Tikal reports: the series continues.
Hammond, Norman
WILLIAM A. HAVILAND. Excavations in residential areas of Tikal:
non-elite groups without shrines: the excavations (Tikal Report
20A/University Museum Monograph 139). xxiv+431 pages, 183 b&w
illustrations, 373 tables. 2014. Philadelphia: University of
Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology; 978-1-934536-70-4
hardback $89.95.
William A. Haviland. Excavations in residential areas of Tikal:
non-elite groups without shrines: analysis and conclusions (Tikal Report
20B/University Museum Monograph 140). xi+167 pages, 16 b&w
illustrations, 76 tables. 2014. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania
Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology; 978-1-934536-73-5 hardback
$59.95.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
The University of Pennsylvania Museum's Tikal Project of
1958-1968 was one of the great Maya investigations of the twentieth
century. It was the most ambitious study of a Maya city so far
undertaken, with scores of staff, graduate students and local workers
engaged in a range of activities from mapping the site core and its
surrounding settlement, to stripping the tropical forest from the
colossal temple-pyramids and restoring them, to establishing an
occupation history that eventually showed an origin for Tikal in the
mid-first millennium BC and abandonment more than sixteen centuries
later at the end of the Classic period. The impact of the project's
results, publications and cadre of trained Mayanists moving out into the
academic world was substantial and led to several decades of a
Tikal-centric view of ancient Maya civilisation.
The project was directed initially by Edwin M. Shook and, after he
was displaced, by William R. Coe. The latter planned an ambitious series
of Tikal Reports (TRs) to be published by the Museum and the first
eleven of these came out while the fieldwork was still in progress. Many
were intended to encapsulate doctoral dissertations, but the time these
took to complete--and the subsequent movement of their authors out into
teaching positions or other jobs--held back publication. For a number of
years nothing else appeared (Coe discouraged his authors from publishing
information elsewhere before their TR was published), until later
directors of the Museum, beginning with Martin Biddle in the late 1970s,
pushed to get things moving again, which they did in 1982 with TR 12, a
succinct guide to the project and its intended publications (Coe &
Haviland 1982). So far, some two dozen of an intended 39 TRs have
appeared, some only in part; and their blue cloth bindings have become
an invaluable presence on the bookshelves of Mesoamericanists. A number
of the prospective authors have died without completing their volumes,
and the admirable intentions of TR 12 (Coe & Haviland 1982: 55-63)
may never be completely fulfilled.
This two-part monograph from William A. Haviland--one of the
survivors (and principal movers in getting Tikal published)--documents
excavations completed more than half a century ago, and is most welcome.
It forms part of a sequence of TRs on excavations in the 16[km.sup.2] of
settlement immediately surrounding Tikal's massive ceremonial
precinct, and covered by the detailed maps in TR 11 (the survey
transects beyond that area were reported in TR 13, with the excavations
due in TR 24). TR 20A & B follow on from Haviland's TR 19
(1985) and TR 21 by Becker (1999); it should be noted that TRs are not
cited in the normal Harvard fashion in these monographs, and in the
bibliography in each is listed in a separate section following other
references. TR 22 is still in preparation, and will complete this
sequence of reports on the settlement archaeology of inner Tikal;
Haviland makes it clear that they should be used together, and in fact
much that is necessary for understanding TR 20 and following volumes is
in TR 19 and not subsequently repeated.
TR 19 dealt with excavations in just two adjacent residential
compounds, groups 4F-1 and 4F-2 (thus designated from their locations in
square 4F of the alphanumeric grid of the TR 11 map), situated close to
the Tikal Project camp; many of the protocols for dealing with
Tikal's small structures were established here in the 1959-1960
investigations. TR21 covered residential groups with eastern shrine
structures (Becker's 'Plaza Plan 2', and arguably elite
residences). The present report, with the detailed excavation data in TR
20A and the analyses and conclusions in TR 20B, embraces 'non-elite
groups without shrines' scattered across the Tikal map from grid 2B
in the north-west to 7G in the south-east. Haviland notes that the
excavations were done in 1961 and 1963 and that TR 20 "deals with
all investigations, of whatever sort, of small structures at Tikal,
except for those discussed in TR 21" (20A: 1); "the present
analysis was carried out in 1972, with some revisions in 2008"
(20B: 1). "I have made no attempt to 'cover' [the]
post-1972 literature [...] the intent has been to understand Tikal in
its own terms" (20A: 1-2). While understandable, this means that
Haviland was unable to bring in Gair Tourtellot's (1983, 1988)
massive study of the settlement structure at Seibal, based on fieldwork
from 1965-1968, which has influenced our understanding of Maya
residential architecture for the past generation; inevitably, this gives
a sense of deja vu to much that Haviland says.
Perhaps admirably, he tests the common-sense presumption, current
since Edward H. Thompson's work in the 1890s, that the thousands of
small structures surrounding the civic-ceremonial core were in fact
dwellings. The terms 'house mound' and 'house
platform' have pervaded the literature for decades, but Haviland
nonetheless examines each structure on its merits. Some he concludes
were certainly houses, some residential adjuncts such as kitchens and
stores; but in general he takes the Popperian view that the residential
hypothesis has been tested and not disproved.
While many of the small structures were examined by means of a
simple axial trench or test pit, yielding relatively few data, some
groups were excavated more intensively. Those familiar with the Maya
literature, and especially with Haviland's articles over the past
40 years or so, will be especially pleased to find at last the detailed
account of his work at group 2G-1. Its five platforms (2G56-60) enclose
a small courtyard, and their successive enlargements, refloorings and
interments have been repeatedly used to test a model of extended-family
multi-generational residence. Haviland's proposal that such
residence was patrilineal, patrilocal and patriarchal has influenced the
interpretations of Mayanists ever since, and his visual reconstruction
of the compound over time (reproduced as 20B: fig. 16, with an
accompanying tabulation of generations at 20B: tab. 6.8) has illustrated
successive editions of his textbook Cultural anthropology (1974 onwards)
as well as being borrowed by colleagues (this reviewer included).
While group 2G-1 receives the detailed analysis one might expect in
20B, what is faintly surprising, and disappointing, is that in 20A there
are rather few basic data presented to back it all up: ten excavation
plans and sections (20A: figs 16-25; but no overall plan of the group),
two pages of burial plans and two of photographs (20A: figs 162-63,
173-74), plus the lid and orifice of the one chultun storage chamber
(20A: fig. 176a). Nevertheless, TR 20A & B is a substantial work,
and I look forward to TR 22, in which Haviland will examine in detail
group 7F-1, which, in contrast to the commoner houses he reports in TR
20A & B, seems to have been both a high elite residence and perhaps
the dower house of a former queen of Tikal (cf. Haviland 1981). The
Tikal Project and its onward-rolling publication programme will affect
our thinking about and understanding of ancient Maya civilisation for
years to come.
doi: 10.15184/aqy.2015.27
References
BECKER, M.J. 1999. Excavations in residential areas of Tikal:
groups with shrines (Tikal Report 21/University Museum Monograph 104).
Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and
Anthropology.
COE, W. R. & W.A. HAVILAND. 1982. Introduction to the
archaeology of Tikal, Guatemala (Tikal Report 12/University Museum
Monograph 46). Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Museum of
Archaeology and Anthropology.
HAVILAND, W.A. 1974. Cultural anthropology. New York: Holt,
Rinehart & Winston.
-- 1981. Dower houses and minor centers at Tikal, Guatemala: an
investigation into the identification of valid units in settlement
hierarchies, in W. Ashmore (ed.) Lowland Maya settlement patterns:
89-117. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press.
-- 1985. Excavations in small residential groups of Tikal: groups
4F-1 and 4F-2 (Tikal Report 19/University Museum Monograph 58).
Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and
Anthropology.
TOURTELLOT, G. 1983. Ancient Maya settlements at Seibal, Peten,
Guatemala: peripheral survey and excavation. Unpublished PhD
dissertation, Harvard University.
-- 1988. Excavations at Seibal, Department of Peten, Guatemala
(Memoirs of the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology, Harvard
University, 16). Cambridge (MA): Peabody Museum.
Norman Hammond, McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research,
University of Cambridge, UK (Email: ndch@bu.edu)