Abstract
Mayas from the pre-Hispanic period documented important facts and life experiences via a writing system consisting of hieroglyphs. To timetable these events, they used time units such as the so-called day signs, whose origins are largely unknown. Classic Maya civilization included a tradition of keeping native stingless bees in horizontally oriented, hollowed-out logs for the production of honey and wax. The legacy and value of this stingless-bee keeping, also called meliponiculture, can be found in their culture and religion. The most commonly kept species was Melipona beecheii , which the Mayas knew by the name of Xunan-kab . The principal way for Mayan beekeepers to access nest interiors and extract honey and wax was via the ends of the rustic log hives. Here I argue that the day signs Imix , Kib’ , Kab’an , Kawak and Ajaw represent cross sections of log hives that are visible when opened at their sides. The signs' interiors reflect extant but stylized bee nest elements that are important to beekeeping, such as food stocks, brood content, adult bees, and nest entrances. Similar to all other day signs and nearly all variants, their roundish, outer frames imitate a hollow log’s solid wall. In those cases where numerous hives were densely stacked together in bee sheds, Maya beekeeping must have become more complex in its organization. To tackle increasing complexity in bee management and sustain colony growth and optimize honey and wax production, Mayan beekeepers likely administered their work based on written figures related to beekeeping details. The five day signs were probably derived from a mnemonic system that originally was intended to identify individual log hives, to keep records of colonies and to share information with others involved in this activity.
Highlights
Mayas from the pre-Hispanic period documented important facts and life experiences via a writing system consisting of hieroglyphs
The tradition of Maya beekeeping, and associated depictions Classic Maya civilization comprises the period from ca. 2000 BC to AD 1539, when it was ended by the Spanish conquest (THOMPSON, 1950; HAMMOND et al, 1976)
I made the case that scribes from the Classic period (AD 250900) applied the same, natural phenomenon of a headless queen bee as a model for the three-sided or partially visible quatrefoil glyph they sculpted (KOEDAM, 2018). This glyph was catalogued as affix T173 (THOMPSON, 1962) and is one of several zero characters, including shell-like images and head and full-figure variants that the Mayas used in inscriptions and manuscripts
Summary
Mayas from the pre-Hispanic period documented important facts and life experiences via a writing system consisting of hieroglyphs. I argue that the full depictions of five day signs, just as the overall configuration of all 20, reflect the way Mayan beekeepers would have visualized a nest inside a horizontal log hive each time they exposed its ends.
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More From: Ethnoscientia - Brazilian Journal of Ethnobiology and Ethnoecology
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