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La Estructura Oropéndola en la Acrópolis de Copán
Author(s) -
Ricardo Agurcia Fasquelle,
Juan Carlos Pérez Calderón
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
ciencias espaciales
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2521-5868
pISSN - 2225-5249
DOI - 10.5377/ce.v9i2.5160
Subject(s) - humanities , art
The structure known as Oropendola is located at the interior of Structure 10L-16, at the center of the Acropolis of Copan. The construction of this building is dated to the mid Early Classic; a little later than Rosalila, suggesting a date between 550 and 600 a.C. Oropendola is characterized for being the first building in which we observed a change from modelled stucco to stone mosaics, which in following centuries became Copan´s distinctive hallmark as one of the finest decorated and artistic urban centers of the Maya World. Both its iconography as its location in the ancient Acropolis shows a clear relation between the building and the underworld. The prevalent image is that of the jaguar, animal associated in maya art with the nocturnal sun, the night, shadows, and the aquatic realm of the underworld. The images are more than artistic forms; they also represent a whole belief system consisting of what is considered strong, brave and powerful in the real world (the ruler and his warriors) as well as in the supernatural world. Both Rosalila and Oropendola are marked as sacred mountains, witz, and have a multitude of other iconographic elements of maya cosmology, a great deal of them related to ancestor worship and the power of kings.

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