MAYA (4 threads, 224 posts)
    Monte Alban (5 posts)
    Historical Thread 0 Featured January 18 , 2004

    Up the mountains in Oaxaca ...
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    Author: * Tetisheri Tecumseh - 2 Posts on this thread out of 245 Posts sitewide.
    Date: Feb 3, 2004 - 13:37

    Five miles to the west of Oaxaca City lie the spectacular Monte Alban ruins, perched on a mountaintop high above the surrounding valleys. Leaving Oaxaca below and to the east, the access road winds steeply up a hillside, bringing you shortly to a parking area near the site entrance and it's museum.


    On the day we visited Monte Alban and took these pictures, it was the end of the rainy season, and we found the greenness of the surrounding hills and valleys and the archeological site itself extremely pleasant. The ruins extend over the peaks of 3 mountain ranges that converge in Oaxaca's central valley, at an altitude of 1,600 meters (about 5200 ft.) above sea level.


    About Monte Alban


    From about 500 B.C. through 800 A.D., Monte Alban flourished as the capital of the Zapotecs. Its great structures, formed of irregular stones and mud faced with cut stone and sometimes stucco, many decorated with elaborate reliefs, overlook the surrounding valleys.


    The site comprises 12 areas


    1. The North Platform, the largest and most complex area, stretches 870 from north to south and 635 feet from east to west. It hold several major temple clusters.


    2. Ball Court, on one side of the Plaza below the North Platform. Built around 250 A.D.


    3. Main Plaza: Flat, open central area 1,000 x 666 ft. in size.


    4. Pyramid Systems IV and M: on the west side of the plaza, between which lies the Building of the Dancers


    5. Central Buildings G, H, I: Stepped temples in the central area.


    6. Building of the Dancers: One of the sites oldest structures. Here were placed nearly 400 large rectangular stone blocks carved with human figures known as "dancers". These reliefs are thought to illustrate those who lived and died in Monte Alban, including captives, warriors, the sick and deformed and the dead.


    7. Building J: Unique structure believed by Arq. Alfonso Caso to have been used as an observatory., located in the Central Plaza


    8. South Platform: Nearly square, can be climbed via a long series of steps on its east side. Remains of a temple and a shrine are found on its top.


    9. The Palace: Four main rooms built around a patio in the heart of the site - the home of a dignitary.


    10. The Chapel


    11. Home of Tomb 7: Temple with rooms flanked by columns. The tomb was placed below the floor.


    12. Home of Tomb 104: Decorated with jaguar heads. Once the home of a prominent Zapotec.


    http://www.surf-mexico.com/states/Oaxaca/monte_alban.htm


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