of Tikal dynastic history, complete with a proposed genealogy of the rulers themselves. These are important data for any attempt to reconstruct the social and political organization of Tikal, and this paper explores their implications. The data are consistent with models of ancient Maya sociopolitical organization in which patrilineal descent, stratification, and strong central political authority were important. At Tikal, this seems to have been the case from the first century A.D. until Terminal Classic times. A currently popular view that, in Early Classic times, positions of prestige, power, and authority were open to anyone who had the necessary talent, wealth, and support is probably untenable, at least for Tikal.Keywords
This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- Inauguration Dates of Three Late Classic Rulers of Tikal, GuatemalaAmerican Antiquity, 1977
- Territorial Organization of the Lowland Classic MayaScience, 1973
- Stature at Tikal, Guatemala: Implications for Ancient Maya Demography and Social OrganizationAmerican Antiquity, 1967
- Role Allocation, Position Structuring, and Ambilineal Descent1American Anthropologist, 1964