MAYA NOTES
WHO WAS FREDERICK
CATHERWOOD?
The
Temple of the Inscriptions in Palenque, as depicted by Catherwood.
Frederick Catherwood's name is rarely
spoken alone. His rather peculiar claim to fame derives from his association
with John Lloyd Stephens, the "father of Maya archaeology,"
but they were a team in every sense of the word.
Most people interested in the Maya
have heard of Stephens and Catherwood; or at least of the 19th century
travel book, Incidents of Travel in the Yucatan (1842) written
by Stephens and illustrated by Catherwood.
In 1839 Stephens decided to personally
investigate the growing number of reports of lost civilizations in the
wilds of Yucatan. He was already a well- known travel writer, and his
invitation to Catherwood to join him was made to a man equally respected
in his field. While Stephens wrote about the cities of antiquity, Catherwood
drew them.
Born England in 1799, Frederick
Catherwood studied architecture, drawing and painting at the Royal Academy,
and classical architecture and sculpture in Italy, Sicily and Greece.
After completing his studies, he traveled throughout the east, making
scale drawings of the antiquities of Egypt, Arabia and the Holy Land.
In 1823 he was hired as an architectural consultant in the restoration
of Cairo's mosques; by the late 1830s he was working for an architectural
firm in America.
Catherwood matured into a perceptive
draftsman. He was in New York mounting an exhibition of his early work
in 1839 when Stephens approached him with the idea of exploring the Yucatan
peninsula and Central America. They already knew each other, having met
three years earlier. Catherwood did not hesitate, and they set off within
the year.
The soon-to-be-famous team traveled
first to Copan (Honduras) where, in order to have free-reign to work,
Stephens bought the site outright for $50 U.S. dollars. Thirty miles north
Catherwood discovered Quirigua while Stephens was away on business in
Guatemala City. He made drawings of both sites.
The two visited both Palenque (Chiapas,
Mexico) and Uxmal (Yucatan, Mexico) before heading back to New York for
the publication of their first collaborative work, Incidents of Travel
in Central America, Chiapas and Yucatan (1841).
Catherwood suffered from malaria
in Palenque and had collapsed in Uxmal before being taken home to the
States. Nevertheless, in 1842 he promptly returned with Stephens to the
Yucatan to continue their reconnaissance of the region. They worked in
Chichen Itza, Cozumel, Tulum, Dzilam, Izamal and Ake After seven months
in the field, Catherwood was again near collapsing and they returned to
New York. There they published Incidents of Travel in the Yucatan
(1843), describing 44 archaeological sites.
Stephens is credited with drawing
our attention to the Maya, but it was Catherwood who furnished the proof.
They were two gifted amateurs to whom the entire world owes a debt.
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Site produced by Organización
Tips. Cancun, Mexico.
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