Divinely sanctioned kingship is found among ancient civilisations throughout the world, incuding Asia, West Africa and Europe, but it has been a largely unexplored process in ancient Mesoamerica. Sacred kings, who played key roles in the emergence of complex urban society, first appeared among the Olmec on the Gulf Coast of Mexico around 900 BC, but the full flowering of this phenomenon subsequently occurred in southern Mexico, Guatemala, Belize and western Honduras among the most brilliant of the New World civilizations: The Maya. Published to accompany the exhibition opening at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art in September 2005, then travelling to the Dallas Museum of Art in February 2006 and the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, in June 2006, this superb book breaks new ground in documenting the development and exploring the manifesations of royal authority among the ancient Maya as well as their descendants, as revealed by the religious beliefs and ceremonies of the Maya today. Drawing on the most current archaeological, epigraphic and art-historical research of an impressive roster of Maya scholars, Lords of Creation addresses specific aspects of the central historical issues and seminal artworks that exemplify the primary characteristic of Maya divine kingship: the capacity of rulers to intercede between gods and men. Other languages available Spanish |