Don’t Know Much About® Mythology (61 page)

BOOK: Don’t Know Much About® Mythology
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c. 1750
Large ceremonial centers built in Peru.

c. 1500
Earliest evidence of metalworking in Peru.

c. 1200
Olmec, the first major pre-Columbian civilization, emerges in

Yucatan lowlands. Olmec civilization is destroyed around 400 BCE.

c. 1000
Adena culture develops in middle Ohio River valley. The people in this village culture are famous for their large burial mounds, which begin to appear around 700 BCE.

c. 850
Chavin culture, based in Peru, with worship of part-human, part-animal beings, reaches its height. Grave goods include copper jewelry, decorated human skulls, and pipes for early tobacco use.

c. 800
Mayans begin to move from Central America into southern Mexico.

c. 400
Beginnings of Moche civilization in northern Peru.

c. 200
Nazca culture emerges in Peru; famed for “Nazca lines”—geometric and figurative designs etched into the surface of the Peruvian desert and attributed to aliens in pseudoscientific circles. Most likely, the lines were offerings made to the gods of sky and mountains.

c. 150
Great Serpent Mound in Ohio: 1,312 foot (405 meters) snakelike earthen effigy.

c. 150
Mayan “Golden Age” begins in Mesoamerica.

50
Teotihuacán in the Valley of Mexico is largest city in America.

 

Common Era

100
Emergence of Anasazi in southwestern North America.

Pyramids of the Sun and Moon constructed in Teotihuacán, Mexico, by unnamed civilization.

c. 420
Moche culture (Peru). Temple of the Sun constructed with 50 million bricks.

600
City of Palenque (Chiapas, Mexico) is constructed.

c. 700
City of Teotihuacán burns and is abandoned.

790
Decline of Maya civilization begins as many sites are abandoned.

c. 800
First use of bows and arrows in the Mississippi Valley.

900
Rise of Toltecs, warrior people from central Mexico, as Mayan empire collapses; they dominate central Mexico for the next 300 years.

987
Toltec priests are expelled from city of Tula (modern Hidalgo, Mexico) by a rival cult that favors human sacrifice.

990
Exiled Toltecs take over Maya city of Chichén Itzá on Yucatán peninsula.

c. 1000
Viking voyages to Newfoundland in North America; despite brief settlement, they leave no lasting impact on Native American culture or history.
Incas found Cuzco (Peru).

c. 1100
Fortified cliff dwellings of the Anasazi people are first built in southwestern North America.

c. 1175
Toltec empire destroyed by famine, fire, and invasion.

1200
Entry of people called Mexica (generally known as Aztecs) into

Valley of Mexico. Originally a farming people from western Mexico who became mercenary warriors, they migrate to Valley of Mexico and settle on two marshy islands in Lake Texcoco. Begin to construct city of Tenochtitlán (site of present-day Mexico City) on one of the islands.
Toltec-Mayan city of Chichén Itzá is abandoned.

c. 1300
Anasazi pueblo villages in American Southwest are deserted, possibly due to climate changes.

1410
Inca empire of Peru expands.

1428
Aztec Empire expands.

1440
Moctezuma I is ruler of Aztecs. (Moctezuma’s name is also spelled Montezuma or Motecuhzoma)

1487
Inauguration of great pyramid temple at Tenochtitlán; according to traditional acccounts, 20,000 people are ritually sacrificed there to “celebrate” the temple’s completion.

1492
Christopher Columbus, on his first voyage in search of westward route to Asia, lands in the Bahamas, Cuba, and Hispaniola (Santo Domingo).

1496
Columbus establishes first Spanish settlement in Western Hemisphere.

1500
Portuguese reach Brazil and claim it for Portugal.

1502
Beginning of reign of Moctezuma II.
African slaves introduced to Caribbean.

1507
Waldseemüller’s world map names newfound lands in honor of Amerigo Vespucci.

1508
Spanish settlers on Hispaniola enslave natives.

1509
Spanish settlement of Central America begins.
San Juan (Puerto Rico) is founded.

1513
Ponce de Leon claims Florida for Spain.

1514
Spanish force the conversion of natives to Christianity under the threat of death.
Spanish priest Bartolomé de las Casas begins to record the depraved behavior of Spanish colonists toward the natives.

1519
Hernando Cortés lands at Veracruz with 500 men; marches to the Aztec capital. Moctezuma II surrenders without a fight, is held captive and dies, probably executed by the Spanish, in 1520. The Spanish are later driven out by Aztec leader Cuauhtémoc. In 1521, Cortés returns with Indian allies and retakes Tenochtitlán following a smallpox epidemic that devastates the Aztecs. The Spanish level the city and begin to build Mexico City on the ruins. In 1522, Cortés becomes governor of New Spain. Cuauhtémoc, the last Aztec king, is hanged in 1524 on a charge of treason.

1526
Dominican monks arrive in Mexico.

1530
Portuguese begin to colonize Brazil.

1533
Francisco Pizarro captures Inca chief Atahualpa; orders his execution.

1541
Jacques Cartier founds a French colony at Quebec in Canada.
Pizarro is assassinated by rival Spaniards.

1545
Discovery of vast silver mine in Potosí (Peru); by the 1590s, Spain is exporting 10 million ounces of silver per year from the New World.

1550
First Jesuits reach Brazil.

1552
Bartolomé de Las Casas’s scathing account of treatment of natives,
History of the Indies
, is published.

1570
Iroquois in northern North America form a league of tribes known as the Iroquois Confederacy.

1607
Foundation of first permanent English colony at Jamestown, Virginia. First African slaves arrive in 1619.

1620
Pilgrims arrive at Plymouth, Massachusetts.

 

BREAKING NEWS FROM THE NEW WORLD…

 
 
  • In the Central American rain forests of Guatemala, in 2004, archaeologists uncover a royal palace beneath the thick tropical canopy. Inside a tomb within the palace ruins, resting on a stone platform, they find the body of a Mayan queen who reigned more than twelve hundred years ago. Her remains are surrounded by pearls and crown jewels, along with masterpieces of carved jade and artifacts that throw new light on an ancient people about whom there are still mysteries. The researchers who make this remarkable find say it may unlock many secrets of a magnificent civilization. (
    New York Times
    , May 11, 2004.)
  •  
  • A tomb near Mexico’s 2,000-year-old Pyramid of the Moon in Teotihuacán is uncovered in 2004, yielding the remains of ten headless human bodies, most likely sacrificial victims. This extraordinary, if grisly, discovery comes after some 200 years of excavations at the site of the first major city in the Americas. Located about 35 miles northeast of Mexico City, and home to an estimated 200,000 people in 500 CE, Teotihuacán mysteriously collapsed about 200 years later. With its massive Pyramids of the Moon and the Sun, it was called “the place where men became gods” by the Aztecs when they rose to power in Mexico in about 1400 CE. (Reuters, December 2, 2004.)
  •  
  • In a case pitting scientists against Native Americans, a federal court rules in 2004 that the skeletal remains of “Kennewick man,” discovered in Washington state in 1996 and the oldest human remains yet found in North America, can be studied for scientific purposes. Tribes from three states in the American Northwest had sued to prevent any further investigation of the 9,200-year-old skeleton under a law that requires the reburial of any Native American ancestral remains. The researchers hope that more extensive testing and study of “Kennewick man”—who was shown to be unrelated by DNA to any of the tribes—will shed more light on long-standing mysteries over who came to the Americas and when they arrived (
    New York Times
    , July 20, 2004).
  •  
 
 
 
 

T

hese headline-making stories all point to the long, rich, yet still grossly misunderstood history and mythic traditions of the ancient Americas. Each new scientific advance and archaeological find makes it increasingly clear that our image of Native America has been tainted by the antiquated, “cowboys and Indians,” Hollywood version. Or that we romanticize Native Americans as “noble savages” living in Eden-like spiritual and ecological harmony. Or, more recently, they have been depicted mostly as wealthy casino operators running gambling meccas on tribal lands. Needless to say, none of these views is accurate or complete, in part because there were—and are—so many different Native Americans.

Just as the people of Africa were a diverse group, the Native Americans were also a multicolored, many-voiced lot. Set apart by the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans and living on two large continents that span the Western Hemisphere, the native peoples of the Americas ranged from the Aztecs of Mexico, the Mayas of Central America, and the Incas of South America, to the vastly different tribes of North America. These tribes included the Sioux and other people of the Great Plains; the Navajos and Hopis of the Southwest; the “Five Civilized Tribes” of the Southwest; the “Iroquois Confederacy” of the Northeast; and the Aleuts and Inuits of the Arctic regions—to name just a few of the hundreds of Native American groups.
*

The mythologies of the Native Americans were as rich and diverse as the people themselves. Full of nature deities, mischievous animal tricksters, heroic braves, and dueling twins, they all included a great, world-encompassing Creation story. This thinking led to a deep reverence for nature and the concept of a benign Earth Mother. As Native American historian Vine Deloria puts it in his provocative book
God Is Red
, “For many Indian tribal religions the whole of creation was good, and because the creation event did not include a ‘fall,’ the meaning of the creation was that all parts of it functioned together to sustain it.”

Presiding over most of these traditions—which were all preliterate except for the Mayas and Aztecs—was the shaman. This powerful figure supervised group chanting, healing, spirit communication, sweat lodges, and the pipe rituals aimed at connecting with the “Great Mystery.” In the Mesoamerican civilizations, shamans formed a priestly class—like the Celtic Druids—that presided over blood rituals and human sacrifices. Not intended for squeamish audiences, these sacrifices included tearing or cutting out the still-beating heart from a victim’s chest to appease the gods. This grotesque cruelty was sometimes performed on infants while their mothers looked on.

One of the great scientific and academic debates simmering today has to do with who the Native Americans were, how they got to the Americas in the first place, and how long they have been here. Usually, when you hear the expression “Early American,” it refers to colonial-era antiques and life in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. But those “early Americans” were Johnny-come-latelies compared with the true “early Americans,” who lived in the Americas thousands of years earlier. What you probably learned about their history in school goes something like this:

Near the end of the last great Ice Age, some 12,000 years ago, groups of nomadic hunter-gatherers crossed the 1,000-mile-wide land bridge connecting Siberia to what is now Alaska and Canada. This crossing took place before the great North American ice sheets melted and raised sea levels by some 300 feet, inundating the grassy steppe that allowed people and animals to move between Asia and North America. Probably pursuing large game such as mastodons, these really-early Americans spread out over the two continents and gradually diversified into the tens of millions of people who were present when the Spanish arrived in 1492.

But an array of new research from the worlds of archaeology, biology, and linguistics has shaken that notion to its permafrost foundation. It is now more widely accepted that the real “Pilgrims” may have come to the Americas 20,000 to 30,000 years ago, probably in successive waves of migrations carried out over a long time span, from Siberia, Mongolia, and other parts of Central Asia. Kennewick man, for instance, has been related—based on DNA evidence—to the Ainu, the prehistoric people who first inhabited Japan. Instead of strolling across the land bridge now covered by the Bering Straits, in one great prehistoric walkathon, perhaps Kennewick man and some of the other first Americans came in small, skin-covered boats, hugging the Pacific coastline down to the southernmost parts of South America. Gradually, these ancient people spread out across both continents, a process that continued for a long time.

The likelihood of many waves of immigrants would help explain the tremendous diversity of tribes, languages, myths, and civilizations the Europeans encountered when they arrived in the 1500s. Well before the beginning of the Common Era, tribes had spread out across North America, and impressive civilizations had begun to emerge in Central America and Mexico. These civilizations included cities that were larger, cleaner, and more organized than most European cities of the same period. Their inhabitants wrote hieroglyphic books and erected temples and pyramids as sophisticated staging areas for their religious rites. When the Spanish conquistadors arrived, these extraordinary accomplishments would be relentlessly and mercilessly plundered, and the Mesoamerican city-dwellers would experience death and destruction on an unimaginable scale.

To some degree, myth may have helped make that destruction possible. While some scholars now question the notion, many historians have long held that one reason a fairly small group of Spaniards was able to subjugate populations numbering in the millions lay in the story of an Aztec god named Quetzalcoatl. According to Aztec myth, Quetzalcoatl had departed from the Aztec people with the messianic promise of returning to usher in a new Golden Age. Supposedly, the notion that these white Spanish explorers might be the returning Aztec messiah helped win the Aztecs’ initial welcome, if not their hearts and minds. The Spanish then used treachery, technology, and brutality as the real means to conquest. European diseases, against which these Native Americans had no natural immunities, did the rest of the dirty work.

Far more significant, myth played a role in crushing religious traditions, which contained striking similarities to Catholicism. Powerful images of death, penitence, self-mortification, blood sacrifice, and a dying-and-reborn god—many of them central to Catholicism—pervaded the Aztec, Mayan, and Incan traditions. These parallels were not lost on the Spanish soldiers and the priests who followed them. Professing concern for the Mesoamerican soul, the Spanish co-opted native beliefs and set about their real goal—acquiring massive tracts of land and seizing as much gold and silver as they could for Spain’s royal coffers.

The path to exploitation in North America was a variation on a theme. Unlike the fairly swift, relentless Spanish conquest of the natives of Mexico and South America, the Europeans moved more slowly in North America. They had to. First, there were hundreds of tribes and groups to conquer, across a huge and largely uncharted space. While some of these people lived in sophisticated, organized settlements, others occupied remote places or were on the move, following the buffalo and better weather. The Europeans had to work longer at dropping a moving target that quickly learned the value of fighting back and was often quite good at it.

But in the end, the song remained the same. What took place all over North America was a grotesque
Groundhog Day
, in which identical awful things happened over and over, minus a happy ending. The pattern was this simple: The Europeans arrived and were welcomed and often aided by the natives. Once the conquerors had promised to keep the peace, they aggressively expanded, broke treaties, declared war, pitted one tribe against another, and unwittingly (for the most part) introduced diseases that nearly exterminated the native people, along with their language, mythic traditions, and sacred beliefs. In the four hundred years between Columbus’s arrival and the massacre at Wounded Knee in 1890, upward of 90 percent of an estimated 40 to 100 million people were wiped out in one of the largest “ethnic cleansings” the world has ever witnessed—all in the name of progress, “civilization,” and the God of Christianity.

The story of what was lost is still being written as new discoveries are made each day. A palace with a Mayan princess is found. Sacrificial victims in an ancient tomb are unearthed. The skeletal remains of an early man are opened up for study. And a new generation of scholars, eager to retell this tale from the “loser’s” point of view, continues to stir up the long-accepted histories and theories of what happened to the “primitive” people of the New World. As a result, each day new light is shed on the vibrant mythic traditions of the Americas.

M
YTHIC
V
OICES

 

They must be good servants and very intelligent, because I see that they repeat very quickly what I told them, and it is my conviction that they would easily become Christians, for they seem not to have any sect. If it please our Lord, I will take six of them that they may learn to speak. The people are totally unacquainted with arms, as your Highnesses will see by observing the seven which I have caused to be taken in. With fifty men all can be kept in subjection, and made to do whatever you desire.

—C
HRISTOPHER
C
OLUMBUS
, from his diary, October 12, 1492
*

 

The tribe has no belief in God that amounts to anything; for they believe in a god they call Cudouagny, and maintain that he often holds intercourse with them and tells what the weather will be like. They also say that when he gets angry with them, he throws dust in their eyes. They believe furthermore that when they die they go to the stars and descend on the horizon like the stars…. After they had explained these things to us, we showed them their error and informed them that Cudouagny was a wicked spirit who deceived them, and that there is but one God, Who is in Heaven, Who gives everything we need and is the Creator of all things and that in Him alone we should
believe. Also that one must receive baptism or perish in hell….

—French explorer
J
ACQUES
C
ARTIER
(1491–1557), describing the Hurons of eastern Canada

 

How did Native American myth go up in smoke?

 

What is “civilized”? What is “savage”? To the “civilized” Europeans who came to the Americas in the 1500s, the answer was simple. “Civilized” meant clothes-wearing, literate, European Christians. The word “savage” meant “Indian.” Led by medicine men smoking pipes, having visions, curing with herbs, and rejecting the white man’s “salvation,” the native tribes were, in the European view, doomed souls. Unfortunately, that view dominated from the sixteenth century on.

Maybe that is why the public today is still largely in the dark about Native American mythology and beliefs. The Europeans—and later, Americans—didn’t just crush the Native American “savages.” They composed the diaries and letters, painted the artwork, took the photographs, and wrote the first histories that either ignored or demeaned a conquered people. They suppressed native mythologies and languages to near-extinction, allowing them to go up in the smoke of burning villages. Church schools, missionaries, and government agencies like the notorious Indian Affairs Bureau added to the catastrophe, forcing native children to accept “Anglo” names and denying them the right to speak their mother tongues or learn their ancestral sacred stories. Sacred native places were built over and renamed—a process still going on as a Wal-Mart outlet goes up near Teotihuacán in Mexico, or an astronomical observatory is placed on a mountain sacred to the San Carlos Apaches in the state of Arizona.
*
People who shrug this off might see the issue differently if Native Americans secured rights to build a gambling casino atop Arlington National Cemetery.

But there is more to the story. As the authors of
The Encyclopedia of Native American Religions
write, “Indian country in North America is still home to hundreds of religious traditions that have endured, despite a long history of persecution and suppression by government and missionaries…. Native American sacred beliefs are as dignified, profound, viable, and richly faceted as other religions practiced throughout the world. Native sacred knowledge has not been destroyed or lost but in fact lives on as the heart of Native American cultural existence today.”

What is known of these sacred traditions today comes largely through efforts during the past century to interview native survivors who preserved an oral tradition. These survivors included Black Elk, whose 1932 memoir,
Black Elk Speaks
, records the visionary recollections of an Oglala Sioux holy man who witnessed the nineteenth-century spiritual revival called the “Ghost Dance” and the massacre at Wounded Knee. Memories such as his have been added to the handful of written sources that do exist, such as the Popol Vuh, a re-creation of sacred Mayan writings discovered 300 years ago in a Guatemalan church, and a few hieroglyphic books from the Aztecs and Mayas. From the Spanish colonial era, there is also a large library of works about native beliefs, but these are somewhat suspect, given their source—often priests, or natives who may have wanted to curry favor with their Spanish masters, or deceive them.

More recently, the effort to preserve Native American traditions has been invigorated by a generation of scholars far more sensitive to their subject. In September 2004, more than 20,000 members of some 500 Native American tribes gathered in Washington, D.C., to celebrate the opening of the National Museum of the American Indian. Built at a cost of more than $219 million, the museum housed the Smithsonian Institute’s hundreds of thousands of Native American objects.
*
There is also a revival of interest in tradition among young Native Americans, who hope to save something of their past as a complement to their heightened political activism in both the United States and Latin America. Award-winning poets, short-story writers, and novelists such as Leslie Marmon Silko, Louise Erdrich, and Sherman Alexie have joined in the rescue effort with creative works such as
Ceremony
,
Love Medicine
, and
Tonto and the Lone Ranger Fistfight in Heaven
, which explore tribal mythic traditions and their impact on contemporary Native Americans. Finally, archaeology and other scientific research have also added immensely to a picture that has been rescued from the ashes of the Native American holocaust.

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