Mayan Calendar Prophecies: The Complete Collection of 2012 Predictions and Prophecies (21 page)

BOOK: Mayan Calendar Prophecies: The Complete Collection of 2012 Predictions and Prophecies
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Who will be the prophet, who will be the priest who shall interpret truly the word of the book?

C. The Mayan Chronicles from the Chilam Balam of Chumayel

 

Within the
Chilam Balam of Chumayel
translated by Ralph Roys were a series of chronicles or histories recorded for each
katun
. The Maya believed that what happened in one
katun
could happen again when the
katun
returned in the future. Since each named
katun
reoccurred every 256 years, the Maya priests wanted to keep track of events in each
katun
in order to detect patterns in each
katun
from which they could make more accurate predictions about the future. This is little different than modern forecasting.

Below you will find the events which the Maya recorded as happening in previous
katuns
. I’ve only included events for the three
katun
periods covered by this book:
katuns
4, 2 and 13. If the
katun
is blank then that means nothing was recorded for this
katun
. Since each
katun
cycle consisted of 256 years and there are five
katun
cycles for which events were recorded, these chronicles cover around 1200 years of Maya history.

 

Chapter XIX The First Chronicle

 

4 Ahau.

2 Ahau.

13 Ahau was when the mat was counted in order.

 

4 Ahau was when the land was seized by them at Chakanputun.

2 Ahau.

13 Ahau.

 

4 Ahau.

2 Ahau.

13 Ahau.

 

4 Ahau was when the land of Ich-paa Mayapan was seized by the Itzá men who had been separated from their homes because of the people of Izamal and because of the treachery of Hunac Ceel.

2 Ahau.

13 Ahau.

 

4 Ahau was when the pestilence occurred; it was when the vultures entered the houses within the fortress.

2 Ahau was when the eruption of pustules occurred. It was smallpox.

13 Ahau was when the rain-bringer died. It was the sixth year. The year-count was to the east. It was 4 Kan. Pop was set to the east. . . . It was the teenth Zip. 9 Imix was the day when the rain-bringer, Napot Xiu, died. It was the year of our Lord 158.

 

Chapter XX The Second Chronicle

 

4 Ahau was the name of the katun when occurred the birth of Pauahs, when the rulers descended.

 

Thirteen katuns they reigned; thus they were named while they ruled.

 

4 Ahau was the name of the katun when they descended; the great descent and the little descent they were called.

 

Thirteen katuns they reigned. So they were called. While they were settled, thirteen were their settlements.

 

4 Ahau was the katun when they sought and discovered Chichen Itzá. There it was that miraculous things were performed for them by their lords. Four divisions they were, when the four divisions of the nation, as they were called, went forth. From Kincolahpeten in the east one division went forth. From Nacocob in the north one division came forth. But one division came forth from Holtun Zuyua in the west. One division came forth from Four-peaked Mountain, Nine Mountains is the name of the land.

 

4 Ahau was the katun when the four divisions were called . The four

divisions of the nation, they were called, when they descended. They became lords when they descended upon Chichen Itzá. The Itzá were they then called.

Thirteen katuns they ruled, and then came the treachery by Hunac Ceel. Their town was abandoned and they went into the heart of the forest to Tan-xuluc-mul, as it is called.

 

4 Ahau was the katun when their souls cried out!

 

Thirteen katuns they ruled in their misery!

 

13 Ahau was the katun when they founded the town of Mayapan, the Maya men, as they were called.

 

Chapter XXI The Third Chronicle

 

A record of the katuns for the Itzá, called the Maya katuns.

 

4 Ahau.

2 Ahau.

13 Ahau.

 

4 Ahau.

2 Ahau.

13 Ahau.

 

4 Ahau. The stone was taken at Atikuh. This was the katun when the pestilence

occurred. It was in the fifth tun of Katun 4 Ahau.

2 Ahau. The stone was taken at Chacalna.

13 Ahau. The stone was taken at Euan.

 

On this 18th day of August, 1766, occurred a hurricane. I have made a record of it in order that it may be seen how many years it will be before another one will occur.*

 

(Author’s Note: 1766 occurred during a katun 4 ahau cycle, thus I’ve included this passage here.)

 

On this 20th day of January, 1782, there was an epidemic of inflammation here in the town of Chumayel. The swelling began at the neck and then descended. from the little ones to the adults, until it swept the entire house, once it was introduced. The remedy was sour ashes and lemons or the young Siempre vive. It was the year of '81 when it began. After that there was a great drought also. There was scarcely any rain. The entire forest was burned , and the forest died This is the record which I have written down, I, Don Juan Josef Hoil. (Rubrica.)*

 

(Author’s Note: 1782 occurred during a katun 13 ahau cycle, thus I’ve included this passage here.)

 

 

About the Author

 

Gary C. Daniels
has had a lifelong interest in Native American and Mesoamerican culture. He is a writer, television producer and documentary filmmaker and began seriously researching these cultures in 2001 while pursuing his Master’s Degree in Communications at Georgia State University in Atlanta. This research culminated in the production of a documentary film,
Lost Worlds: Georgia
and website,
LostWorlds.org
.

During this research he noticed that many Native American civilizations in the Southeastern U.S. lasted for around 250 years before collapsing. Later he learned of the Maya belief in a 256-year
katun
cycle that governed the rise and fall of civilizations. Intrigued he delved deeper into Maya beliefs immersing himself in their mythology and religious beliefs finding many similarities between the cultures of the Southeastern U.S. and Mesoamerica as well as the possible presence of
Maya in America
. It was then that he discovered their “prophecies” related to this 256-year
katun
cycle. His research resulted in the creation of the websites
2012Quest.com
and
MayaProphecies.com
.

He is currently working on a new book entitled
The Real Mayan Prophecies
which brings together his latest findings and research on Maya history, mythology, religion and predictions about the future.

References

[*]
As stated several times, the
katun
prophecies repeated every 256 years thus wouldn’t this mean the Maya believed this comet would have returned every 256 years thereby invalidating the previous conclusion of a 12,500 year cycle? Astronomer and Mayan scholar Maud Makemson argued in her book
The Book of the Jaguar Priest
that many of the
katun
prophecies were likely earlier related to the
baktuns
and when the Maya stopped using the Long Count calendar the priests simply converted these
baktun
prophecies into
katun
prophecies. Yet this does not completely solve the problem for if this was true then it suggests the Maya believed this comet returned once every 5000 years. Thus could the Kukulkan prophecy have been unrelated to neither the
katun
or
baktun
cycles? The key words in this particular prophecy that support this possibility are, “
Kukulcan shall come with them for the
second
time.

If this event were supposed to have happened once every 256 years then why would the Maya specify that this return was the
second
one? Perhaps this phrase was to alert a future Mayan calendar priest that this particular prophecy would only be fulfilled in the
Katun 4 Ahau
period at the end of the Long Count ‘Great Cycle’ in 2012.

[]
Coincidentally, the ancient Greek deity Atlas was associated with holding up the sky and was also associated with the Pleiades since the seven stars were seen as his seven daughters. One of these daughters was named, interestingly enough, Maia and another, Electra, was transformed into a comet.

[1]
“Foundation for the Study of Cycles.” FoundationForTheStudyofCycles.org. Accessed online 18 August 2012 at <
http://www.foundationforthestudyofcycles.org
/>.

[2]
“Foundation for the Study of Cycles.” FoundationForTheStudyofCycles.org. Accessed online 18 August 2012 at <
http://www.foundationforthestudyofcycles.org
/>.

[3]
“Earthquakes, Tsunami’s, and the Seismic Cycle.” Tectonics.CalTech.edu. Accessed online 12 September 2012 at <
http://www.tectonics.caltech.edu/outreach/animations/subduction_youtube.html
>.

[4]
Vaquero, J.M. “A 250-year cycle in naked-eye observations of sunspots.”
GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS
, VOL. 29, 1997, 4 PP., 2002. Accessed online 4 September 2012 at <
http://www.agu.org/pubs/crossref/2002/2002GL014782.shtml
>.

[5]
Asher, D. J., et al. “Earth in the Cosmic Shooting Gallery.”
Observatory
. Accessed online 21 October 2012 at <
http://articles.adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-iarticle_query?2005Obs...125..319A&data_type=PDF_HIGH&whole_paper=YES&type=PRINTER&filetype=.pdf
>.

[6]
Baille, Mike.
New Light on the Black Death: The Cosmic Connection
. Tempus, 2006, p.199.

[7]
“Tunguska event.” Wikpedia.org. <
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tunguska_event
>.

[8]
Finsinger, Walter and Willy Tinner. “Holocene vegetation and land use changes in response to climatic changes in the forelands of the southwestern Alps, Italy.”
Journal of Quaternary Science
.  Wiley InterScience. 2006: Vol. 1, pp. 243-258. Accessed online 16 August 2012 at <
http://igitur-archive.library.uu.nl/bio/2008-0930-200335/Finsinger_06_ Holocene vegetation.pdf
>.

[9]
Vaquero, J.M. “Sunspot numbers can detect pandemic influenza A: The use of different sunspot numbers.”

[10]
Hayes, Daniel P. “Influenza pandemics, solar activity cycles, and vitamin D.”
Medical Hypotheses
. 2010 May;74(5):831-4. Accessed online 4 September 2012 at <
http://www.vitamindwiki.com/tiki-download_file.php?fileId=201
>.

[11]
Hayes, Daniel P. “Influenza pandemics, solar activity cycles, and vitamin D.”
Medical Hypotheses
. 2010 May;74(5):831-4. Accessed online 4 September 2012 at <
http://www.vitamindwiki.com/tiki-download_file.php?fileId=201
>.

[12]
Hayes, Daniel P. “Influenza pandemics, solar activity cycles, and vitamin D.”
Medical Hypotheses
. 2010 May;74(5):831-4. Accessed online 4 September 2012 at <
http://www.vitamindwiki.com/tiki-download_file.php?fileId=201
>.

[13]
Davis, G. E., Jr. “Solar cycles and their relationship to human disease and adaptability.”
Medical Hypotheses
. 2006;67(3):447-61. Accessed online 5 September 2012 at <
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16701959
>.

[14]
Raps, Avi, et al; "Geophysical Variables and Behavior: LXIX. Solar Activity and Admission of Psychiatric Inpatients,"
Perceptual and Motor Skills
, 74:449, 1992.

[15]
Randall, Walter, and Randall, Steffani; "The Solar Wind and Hallucinations--- A Possible Relation Due to Magnetic Disturbances,"
Bioelectromagnetics
, 12: 67, 1991.

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