MAYA NOTES
DECIPHERING THE LEYDEN
PLAQUE

Illustration by Jorge Luna
The oldest recorded date ever discovered
in the Mundo Maya is etched onto the Leyden Plaque, a 21.5-cm long by
7.6-cm wide piece of brightly-colored jade shaped like a hatchet. The
article was found in Guatemala in 1864 at a site called Puerto de Barrios.
According to the Maya calendar, its engraved date of 8.14.3.1.12 is equivalent
to A.D. 320 on our Julian calendar.
Research suggests that the Leyden Plaque was
made at Tikal, Guatemala. This idea is principally based on the image
of a captive pictured at the feet of the plaques central figure; similar
in style and detail to drawings of captives found on monuments at Tikal.
This evidence, along with information from dated artifacts, suggests that
Tikal, located in the Peten region of Guatemala, is one of the most ancient
Mundo Maya cities.
Interestingly, Stele 9 from Uaxactun, now the
oldest known dated stele, was discovered at a site found 18 kilometers
from Tikal. Uaxactun's Stele 9 is engraved with the Maya date of 8.14.10.13.15,
our A.D. 328, only eight years later than the inscription of the Leyden
Plaque.
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Site produced by Organización
Tips. Cancun, Mexico.
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