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J. Eric S. Thompson

Sir John Eric Sidney Thompson KBE (31 December 1898 – 9 September 1975[1]) was a leading English Mesoamerican archaeologist, ethnohistorian, and epigrapher. While working in the United States, he dominated Maya studies and particularly the study of the Maya script until well into the 1960s.

Sir J. Eric S. Thompson

Biography edit

Early life edit

Thompson was born on 31 December 1898 to George Thompson, a distinguished surgeon and fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons of England. Thompson was raised in the family home on Harley Street in London.[2] At the age of 14, he was sent to Winchester College to receive an independent education.

In 1915, shortly after the beginning of World War I, Thompson used the assumed name "Neil Winslow" to join the British Army while underage. A year into service, he was wounded and sent home to recover, first in Huddersfield, then in Seaford. He continued to serve in the Coldstream Guards until the end of the war, ending his service as a commissioned officer.

After the war Thompson left for Argentina to work as a gaucho on a family cattle farm. When he returned to England in the early 1920s, he published his first article, on his experience in Argentina, in the Southwark Diocesan Gazette: "A Cowboy's Experience: Cattle Branding in the Argentine".

Education edit

Thompson first considered a medical or political career. However, he later decided to study anthropology at Fitzwilliam House, Cambridge under A.C. Haddon. With the completion of his degree in 1925 Thompson wrote to Sylvanus G Morley, the head of the Carnegie Institution's project at Chichen Itza, to ask for a job, inquiring about a field position.[3] Morley accepted Thompson, most likely due to the fact that Thompson had previously taught himself to read Maya hieroglyphic dates, an accomplishment that was highly valued by Morley who also had a passion for Maya hieroglyphics.

Early career edit

In 1926 Thompson arrived in the Yucatan of Mexico under the direction of Morley to work at Chichen Itza. Here he started working on the friezes of the Temple of the Warriors. In his autobiography, Maya Archaeologist (1936), Thompson referred to the friezes as "a sort of giant jigsaw puzzle made worse by the fact the stones had been carved before being placed in position" accurately describing his first field experience.[3]

Later that year Morley sent Thompson to report on the site of Coba, located to the east of Chichen Itza. During the first field season at Coba, Thompson deciphered the dates on the Macanxoc stela. Morley, the foremost epigrapher, did not originally agree with the readings of the dates. It was not until a return trip to Coba that Morley was persuaded by Thompson's readings, marking his emergence as a prominent scholar in the field of Maya epigraphy.[4] Within the next year, Thompson took post as the Assistant Curator at the Field Museum of Natural History in Chicago. He would work there until 1935 when he left for a position at the Carnegie Institution in Washington, D.C.

In 1926, while employed by the Field Museum, Thompson, under the supervision of Thomas A. Joyce and the British Museum, took part in an expedition to Lubaantun in British Honduras. It was the fieldwork at Lubaantun that led Thompson to disagree with Joyce's argument for the early "megalith" and "in-and-out" style of architectural stratigraphy. Thompson argued that the "in-and-out" constructions were due to root action.[2] This root action disturbed the construction by pushing the rocks out in the fashion of the "in-and out" construction that invalidated Joyce's argument.

Field work edit

Toward the end of the first season at Lubaantun, the site of Pusilha was discovered and Thompson was sent to investigate with his guide, Faustino Bol. Thompson's subsequent interactions with his guide, who was a Mopan Maya, would later shed light on how Thompson viewed the ancient Maya and their culture. As a result of their long conversations, Thompson concluded that it "was clear that archaeological excavations were not the only means of learning about the ancient ways." This led to his first monograph, Ethnology of the Mayas of Southern and Central British Honduras (1930) which gave insight into the problems of Maya archaeological and epigraphic through the use of ethnographic and ethno-historic data.

In 1931, Thompson and Thomas Gann teamed up to publish The History of the Maya from the Earliest Times to the Present Day. Additionally, Thompson started on a new field project at the site of San Jose in (now) Belize. Here his research was focused at an "average" Maya center in which the stratigraphy produced a ceramic sequence from the Preclassic Period to the Terminal Classic Period. The field report, published in 1939, contained Anna O. Shepard's appendix on the temporal changes in ceramic material, which was the first use of "archaeological sciences".[2]

Thompson was able to produce ceramic sequences at the sites of Tzimin Kax, San Jose, and Xunantunich. These sequences allowed for sites which lacked inscribed monuments traditionally used for dating, to produce a tentative date. The patterns presented by the data from the Petén region and Uaxactun allowed for these sites to fit within the cultural development of the Maya lowlands. In 1938, Thompson added to ceramic sequence, the discovery of the site of La Milpa. This sequence would hold strong until Gordon Willey's research at Barton Ramie, which would lead to a sequence. The field season at La Milpa would be one of the last ones for Thompson, though he was not aware of this at the time of his publication of Maya Archaeologist.

Professional career edit

While Thompson continued to publish on chronology, during the 1940s his main goal was to decipher the non-calendric hieroglyphs which composed the majority of the unread texts. Of the eight papers he published in 1943, half were on epigraphic research. Thompson's particular epigraphic focus was on the fish symbol and directional glyphs. Additionally, outside of epigraphy, Thompson investigated tattooing and tobacco use by the ancient Maya.

In The Ancient Maya: The Rise and Fall of a Rainforest Civilization, Arthur Demarest characterizes Thompson as engendering a traditional view of Maya society or essentially one of "gentlemen scholars" of the earlier part of the 20th century. This perspective stems from an elitist tradition is biased since it presents the Maya myopically. Additionally Thompson presented the Maya as practicing slash and burn agriculture since it fit well into models which presented the Maya as dispersed people. Thompson depicted the Maya public life as being solely centered on "theocratic" ceremonial centers dedicated to worship of great cycles of time and celestial bodies; a view that is now considered an oversimplification.[5] With the help of Dr. A.V. Kidder, Thompson (1943) wrote, A Trial Survey of the Southern Maya Area, describing sites, such as; Kaminaljuyui, Miraflores, and Copan. The article by Thompson assumes that the Maya were ultimately "peaceful" people since they lacked apparent defenses. He again stresses the widespread abandonment of ceremonial centers. He refers to the decline in arts and architecture as "Balkanization," a period which he views as experiencing political disintegration. He is also responsible for the long-held belief that the Aztecs, a "highly war-like" society according to the text, were directly involved in overthrowing what he thought were priest-rulers.[6]

Thompson was an accomplished author, publishing text books and findings in academic journals all over the United States. In his article, A Survey of the North Maya Area, Thompson (1945) describes how researchers ought to employ a historical framework in archaeological studies. Additionally he details his finds in the Northern Maya region whilst making suggestions as to which types of ceramics were adopted. He identified phases: the formative period, the Initial Series, transition period, Mexican period, and Mexican absorption period, in Maya development which set a precedent for the field in a number of ways.

He theorized that the formative period began prior to A.D. 325 and was characterized by monochrome pottery in Chicanel style as well as giant pyramids. However he believed that the Maya did not have any carved stelae during this point in history. Currently, it is believed that the Preclassic period actually occurred earlier than Thompson originally surmised. The Initial Series period is prostrated as the Classic phase in Maya ceramic styles. He grouped them into two halves. The first half 325 A.D. to 625 is characterized by basal flange bowls, and hieroglyphic stelae and lintels in mostly centralized areas. The second half 625 A.D. to 900 is indicative of Z fine orange ware, and slate wares. In addition, Puuc, Chenes, and Rio Bec began to develop distinct styles. The Transition period 900 A.D. to 987 the Mayanist felt that there were no identifiable pottery types, he remarked on the fall of Chichen Itza, the abandonment of Puuc/Chenes/Rio Bec, and how Mexican influences were becoming stronger. According to Thompson, the Mexican period marked a decline in Maya civilization and ceramic styles due to conflict between Mesoamerican polities. He postulated that this era saw an end to hieroglyphic texts and increased worship of Mexican cosmology in place of Maya deities. The architectural styles were a mix of Tula and Maya features. He also claimed that the Mexican Absorption Period 1204 A.D. to 1540 was characterized by the abandonment of most major cities, and that artistic innovation only were produced at low levels.[7]

Although Thompson has contributed a considerable amount of research to Mesoamerican studies, some of his interpretations have proven to be flawed, or inconsistent with new investigations. He maintained a venerable air of dissent in the archaeological community. Archaeologist Jeremiah Epstein posed that Thompson was wrong in his characterization of the Maya water transportation. He may have based his analysis of misinterpreted Spanish translations of the Motul Maya word for sail. "Bub" is a 16th-century Spanish interpretation, but may characterize Spanish vessels as opposed to Maya. Sails are not represented in prehistoric Mesoamerican iconography or texts, instead, it is theorized that canoes were used as a primary mode of water transportation for the ancient Maya. In fact, the only place where sails allegedly appear to be represented in prehistoric contexts are in graffiti at Tikal, however, further research poses that the illustration does not depicts sails since there is no supplemental evidence of marine life or water sources (191). In addition, Maya numerous texts make no historical references to sails; they may not have been very utilitarian for the Maya, instead, the overwhelming majority of sources refer to canoes. It appears that Thompson did not consider a Post Conquest context for sails.[8]

Another author Matthew Watson portrays Thompson as a significant figure in Mesoamerican studies, however, in conjunction with Bruno Latour, the author believes that the famous Mayanist, along with Merle Greene Robertson, and Linda Schele used specific techniques known as "mechanical objectivity" and "trained judgement" which essentially reduces the diversity of Maya artistic traditions to that of modernist texts. This approach ignores a context-driven archaeological empiricism, adding to Thompson's many biased assumptions about how the ancient Maya lived.[9]

Moreover, archaeologist Traci Ardren feels that Thompson appeared to have made the mistake of conflating, or merging several cosmological entities into one. He famously misinterpreted the Maya Moon Goddess Ix Chel, basing his research again on mistranslated Spanish texts. He believed as modern Maya do now that the Moon Goddess is the wife of the Sun God. Ardren's article claims, "Thompson interpreted the different glyphic phrases or names associated with the younger set as various tides for the same goddess, a deity he had already assumed to represent the moon". Ardren recognizes that the concept an all-encompassing, unifying female entity is directly influenced by western philosophical movements and androcentric bias.[10]

In tandem with other critics, Marshall J. Becker (1979) reviews Thompson's assumptions about Classic Maya settlement patterns and social structure and how his influence affected later theories regarding complexity in Mesoamerican culture. His article describes scholars; such as Gann, who critiqued Thompson's work. Gann and Thompson would later coauthor a text in which "Thompson stated...his popularized idea that the Maya lived in small agricultural settlements while the religious centers were uninhabited, while Gann suggested just the opposite. This divergence from the complex model, however, only appeared in Thompson's popular work." Furthermore, Becker characterizes more modern research as integrative, enabling studies to connect emerging insights about Maya urbanization/complexity with supportive archaeological evidence. Becker concludes that Thompson's research was both incomplete and incorrect, however, contemporary research is fighting to correct false claims in conjunction with other disciplines. The article distinguishes between two major theoretical concepts that dominated Maya archaeology for decades; Thompson's "priest-peasant" hypothesis and Borgheyi's concept of ranked social classes. Becker deconstructs Thompson's biased narratives, considering them to be a product of Thompson's English heritage and socio-political orientation which he later projected on to his research. Borgheyi's hypothesis is considered as more indicative of what Maya society might actually be like as opposed to Thompson whose claims were generally viewed as unfounded. Additionally, Becker mentions how defining "limits" often creates interpretive issues for scholars, it is an important observation in a whole range of archaeological settings; still affecting research today.[11]

Unfortunately, Thompson's assumptions about Maya elites were misguided. Husband and wife archaeologist team Chase and Chase discusses the significance of the Caracol Archaeological Project which celebrated its 30th consecutive year of field research in 2014. Their research reveals the inconsistent interpretations of past Mayanists like Thompson. Thompson proposed that the Maya socially organized themselves around a two-tiered class system; a view prostrated by Harvard academic traditions. As of current, Caracol is recognized as being essential to evaluating urbanization and large-scale organization of Maya cities. Representing the Penn State academic tradition, Chase and Chase specifically describe how, upon their initial arrival at the site, two theoretical framework purported by Thompson and Borgheyi dominated Caracol, but were later rejected because of evidence stemming from long-term research. The authors found that divisions between elites and lower classes were not as stark or simply as previously suggested, moreover, there is evidence for a prominent middle-class which Thompson did not consider. Ultimately, Thompson did not have access to accurate population estimates or entire maps of settlement patterns, making it difficult for him to assess realistic organizational principles of the Maya.[12]

Nonetheless, the Mayanist knew the limitations of archaeological research. One of Thompson's later articles Estimates of Maya Population: Deranging Factors is an attempt to identify deranging factors for population estimates of the ancient Maya. Determining population sizes is still an issue that plagues archaeologists (214). He draws attention to the ancient Maya tendency to "abandon" a hut after the death of its owner which may invariably skew population estimates. Additionally, Thompson writes about the mobilizing capabilities of the ancient Maya and their long-standing tradition of moving from site to site in order to exploit local resources. Using the modern Maya as an example, he urged other archaeologists to consider hut-abandonment, and movement as major issues. In fact, determining whether or not a site is continuously occupied is still a huge part of archaeological limits today. Moreover, Thompson contends that house-moving was not a major issues for the Maya since building materials were abundant (215). In his conclusion he feels that mounds also may be an indication of decreased population sizes and a time of "growing unrest."[13]

Thompson's focus on the non-calendric hieroglyphs produced the monumental Carnegie monograph Maya Hieroglyphic Writing: Introduction.[2] Thompson did groundbreaking work in the deciphering of Maya hieroglyphics. Notably, his contributions to the field of Maya epigraphic studies included advancements in our understanding of the calendar and astronomy, the identification of new nouns, and the development of a numerical cataloguing system for the glyphs (the T-number system), which are still used today.[citation needed] His attempted decipherments were based on ideographic rather than linguistic principles, and he was a staunch critic of all attempts to propose phonetic readings.[14] In his later years, he resisted the notion that the glyphs have a phonetic component, as put forward by Russian linguist Yuri Knorozov. Thompson forcefully criticised Knorozov's research, which discouraged the majority of the field from taking the latter's work seriously.[15]

Thompson wrote about hieroglyphic writing in great detail. In Systems of Hieroglyphic Writing in Middle America and Methods of Deciphering Them, the famed Mayanist critiqued some of the historical inconsistencies associated with Diego de Landa's informants. He warned other archaeologists that the translation may be inaccurate since the informant through personal agency may have intentionally deceived the Spaniards or the informant did not supply material for reading Maya texts using syllabic systems because "none existed" at the time. He also scathingly claimed that Knorozov overwhelmingly misidentified Landa's hieroglyphs, adding to confusion. However it was later proven that many of Knorozov's speculations that the Maya language was phonetic and ideographic were accurate. Further discussed are Nahuatl language and writing where he again reasserted that the Maya did not have a phonetic language system, instead, he thought they only identified specific places and people (352). He thought that their writing had strong implications between good and bad. Furthermore, he characterized the preconquest Mexican codices as having a form of "rebus" writing (352-353).[16] Thompson also expressed interest in the "divinatory" significance of the Dresden and Madrid codices (357).[17]

Thompson supported Morley's contention that the inscriptions were purely esoteric and religious texts, with no elements of history or politics, until the early 1960s, when the work of Tatiana Proskouriakoff on the inscriptions of Piedras Negras made him realise that his view had been "completely mistaken."[2][3]

Thompson continued to work with epigraphic and ethnohistoric problems until the end of his career. As he himself noted, he belonged to the last generation of "generalists", engaging in activities ranging from finding and mapping new sites and excavation to the study of Maya ceramics, art, iconography, epigraphy, and ethnology (on the side). Thompson sought to present the Maya to the general public with publications such as the Rise and fall of the Maya Civilization (1954) and Maya Hieroglyphs without Tears (1972).

Post-professional life edit

 
Thompson's grave at Ashdon, Essex.

Thompson was awarded four honorary doctorates in three different countries, along with being awarded the Order of Isabel la Catolica by Spain, the Aztec Eagle by Mexico in 1965 and the Order of the Quetzal by Guatemala during his last trip to the Maya lands with the Queen of the United Kingdom in 1975. Thompson was knighted by Queen Elizabeth II in 1975 a few days after his 76th birthday, becoming the first New World archaeologist to receive this honoured distinction. He died nine months later on 9 September 1975 in Cambridge, and was laid to rest in Ashdon, Essex, England.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ "Sir J. Eric S. Thompson". Encyclopaedia Britannica. Retrieved 27 June 2020.
  2. ^ a b c d e Norman Hammond 1977
  3. ^ a b c J Eric Thompson 1963
  4. ^ Michael D. Coe 1992
  5. ^ Demarest, Arthur (2004). The Ancient Maya The Rise and Fall of Rainforest Civilization. New York: Cambridge University Press. pp. 43–45. ISBN 978-0-521-53390-4.
  6. ^ Thompson, John (1943). "A Trial Survey of the Southern Maya Area". American Antiquity. 9 (1): 106–134. doi:10.2307/275456. JSTOR 275456. S2CID 163470642.
  7. ^ Thompson, John (1945). "A Survey of the Northern Maya Area". American Antiquity. 11 (1): 2–24. doi:10.2307/275524. JSTOR 275524. S2CID 164127117.
  8. ^ Epstein, Jeremiah (1990). "Sails in Aboriginal Mesoamerica: Reevaluating Thompson's Argument". American Archaeology.
  9. ^ Watson, Matthew (1990). "Mediating the Maya: Hieroglyphic Image and Objectivity". Journal of Social Archaeology.
  10. ^ Ardren, Traci (2006). "Mending the Past: Ix Chel and the invention of the Modern Pop Goddess". Antiquity. 80 (307): 25–37. doi:10.1017/S0003598X00093236. S2CID 54685202.
  11. ^ Becker, Marshall (1979). "Priest, Peasants and Ceremonial centers: The Intellectual History of a Model". Maya Archaeology and Ethnohistory: 3–20. doi:10.7560/750401-004. ISBN 9780292762565. S2CID 222342895.
  12. ^ Chase, Arlen; Chase (2015). "Thirty Years of Archaeology at Caracol, Belize: Retrospective and Prospective". Research Reports in Belizean Archaeology.
  13. ^ Thompson, John (1971). "Estimates of Maya Population: Deranging Factors". Society for American Archaeology.
  14. ^ Houston, Stephen D.; Chinchilla Mazariegos, Oswaldo Fernando; Stuart, David (2001). The Decipherment of Ancient Maya Writing. University of Oklahoma Press.
  15. ^ John Ferguson Harris, Stephen K. Stearns. 1997. Understanding Maya Inscriptions: A Hieroglyph Handbook. UPenn Museum of Archaeology, p. 9-10
  16. ^ « There is no alphabetic or true syllabic writing in preconquest Mexican codices ; this would easily be spotted had it existed because the glyphs are mainly of identifiable places and persons. There is a certain use of rebus writing [...] to our European way of thinking the spoken syllabes reverse the arrangement of the drawing ; we would read it downwards [...] Under Spanish influence Nahuatl writing showed a great increase of rebus writing [...] the various glyphs which form the phrase are in line, just as in Landa's Maya sentence, but they are still pictographic, ideographic, or rebus writing [...] This form of rebus writing — for example, pater noster was written as a flag (pantli), a stone (tetl, for there is no r in nahuatl), a prickly pear (nochtli) and again a stone (tetl) — is arranged, European fashion, in straight lines like the phrases in Codex Xolotl and in Landa's illustrative material. »
  17. ^ Thompson, John (1959). "Systems of Hieroglyphic Writing in Middle America and Methods of Deciphering Them". Society for American Archaeology.

References edit

External links edit

  • Cracking the Maya Code – PBS website
  • Hieroglyph Catalog
  • BBC Archive – The lost world of the Maya

eric, thompson, other, persons, named, eric, thompson, eric, thompson, disambiguation, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, remov. For other persons named Eric Thompson see Eric Thompson disambiguation This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources J Eric S Thompson news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2012 Learn how and when to remove this message Sir John Eric Sidney Thompson KBE 31 December 1898 9 September 1975 1 was a leading English Mesoamerican archaeologist ethnohistorian and epigrapher While working in the United States he dominated Maya studies and particularly the study of the Maya script until well into the 1960s Sir J Eric S Thompson Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life 1 2 Education 1 3 Early career 1 4 Field work 1 5 Professional career 1 6 Post professional life 2 See also 3 Notes 4 References 5 External linksBiography editEarly life edit Thompson was born on 31 December 1898 to George Thompson a distinguished surgeon and fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons of England Thompson was raised in the family home on Harley Street in London 2 At the age of 14 he was sent to Winchester College to receive an independent education In 1915 shortly after the beginning of World War I Thompson used the assumed name Neil Winslow to join the British Army while underage A year into service he was wounded and sent home to recover first in Huddersfield then in Seaford He continued to serve in the Coldstream Guards until the end of the war ending his service as a commissioned officer After the war Thompson left for Argentina to work as a gaucho on a family cattle farm When he returned to England in the early 1920s he published his first article on his experience in Argentina in the Southwark Diocesan Gazette A Cowboy s Experience Cattle Branding in the Argentine Education edit Thompson first considered a medical or political career However he later decided to study anthropology at Fitzwilliam House Cambridge under A C Haddon With the completion of his degree in 1925 Thompson wrote to Sylvanus G Morley the head of the Carnegie Institution s project at Chichen Itza to ask for a job inquiring about a field position 3 Morley accepted Thompson most likely due to the fact that Thompson had previously taught himself to read Maya hieroglyphic dates an accomplishment that was highly valued by Morley who also had a passion for Maya hieroglyphics Early career edit In 1926 Thompson arrived in the Yucatan of Mexico under the direction of Morley to work at Chichen Itza Here he started working on the friezes of the Temple of the Warriors In his autobiography Maya Archaeologist 1936 Thompson referred to the friezes as a sort of giant jigsaw puzzle made worse by the fact the stones had been carved before being placed in position accurately describing his first field experience 3 Later that year Morley sent Thompson to report on the site of Coba located to the east of Chichen Itza During the first field season at Coba Thompson deciphered the dates on the Macanxoc stela Morley the foremost epigrapher did not originally agree with the readings of the dates It was not until a return trip to Coba that Morley was persuaded by Thompson s readings marking his emergence as a prominent scholar in the field of Maya epigraphy 4 Within the next year Thompson took post as the Assistant Curator at the Field Museum of Natural History in Chicago He would work there until 1935 when he left for a position at the Carnegie Institution in Washington D C In 1926 while employed by the Field Museum Thompson under the supervision of Thomas A Joyce and the British Museum took part in an expedition to Lubaantun in British Honduras It was the fieldwork at Lubaantun that led Thompson to disagree with Joyce s argument for the early megalith and in and out style of architectural stratigraphy Thompson argued that the in and out constructions were due to root action 2 This root action disturbed the construction by pushing the rocks out in the fashion of the in and out construction that invalidated Joyce s argument Field work edit Toward the end of the first season at Lubaantun the site of Pusilha was discovered and Thompson was sent to investigate with his guide Faustino Bol Thompson s subsequent interactions with his guide who was a Mopan Maya would later shed light on how Thompson viewed the ancient Maya and their culture As a result of their long conversations Thompson concluded that it was clear that archaeological excavations were not the only means of learning about the ancient ways This led to his first monograph Ethnology of the Mayas of Southern and Central British Honduras 1930 which gave insight into the problems of Maya archaeological and epigraphic through the use of ethnographic and ethno historic data In 1931 Thompson and Thomas Gann teamed up to publish The History of the Maya from the Earliest Times to the Present Day Additionally Thompson started on a new field project at the site of San Jose in now Belize Here his research was focused at an average Maya center in which the stratigraphy produced a ceramic sequence from the Preclassic Period to the Terminal Classic Period The field report published in 1939 contained Anna O Shepard s appendix on the temporal changes in ceramic material which was the first use of archaeological sciences 2 Thompson was able to produce ceramic sequences at the sites of Tzimin Kax San Jose and Xunantunich These sequences allowed for sites which lacked inscribed monuments traditionally used for dating to produce a tentative date The patterns presented by the data from the Peten region and Uaxactun allowed for these sites to fit within the cultural development of the Maya lowlands In 1938 Thompson added to ceramic sequence the discovery of the site of La Milpa This sequence would hold strong until Gordon Willey s research at Barton Ramie which would lead to a sequence The field season at La Milpa would be one of the last ones for Thompson though he was not aware of this at the time of his publication of Maya Archaeologist Professional career edit While Thompson continued to publish on chronology during the 1940s his main goal was to decipher the non calendric hieroglyphs which composed the majority of the unread texts Of the eight papers he published in 1943 half were on epigraphic research Thompson s particular epigraphic focus was on the fish symbol and directional glyphs Additionally outside of epigraphy Thompson investigated tattooing and tobacco use by the ancient Maya In The Ancient Maya The Rise and Fall of a Rainforest Civilization Arthur Demarest characterizes Thompson as engendering a traditional view of Maya society or essentially one of gentlemen scholars of the earlier part of the 20th century This perspective stems from an elitist tradition is biased since it presents the Maya myopically Additionally Thompson presented the Maya as practicing slash and burn agriculture since it fit well into models which presented the Maya as dispersed people Thompson depicted the Maya public life as being solely centered on theocratic ceremonial centers dedicated to worship of great cycles of time and celestial bodies a view that is now considered an oversimplification 5 With the help of Dr A V Kidder Thompson 1943 wrote A Trial Survey of the Southern Maya Area describing sites such as Kaminaljuyui Miraflores and Copan The article by Thompson assumes that the Maya were ultimately peaceful people since they lacked apparent defenses He again stresses the widespread abandonment of ceremonial centers He refers to the decline in arts and architecture as Balkanization a period which he views as experiencing political disintegration He is also responsible for the long held belief that the Aztecs a highly war like society according to the text were directly involved in overthrowing what he thought were priest rulers 6 Thompson was an accomplished author publishing text books and findings in academic journals all over the United States In his article A Survey of the North Maya Area Thompson 1945 describes how researchers ought to employ a historical framework in archaeological studies Additionally he details his finds in the Northern Maya region whilst making suggestions as to which types of ceramics were adopted He identified phases the formative period the Initial Series transition period Mexican period and Mexican absorption period in Maya development which set a precedent for the field in a number of ways He theorized that the formative period began prior to A D 325 and was characterized by monochrome pottery in Chicanel style as well as giant pyramids However he believed that the Maya did not have any carved stelae during this point in history Currently it is believed that the Preclassic period actually occurred earlier than Thompson originally surmised The Initial Series period is prostrated as the Classic phase in Maya ceramic styles He grouped them into two halves The first half 325 A D to 625 is characterized by basal flange bowls and hieroglyphic stelae and lintels in mostly centralized areas The second half 625 A D to 900 is indicative of Z fine orange ware and slate wares In addition Puuc Chenes and Rio Bec began to develop distinct styles The Transition period 900 A D to 987 the Mayanist felt that there were no identifiable pottery types he remarked on the fall of Chichen Itza the abandonment of Puuc Chenes Rio Bec and how Mexican influences were becoming stronger According to Thompson the Mexican period marked a decline in Maya civilization and ceramic styles due to conflict between Mesoamerican polities He postulated that this era saw an end to hieroglyphic texts and increased worship of Mexican cosmology in place of Maya deities The architectural styles were a mix of Tula and Maya features He also claimed that the Mexican Absorption Period 1204 A D to 1540 was characterized by the abandonment of most major cities and that artistic innovation only were produced at low levels 7 Although Thompson has contributed a considerable amount of research to Mesoamerican studies some of his interpretations have proven to be flawed or inconsistent with new investigations He maintained a venerable air of dissent in the archaeological community Archaeologist Jeremiah Epstein posed that Thompson was wrong in his characterization of the Maya water transportation He may have based his analysis of misinterpreted Spanish translations of the Motul Maya word for sail Bub is a 16th century Spanish interpretation but may characterize Spanish vessels as opposed to Maya Sails are not represented in prehistoric Mesoamerican iconography or texts instead it is theorized that canoes were used as a primary mode of water transportation for the ancient Maya In fact the only place where sails allegedly appear to be represented in prehistoric contexts are in graffiti at Tikal however further research poses that the illustration does not depicts sails since there is no supplemental evidence of marine life or water sources 191 In addition Maya numerous texts make no historical references to sails they may not have been very utilitarian for the Maya instead the overwhelming majority of sources refer to canoes It appears that Thompson did not consider a Post Conquest context for sails 8 Another author Matthew Watson portrays Thompson as a significant figure in Mesoamerican studies however in conjunction with Bruno Latour the author believes that the famous Mayanist along with Merle Greene Robertson and Linda Schele used specific techniques known as mechanical objectivity and trained judgement which essentially reduces the diversity of Maya artistic traditions to that of modernist texts This approach ignores a context driven archaeological empiricism adding to Thompson s many biased assumptions about how the ancient Maya lived 9 Moreover archaeologist Traci Ardren feels that Thompson appeared to have made the mistake of conflating or merging several cosmological entities into one He famously misinterpreted the Maya Moon Goddess Ix Chel basing his research again on mistranslated Spanish texts He believed as modern Maya do now that the Moon Goddess is the wife of the Sun God Ardren s article claims Thompson interpreted the different glyphic phrases or names associated with the younger set as various tides for the same goddess a deity he had already assumed to represent the moon Ardren recognizes that the concept an all encompassing unifying female entity is directly influenced by western philosophical movements and androcentric bias 10 In tandem with other critics Marshall J Becker 1979 reviews Thompson s assumptions about Classic Maya settlement patterns and social structure and how his influence affected later theories regarding complexity in Mesoamerican culture His article describes scholars such as Gann who critiqued Thompson s work Gann and Thompson would later coauthor a text in which Thompson stated his popularized idea that the Maya lived in small agricultural settlements while the religious centers were uninhabited while Gann suggested just the opposite This divergence from the complex model however only appeared in Thompson s popular work Furthermore Becker characterizes more modern research as integrative enabling studies to connect emerging insights about Maya urbanization complexity with supportive archaeological evidence Becker concludes that Thompson s research was both incomplete and incorrect however contemporary research is fighting to correct false claims in conjunction with other disciplines The article distinguishes between two major theoretical concepts that dominated Maya archaeology for decades Thompson s priest peasant hypothesis and Borgheyi s concept of ranked social classes Becker deconstructs Thompson s biased narratives considering them to be a product of Thompson s English heritage and socio political orientation which he later projected on to his research Borgheyi s hypothesis is considered as more indicative of what Maya society might actually be like as opposed to Thompson whose claims were generally viewed as unfounded Additionally Becker mentions how defining limits often creates interpretive issues for scholars it is an important observation in a whole range of archaeological settings still affecting research today 11 Unfortunately Thompson s assumptions about Maya elites were misguided Husband and wife archaeologist team Chase and Chase discusses the significance of the Caracol Archaeological Project which celebrated its 30th consecutive year of field research in 2014 Their research reveals the inconsistent interpretations of past Mayanists like Thompson Thompson proposed that the Maya socially organized themselves around a two tiered class system a view prostrated by Harvard academic traditions As of current Caracol is recognized as being essential to evaluating urbanization and large scale organization of Maya cities Representing the Penn State academic tradition Chase and Chase specifically describe how upon their initial arrival at the site two theoretical framework purported by Thompson and Borgheyi dominated Caracol but were later rejected because of evidence stemming from long term research The authors found that divisions between elites and lower classes were not as stark or simply as previously suggested moreover there is evidence for a prominent middle class which Thompson did not consider Ultimately Thompson did not have access to accurate population estimates or entire maps of settlement patterns making it difficult for him to assess realistic organizational principles of the Maya 12 Nonetheless the Mayanist knew the limitations of archaeological research One of Thompson s later articles Estimates of Maya Population Deranging Factors is an attempt to identify deranging factors for population estimates of the ancient Maya Determining population sizes is still an issue that plagues archaeologists 214 He draws attention to the ancient Maya tendency to abandon a hut after the death of its owner which may invariably skew population estimates Additionally Thompson writes about the mobilizing capabilities of the ancient Maya and their long standing tradition of moving from site to site in order to exploit local resources Using the modern Maya as an example he urged other archaeologists to consider hut abandonment and movement as major issues In fact determining whether or not a site is continuously occupied is still a huge part of archaeological limits today Moreover Thompson contends that house moving was not a major issues for the Maya since building materials were abundant 215 In his conclusion he feels that mounds also may be an indication of decreased population sizes and a time of growing unrest 13 Thompson s focus on the non calendric hieroglyphs produced the monumental Carnegie monograph Maya Hieroglyphic Writing Introduction 2 Thompson did groundbreaking work in the deciphering of Maya hieroglyphics Notably his contributions to the field of Maya epigraphic studies included advancements in our understanding of the calendar and astronomy the identification of new nouns and the development of a numerical cataloguing system for the glyphs the T number system which are still used today citation needed His attempted decipherments were based on ideographic rather than linguistic principles and he was a staunch critic of all attempts to propose phonetic readings 14 In his later years he resisted the notion that the glyphs have a phonetic component as put forward by Russian linguist Yuri Knorozov Thompson forcefully criticised Knorozov s research which discouraged the majority of the field from taking the latter s work seriously 15 Thompson wrote about hieroglyphic writing in great detail In Systems of Hieroglyphic Writing in Middle America and Methods of Deciphering Them the famed Mayanist critiqued some of the historical inconsistencies associated with Diego de Landa s informants He warned other archaeologists that the translation may be inaccurate since the informant through personal agency may have intentionally deceived the Spaniards or the informant did not supply material for reading Maya texts using syllabic systems because none existed at the time He also scathingly claimed that Knorozov overwhelmingly misidentified Landa s hieroglyphs adding to confusion However it was later proven that many of Knorozov s speculations that the Maya language was phonetic and ideographic were accurate Further discussed are Nahuatl language and writing where he again reasserted that the Maya did not have a phonetic language system instead he thought they only identified specific places and people 352 He thought that their writing had strong implications between good and bad Furthermore he characterized the preconquest Mexican codices as having a form of rebus writing 352 353 16 Thompson also expressed interest in the divinatory significance of the Dresden and Madrid codices 357 17 Thompson supported Morley s contention that the inscriptions were purely esoteric and religious texts with no elements of history or politics until the early 1960s when the work of Tatiana Proskouriakoff on the inscriptions of Piedras Negras made him realise that his view had been completely mistaken 2 3 Thompson continued to work with epigraphic and ethnohistoric problems until the end of his career As he himself noted he belonged to the last generation of generalists engaging in activities ranging from finding and mapping new sites and excavation to the study of Maya ceramics art iconography epigraphy and ethnology on the side Thompson sought to present the Maya to the general public with publications such as the Rise and fall of the Maya Civilization 1954 and Maya Hieroglyphs without Tears 1972 Post professional life edit nbsp Thompson s grave at Ashdon Essex The neutrality of this section is disputed Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please do not remove this message until conditions to do so are met April 2020 Learn how and when to remove this message Thompson was awarded four honorary doctorates in three different countries along with being awarded the Order of Isabel la Catolica by Spain the Aztec Eagle by Mexico in 1965 and the Order of the Quetzal by Guatemala during his last trip to the Maya lands with the Queen of the United Kingdom in 1975 Thompson was knighted by Queen Elizabeth II in 1975 a few days after his 76th birthday becoming the first New World archaeologist to receive this honoured distinction He died nine months later on 9 September 1975 in Cambridge and was laid to rest in Ashdon Essex England See also editMadrid Codex Maya Yuri Knorozov Tatiana Proskouriakoff Maya civilisation Chichen Itza David Stuart Mayanist Notes edit Sir J Eric S Thompson Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 27 June 2020 a b c d e Norman Hammond 1977 a b c J Eric Thompson 1963 Michael D Coe 1992 Demarest Arthur 2004 The Ancient Maya The Rise and Fall of Rainforest Civilization New York Cambridge University Press pp 43 45 ISBN 978 0 521 53390 4 Thompson John 1943 A Trial Survey of the Southern Maya Area American Antiquity 9 1 106 134 doi 10 2307 275456 JSTOR 275456 S2CID 163470642 Thompson John 1945 A Survey of the Northern Maya Area American Antiquity 11 1 2 24 doi 10 2307 275524 JSTOR 275524 S2CID 164127117 Epstein Jeremiah 1990 Sails in Aboriginal Mesoamerica Reevaluating Thompson s Argument American Archaeology Watson Matthew 1990 Mediating the Maya Hieroglyphic Image and Objectivity Journal of Social Archaeology Ardren Traci 2006 Mending the Past Ix Chel and the invention of the Modern Pop Goddess Antiquity 80 307 25 37 doi 10 1017 S0003598X00093236 S2CID 54685202 Becker Marshall 1979 Priest Peasants and Ceremonial centers The Intellectual History of a Model Maya Archaeology and Ethnohistory 3 20 doi 10 7560 750401 004 ISBN 9780292762565 S2CID 222342895 Chase Arlen Chase 2015 Thirty Years of Archaeology at Caracol Belize Retrospective and Prospective Research Reports in Belizean Archaeology Thompson John 1971 Estimates of Maya Population Deranging Factors Society for American Archaeology Houston Stephen D Chinchilla Mazariegos Oswaldo Fernando Stuart David 2001 The Decipherment of Ancient Maya Writing University of Oklahoma Press John Ferguson Harris Stephen K Stearns 1997 Understanding Maya Inscriptions A Hieroglyph Handbook UPenn Museum of Archaeology p 9 10 There is no alphabetic or true syllabic writing in preconquest Mexican codices this would easily be spotted had it existed because the glyphs are mainly of identifiable places and persons There is a certain use of rebus writing to our European way of thinking the spoken syllabes reverse the arrangement of the drawing we would read it downwards Under Spanish influence Nahuatl writing showed a great increase of rebus writing the various glyphs which form the phrase are in line just as in Landa s Maya sentence but they are still pictographic ideographic or rebus writing This form of rebus writing for example pater noster was written as a flag pantli a stone tetl for there is no r in nahuatl a prickly pear nochtli and again a stone tetl is arranged European fashion in straight lines like the phrases in Codex Xolotl and in Landa s illustrative material Thompson John 1959 Systems of Hieroglyphic Writing in Middle America and Methods of Deciphering Them Society for American Archaeology References editArdren Traci 2006 Mending the Past Ix Chel and the Invention of the Modern Pop Goddess Antiquity 80 307 Antiquity Publication Ltd 30 35 doi 10 1017 S0003598X00093236 ISSN 0003 598X S2CID 54685202 Becker Marshall J 1979 Priests Peasants and Ceremonial Centers The Intellectual History of a Model Texas University of Austin Press Chase Arlen and Chase Diane 2015 Sails in Aboriginal Mesoamerica Thirty Years of Archaeology at Caracol Belize Retrospective and Prospective Research Reports in Belizean Archaeology 12 1 13 14 Coe Michael D 1992 Breaking the Maya Code London Thames amp Hudson ISBN 0 500 05061 9 OCLC 26605966 Coe Michael D 1999 The Maya Ancient peoples and places series 6th edition fully revised and expanded ed London and New York Thames amp Hudson ISBN 0 500 28066 5 OCLC 59432778 Coe Michael D Mark van Stone 2005 Reading the Maya Glyphs 2nd ed London Thames amp Hudson ISBN 978 0 500 28553 4 OCLC 60532227 Demarest Arthur 2004 Ancient Maya The Rise and Fall of a Rainforest Civilization New York Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 53390 4 Epstein Jeremiah F 1990 Sails in Aboriginal Mesoamerica Reevaluating Thompson s Argument American Anthropologist 92 1 Wiley Blackwell 187 192 doi 10 1525 aa 1990 92 1 02a00140 hdl 2152 10306 ISSN 0002 7294 Freidel David A Linda Schele Joy Parker 1993 Maya Cosmos Three Thousand Years on the Shaman s Path New York William Morrow amp Co ISBN 0 688 10081 3 OCLC 27430287 Hammond Norman 1977 Social process in Maya prehistory studies in honour of Sir Eric Thompson London and New York Academic Press ISBN 0 12 322050 5 Harris John F Stephen K Stearns 1997 Understanding Maya Inscriptions A Hieroglyph Handbook 2nd ed Philadelphia University Museum Publications University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology ISBN 0 924171 41 3 OCLC 34077021 Houston Stephen D 1989 Reading the Past Maya Glyphs London British Museum Publications ISBN 0 7141 8069 6 OCLC 18814390 Houston Stephen D 1992 Classic Maya Politics In Elin C Danien Robert J Sharer eds New Theories on the Ancient Maya University Museum Monograph series no 77 Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology pp 65 70 ISBN 0 924171 13 8 OCLC 25510312 Houston Stephen D David Stuart Karl Taube 2006 The Memory of Bones Body Being and Experience Among the Classic Maya Austin University of Texas Press ISBN 978 0 292 71294 2 OCLC 61660268 Kipfer Barbara Ann 2000 Encyclopedic Dictionary of Archaeology New York Kluwer Academic Plenum Publishers ISBN 0 306 46158 7 OCLC 42692203 Schele Linda David Freidel 1992 A Forest of Kings The Untold Story of the Ancient Maya pbk reprint ed New York Harper Perennial ISBN 0 688 11204 8 OCLC 145324300 Sharer Robert J Loa P Traxler 2006 The Ancient Maya 6th fully revised ed Stanford CA Stanford University Press ISBN 0 8047 4816 0 OCLC 28067148 Stuart George E 1992 Quest for Decipherment A Historical and Biographical Survey of Maya Hieroglyphic Investigation In Elin C Danien Robert J Sharer eds New Theories on the Ancient Maya University Museum Monograph series no 77 Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology pp 1 64 ISBN 0 924171 13 8 OCLC 25510312 Stuart George E 1994 The end of the beginning in Maya scholarship Antiquity 68 261 University of York 867 doi 10 1017 S0003598X00047608 ISSN 0003 598X S2CID 162482322 Roberts David Wolfgang Kaehler Anne Bolen July 2004 Secrets of the Maya Deciphering Tikal Smithsonian 35 4 Smithsonian Magazine 42 48 ISSN 0037 7333 Thompson J Eric S 1963 Maya Archaeologist USA University of Oklahoma Press ISBN 0 8061 1206 9 Thompson J Eric S 1945 A Survey of the Northern Maya Area American Antiquity 1 2 1 24 doi 10 2307 275524 ISSN 0002 7316 JSTOR 275524 S2CID 164127117 Thompson J Eric S 1943 A Trial Survey of Southern Maya Area American Antiquity 9 1 131 132 doi 10 2307 275456 ISSN 0002 7316 JSTOR 275456 S2CID 163470642 Thompson J Eric S 1971 Estimates of Maya Population Deranging Factors American Antiquity 1 36 Humanities and Social Sciences Index Retrospective 214 216 doi 10 2307 278679 ISSN 0002 7316 JSTOR 278679 S2CID 164112991 Thompson J Eric S 1959 Systems of Hieroglyphic Writing in Middle America and Methods of Deciphering Them Society for American Archaeology 24 4 JSTOR Journals 214 216 doi 10 2307 276597 ISSN 0002 7316 JSTOR 276597 S2CID 163337656 Watson Matthew 2013 Mediating the Maya Hieroglyphic Imaging and Objectivity Journal of Social Archaeology 13 2 Alternative Press Index 177 196 doi 10 1177 1469605313483913 ISSN 1469 6053 S2CID 145451900 External links editCracking the Maya Code PBS website Hieroglyph Catalog BBC Archive The lost world of the Maya Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title J Eric S Thompson amp oldid 1222293035, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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