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Olmec religion

The religion of the Olmec people significantly influenced the social development and mythological world view of Mesoamerica. Scholars have seen echoes of Olmec supernatural in the subsequent religions and mythologies of nearly all later pre-Columbian era cultures.

Monument 19, from La Venta (1200–400 BC), the earliest known representation of a feathered serpent in Mesoamerica.
Courtesy George & Audrey DeLange, used with permission.

The first Mesoamerican civilization, the Olmecs, developed on present-day Mexico southern Gulf Coast in the centuries before 1200 BCE. The culture lasted until roughly 400 BCE, at which time their center of La Venta lay abandoned. The Olmec culture is often considered a "mother culture" to later Mesoamerican cultures.

There is no surviving direct account of the Olmec's religious beliefs, unlike the Mayan Popol Vuh, or the Aztecs with their many codices and conquistador accounts. Archaeologists, therefore, have had to rely on other techniques to reconstruct Olmec beliefs, most prominently:[1]

  • Typological analysis of Olmec iconography and art.
  • Comparison to later, better documented pre-Columbian cultures.
  • Comparison to modern-day cultures of the indigenous peoples of the Americas.

The latter two techniques assume that there is a continuity extending from Olmec times through later Mesoamerican cultures to the present day. This assumption is called the Continuity Hypothesis. Using these techniques, researchers have discerned several separate deities or supernaturals embodying the characteristics of various animals.

Rulers, priests, and shamans edit

Olmec religious activities were performed by a combination of rulers, full-time priests, and shamans. The rulers seem to have been the most important religious figures, with their links to the Olmec deities or supernaturals providing legitimacy for their rule.[2] There is also considerable evidence for shamans in the Olmec archaeological record, particularly in the so-called "transformation figures".[3]

 
Figure from Las Limas Monument 1

Olmec supernaturals edit

Specifics concerning Olmec religion are a matter of some conjecture. Early researchers found religious beliefs to be centered upon a jaguar god.[4] This view was challenged in the 1970s by Peter David Joralemon, whose Ph. D. paper and subsequent article posited what are now considered to be 8 different supernaturals.[5] Over time Joralemon's viewpoint has become the predominant exposition of the Olmec pantheon. The study of Olmec religion, however, is still in its infancy and any list of Olmec supernaturals or deities can be neither definitive nor comprehensive.[6]

The names and identities of these supernaturals are only provisional and the details concerning many of them remain poorly known.[7] The confusion stems in part because the supernaturals are defined as a cluster of iconographic mafias.[8] Any given motif may appear in multiple supernaturals. For example, "flame eyebrows" are seen at times within representations of both the Olmec Dragon and the Bird Monster, and the cleft head is seen on all five supernaturals that appear on Las Limas Monument 1. To add to the confusion, Joralemon suggested that many of these gods had multiple aspects – for example, Joralemon had identified a God I-A through a God I-F.[9]

Despite the use of the term "god", none of these deities and supernaturals show any sexual characteristics which would indicate gender.[10]

Olmec Dragon (God I) edit

Also known as the Earth Monster, the Olmec Dragon has flame eyebrows, a bulbous nose, and bifurcated tongue.[11] When viewed from the front, the Olmec Dragon has trough-shaped eyes; when viewed in profile, the eyes are L-shaped.[12] Fangs are prominent, often rendered as an upside-down U-shaped bracket.[13] With the Bird Monster, the Olmec Dragon is one of the most commonly depicted supernaturals.[14]

Miller & Taube differentiate a Personified Earth Cave, equating it with Joralmon's God I-B.[15]

 
Monument 52 from San Lorenzo Tenochtitlán. Some researchers identify this figure as the were-jaguar while others state that it instead represents the Rain Deity. The long deep groove carved into the back of this basalt sculpture indicates it was part of the drainage system.

Maize deity (God II) edit

Another probable supernatural is identified by the plants sprouting from its cleft head. A carved celt from Veracruz shows a representation of God II, or the Maize God, growing corn from his cleft, and also shows this god with the snarling face associated with the jaguar.[16] This deity is rarely shown with a full body.[17]

Rain Spirit and Were-jaguar (God III) edit

There is considerable disagreement between researchers whether the Rain Spirit and were-jaguar are one distinct or two separate supernaturals. Christopher Pool,[18] Anatole Pohorilenko, and Miller & Taube each equate the were-jaguar with the Rain Deity, while Joralemon finds them to be two separate supernaturals.[19] Joralemon states that the Olmec rain spirit "is based on were-jaguar features", but is not the were-jaguar per se.[20] More recent scholarship by Carolyn Tate questions the existence of "were-jaguar" (a fantastical concept coined soon after the release of the WereWolf in London) imagery and instead argues for the centrality of embryo-corn kernel iconography within Olmec iconography.[21]

In a later paper, Taube proposed that the Rain Spirit was instead the seed phase version of the Maize God.[22]

Banded-eye God (God IV) edit

This enigmatic deity is named for the narrow band that runs along the side of its face through its almond-shaped eye with its round iris. Like many other supernaturals, the Banded-eye God has a cleft head and a downturned mouth. Unlike others, the Banded-eye God is only known from its profile - these renditions are generally concentrated on bowls from the Valley of Mexico (as shown on left),[23] although the Banded-eye God is one of the five supernaturals shown on Las Limas Monument 1 from the Olmec heartland.

Rather than a distinct supernatural in its own right, however, Taube finds God IV to be yet another aspect of the Maize God.[24]

Feathered Serpent (God V) edit

The feathered (or plumed) serpent depicted throughout Mesoamerica first appears in Olmec times, although there is some disagreement concerning its importance to the Olmec.[25] The Feathered Serpent appears on La Venta Stele 19 (above) and within a Juxtlahuaca cave painting (see this Commons photo), locations hundreds of miles apart.

Fish or Shark Monster (God VI) edit

Most often recognized by its shark tooth, the head of the monster also features a crescent-shaped eye, and a small lower jaw.[26] When depicted in its full-body form, such as on San Lorenzo Monument 58 or on the Young Lord figurine, the anthropomorphic Fish Monster also displays crossed bands, a dorsal fin, a split tail.[27] This supernatural's profile is shown on the left leg of Las Limas Monument 1 (see Commons drawing).

Continuity hypothesis edit

Marshall Howard Saville first suggested in 1929 that the Olmec deities were forerunners of later Mesoamerican gods, linking were-jaguar votive axes with the Aztec god Tezcatlipoca.[28] This proposal was amplified by Miguel Covarrubias in his 1957 work Indian Art of Mexico and Central America where he famously drew a family tree showing 19 later Mesoamerican rain deities as descendants of a "jaguar masked" deity portrayed on a votive axe.[29] The continuity hypothesis has since been generally accepted by scholars,[30] although the extent of Olmec influence on later cultures is still debated.

Notes edit

  1. ^ Pool, p. 98.
  2. ^ Diehl, p. 106. See also J. E. Clark, , p. 343, who says "much of the art of La Venta appears to have been dedicated to rulers who dressed as gods, or to the gods themselves".
  3. ^ Diehl, p. 106.
  4. ^ Joralemon, p. 31.
  5. ^ Joralemon originally defined Gods I through X. However, over time, Joralemon proposed that Gods V, IX, and X were not separate deities (e.g. God IX was to be merged with God II) and has since split the earlier God IV into a rain supernatural and the were-jaguar. See Joralemon (1996) and Coe (1989), pp. 75-76.
  6. ^ Miller & Taube, p. 126.
  7. ^ See Taube (2004), p. 29.
  8. ^ See Joralemon (1996), p. 54.
  9. ^ Joralemon (1971).
  10. ^ Miller & Taube, p. 126.
  11. ^ Pool, p. 117. Joralemon (1996), p. 54.
  12. ^ Pool, p. 117.
  13. ^ Joralemon (1996), p. 54.
  14. ^ Miller & Taube, p. 126.
  15. ^ Miller & Taube, p. 126.
  16. ^ Coe (1972), p. 3.
  17. ^ Miller & Taube, p. 126.
  18. ^ Pool, p. 117, who states: "The were-jaguar is God IV, a god of rain and storms".
  19. ^ Joralemon, pp. 56-58.
  20. ^ Joralemon, pp. 56.
  21. ^ Tate, Carolyn. Reconsidering Olmec Visual Culture. Austin: the University of Texas, 2012.
  22. ^ Taube (2004), p. 30.
  23. ^ Joralemon (1996), p. 56.
  24. ^ Taube (2004), p. 30.
  25. ^ Joralemon (1996), p. 58, says "it was a divinity of considerable significance". However, in counterpoint, Diehl, p. 104, says that the Feathered Serpent's "rarity suggests that it was a minor member of the Olmec pantheon".
  26. ^ Arnold, p. 10.
  27. ^ Pool, p. 102.
  28. ^ Coe (1989), p. 71, who in turn cites Matthew Stirling.
  29. ^ Covarrubias, p. 62.
  30. ^ Miller & Taube (p. 126) say: ". . . some [of these deities] were to survive, albeit in a changed form, for 2500 years until the Spanish Conquest".

References edit

  • Arnold, III, Philip J. (2005) "The Shark-Monster in Olmec Iconography", in Mesoamerican Voices, 2005, v. 2.
  • Bierhorst, John (1990) The Mythology of Mexico and Central America, William Morrow, ISBN 0-688-11280-3.
  • Coe, Michael D. (1972) "Olmec Jaguars and Olmec Kings" in E.P. Benson (ed), The Cult of the Feline. Washington D.C.: Dumbarton Oaks, pp. 1–12.
  • Coe, Michael D. (1989) "The Olmec heartland: evolution of ideology" in Robert J. Sharer and David C. Grove, (ed), Regional Perspectives on the Olmec. Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0-521-36332-7, pp. 68–82.
  • Coe, Michael D.; Rex Koontz (2002). Mexico: from the Olmecs to the Aztecs (5th edition, revised and enlarged ed.). London and New York: Thames & Hudson. ISBN 0-500-28346-X. OCLC 50131575., pp. 64, 75-76.
  • Covarrubias, Miguel (1957) Indian Art of Mexico and Central America, New York: Alfred A. Knopf.
  • Diehl, Richard (2004). The Olmecs: America's First Civilization. Ancient peoples and places series. London: Thames & Hudson. ISBN 0-500-02119-8. OCLC 56746987.
  • Joralemon, Peter David (1996) "In Search of the Olmec Cosmos: Reconstructing the World View of Mexico's First Civilization". In E. P. Benson and B. de la Fuente (eds.), Olmec Art of Ancient Mexico. Washington, D.C.: National Gallery of Art: 51-60. ISBN 0-89468-250-4.
  • Luckert, Karl W. (1976) Olmec Religion: A Key to Middle America and Beyond. University of Oklahoma Press, Norman, Oklahoma. ISBN 0-8061-1298-0.
  • Miller, Mary; Karl Taube (1993). The Gods and Symbols of Ancient Mexico and the Maya: An Illustrated Dictionary of Mesoamerican Religion. London: Thames & Hudson. ISBN 0-500-05068-6. OCLC 27667317.
  • Pohorilenko, Anatole (1996) "Portable Carvings in the Olmec Style", in E. P. Benson and B. de la Fuente (eds.), Olmec Art of Ancient Mexico. Washington, D.C.: National Gallery of Art: 119-131. ISBN 0-89468-250-4.
  • Pool, Christopher A. (2007). Olmec Archaeology and Early Mesoamerica. Cambridge World Archaeology. Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-78882-3. OCLC 68965709.
  • Taube, Karl (2004). (PDF). Pre-Columbian Art at Dumbarton Oaks, No. 2. Washington, DC: Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection; Trustees of Harvard University. ISBN 0-88402-275-7. OCLC 56096117. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2008-02-27.

Further reading edit

  • Joralemon, Peter David (1971) A study of Olmec iconography, Dumbarton Oaks.
  • Joralemon, Peter David (1976) Olmec Dragon: a study in pre-Columbian iconography, UCLA Latin American Studies Series, v 31, pp. 27–71.

olmec, religion, religion, olmec, people, significantly, influenced, social, development, mythological, world, view, mesoamerica, scholars, have, seen, echoes, olmec, supernatural, subsequent, religions, mythologies, nearly, later, columbian, cultures, monumen. The religion of the Olmec people significantly influenced the social development and mythological world view of Mesoamerica Scholars have seen echoes of Olmec supernatural in the subsequent religions and mythologies of nearly all later pre Columbian era cultures Monument 19 from La Venta 1200 400 BC the earliest known representation of a feathered serpent in Mesoamerica Courtesy George amp Audrey DeLange used with permission The first Mesoamerican civilization the Olmecs developed on present day Mexico southern Gulf Coast in the centuries before 1200 BCE The culture lasted until roughly 400 BCE at which time their center of La Venta lay abandoned The Olmec culture is often considered a mother culture to later Mesoamerican cultures There is no surviving direct account of the Olmec s religious beliefs unlike the Mayan Popol Vuh or the Aztecs with their many codices and conquistador accounts Archaeologists therefore have had to rely on other techniques to reconstruct Olmec beliefs most prominently 1 Typological analysis of Olmec iconography and art Comparison to later better documented pre Columbian cultures Comparison to modern day cultures of the indigenous peoples of the Americas The latter two techniques assume that there is a continuity extending from Olmec times through later Mesoamerican cultures to the present day This assumption is called the Continuity Hypothesis Using these techniques researchers have discerned several separate deities or supernaturals embodying the characteristics of various animals Contents 1 Rulers priests and shamans 2 Olmec supernaturals 2 1 Olmec Dragon God I 2 2 Maize deity God II 2 3 Rain Spirit and Were jaguar God III 2 4 Banded eye God God IV 2 5 Feathered Serpent God V 2 6 Fish or Shark Monster God VI 3 Continuity hypothesis 4 Notes 5 References 6 Further readingRulers priests and shamans editOlmec religious activities were performed by a combination of rulers full time priests and shamans The rulers seem to have been the most important religious figures with their links to the Olmec deities or supernaturals providing legitimacy for their rule 2 There is also considerable evidence for shamans in the Olmec archaeological record particularly in the so called transformation figures 3 nbsp Figure from Las Limas Monument 1Olmec supernaturals editSpecifics concerning Olmec religion are a matter of some conjecture Early researchers found religious beliefs to be centered upon a jaguar god 4 This view was challenged in the 1970s by Peter David Joralemon whose Ph D paper and subsequent article posited what are now considered to be 8 different supernaturals 5 Over time Joralemon s viewpoint has become the predominant exposition of the Olmec pantheon The study of Olmec religion however is still in its infancy and any list of Olmec supernaturals or deities can be neither definitive nor comprehensive 6 The names and identities of these supernaturals are only provisional and the details concerning many of them remain poorly known 7 The confusion stems in part because the supernaturals are defined as a cluster of iconographic mafias 8 Any given motif may appear in multiple supernaturals For example flame eyebrows are seen at times within representations of both the Olmec Dragon and the Bird Monster and the cleft head is seen on all five supernaturals that appear on Las Limas Monument 1 To add to the confusion Joralemon suggested that many of these gods had multiple aspects for example Joralemon had identified a God I A through a God I F 9 Despite the use of the term god none of these deities and supernaturals show any sexual characteristics which would indicate gender 10 Olmec Dragon God I edit Also known as the Earth Monster the Olmec Dragon has flame eyebrows a bulbous nose and bifurcated tongue 11 When viewed from the front the Olmec Dragon has trough shaped eyes when viewed in profile the eyes are L shaped 12 Fangs are prominent often rendered as an upside down U shaped bracket 13 With the Bird Monster the Olmec Dragon is one of the most commonly depicted supernaturals 14 Miller amp Taube differentiate a Personified Earth Cave equating it with Joralmon s God I B 15 nbsp Monument 52 from San Lorenzo Tenochtitlan Some researchers identify this figure as the were jaguar while others state that it instead represents the Rain Deity The long deep groove carved into the back of this basalt sculpture indicates it was part of the drainage system Maize deity God II edit Another probable supernatural is identified by the plants sprouting from its cleft head A carved celt from Veracruz shows a representation of God II or the Maize God growing corn from his cleft and also shows this god with the snarling face associated with the jaguar 16 This deity is rarely shown with a full body 17 Rain Spirit and Were jaguar God III edit Main article Were jaguar There is considerable disagreement between researchers whether the Rain Spirit and were jaguar are one distinct or two separate supernaturals Christopher Pool 18 Anatole Pohorilenko and Miller amp Taube each equate the were jaguar with the Rain Deity while Joralemon finds them to be two separate supernaturals 19 Joralemon states that the Olmec rain spirit is based on were jaguar features but is not the were jaguar per se 20 More recent scholarship by Carolyn Tate questions the existence of were jaguar a fantastical concept coined soon after the release of the WereWolf in London imagery and instead argues for the centrality of embryo corn kernel iconography within Olmec iconography 21 In a later paper Taube proposed that the Rain Spirit was instead the seed phase version of the Maize God 22 Banded eye God God IV edit This enigmatic deity is named for the narrow band that runs along the side of its face through its almond shaped eye with its round iris Like many other supernaturals the Banded eye God has a cleft head and a downturned mouth Unlike others the Banded eye God is only known from its profile these renditions are generally concentrated on bowls from the Valley of Mexico as shown on left 23 although the Banded eye God is one of the five supernaturals shown on Las Limas Monument 1 from the Olmec heartland Rather than a distinct supernatural in its own right however Taube finds God IV to be yet another aspect of the Maize God 24 Feathered Serpent God V edit Main article Feathered Serpent The feathered or plumed serpent depicted throughout Mesoamerica first appears in Olmec times although there is some disagreement concerning its importance to the Olmec 25 The Feathered Serpent appears on La Venta Stele 19 above and within a Juxtlahuaca cave painting see this Commons photo locations hundreds of miles apart Fish or Shark Monster God VI edit Most often recognized by its shark tooth the head of the monster also features a crescent shaped eye and a small lower jaw 26 When depicted in its full body form such as on San Lorenzo Monument 58 or on the Young Lord figurine the anthropomorphic Fish Monster also displays crossed bands a dorsal fin a split tail 27 This supernatural s profile is shown on the left leg of Las Limas Monument 1 see Commons drawing Continuity hypothesis editMain article Olmec influences on Mesoamerican cultures Marshall Howard Saville first suggested in 1929 that the Olmec deities were forerunners of later Mesoamerican gods linking were jaguar votive axes with the Aztec god Tezcatlipoca 28 This proposal was amplified by Miguel Covarrubias in his 1957 work Indian Art of Mexico and Central America where he famously drew a family tree showing 19 later Mesoamerican rain deities as descendants of a jaguar masked deity portrayed on a votive axe 29 The continuity hypothesis has since been generally accepted by scholars 30 although the extent of Olmec influence on later cultures is still debated Notes edit Pool p 98 Diehl p 106 See also J E Clark p 343 who says much of the art of La Venta appears to have been dedicated to rulers who dressed as gods or to the gods themselves Diehl p 106 Joralemon p 31 Joralemon originally defined Gods I through X However over time Joralemon proposed that Gods V IX and X were not separate deities e g God IX was to be merged with God II and has since split the earlier God IV into a rain supernatural and the were jaguar See Joralemon 1996 and Coe 1989 pp 75 76 Miller amp Taube p 126 See Taube 2004 p 29 See Joralemon 1996 p 54 Joralemon 1971 Miller amp Taube p 126 Pool p 117 Joralemon 1996 p 54 Pool p 117 Joralemon 1996 p 54 Miller amp Taube p 126 Miller amp Taube p 126 Coe 1972 p 3 Miller amp Taube p 126 Pool p 117 who states The were jaguar is God IV a god of rain and storms Joralemon pp 56 58 Joralemon pp 56 Tate Carolyn Reconsidering Olmec Visual Culture Austin the University of Texas 2012 Taube 2004 p 30 Joralemon 1996 p 56 Taube 2004 p 30 Joralemon 1996 p 58 says it was a divinity of considerable significance However in counterpoint Diehl p 104 says that the Feathered Serpent s rarity suggests that it was a minor member of the Olmec pantheon Arnold p 10 Pool p 102 Coe 1989 p 71 who in turn cites Matthew Stirling Covarrubias p 62 Miller amp Taube p 126 say some of these deities were to survive albeit in a changed form for 2500 years until the Spanish Conquest References editArnold III Philip J 2005 The Shark Monster in Olmec Iconography in Mesoamerican Voices 2005 v 2 Bierhorst John 1990 The Mythology of Mexico and Central America William Morrow ISBN 0 688 11280 3 Coe Michael D 1972 Olmec Jaguars and Olmec Kings in E P Benson ed The Cult of the Feline Washington D C Dumbarton Oaks pp 1 12 Coe Michael D 1989 The Olmec heartland evolution of ideology in Robert J Sharer and David C Grove ed Regional Perspectives on the Olmec Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 36332 7 pp 68 82 Coe Michael D Rex Koontz 2002 Mexico from the Olmecs to the Aztecs 5th edition revised and enlarged ed London and New York Thames amp Hudson ISBN 0 500 28346 X OCLC 50131575 pp 64 75 76 Covarrubias Miguel 1957 Indian Art of Mexico and Central America New York Alfred A Knopf Diehl Richard 2004 The Olmecs America s First Civilization Ancient peoples and places series London Thames amp Hudson ISBN 0 500 02119 8 OCLC 56746987 Joralemon Peter David 1996 In Search of the Olmec Cosmos Reconstructing the World View of Mexico s First Civilization In E P Benson and B de la Fuente eds Olmec Art of Ancient Mexico Washington D C National Gallery of Art 51 60 ISBN 0 89468 250 4 Luckert Karl W 1976 Olmec Religion A Key to Middle America and Beyond University of Oklahoma Press Norman Oklahoma ISBN 0 8061 1298 0 Miller Mary Karl Taube 1993 The Gods and Symbols of Ancient Mexico and the Maya An Illustrated Dictionary of Mesoamerican Religion London Thames amp Hudson ISBN 0 500 05068 6 OCLC 27667317 Pohorilenko Anatole 1996 Portable Carvings in the Olmec Style in E P Benson and B de la Fuente eds Olmec Art of Ancient Mexico Washington D C National Gallery of Art 119 131 ISBN 0 89468 250 4 Pool Christopher A 2007 Olmec Archaeology and Early Mesoamerica Cambridge World Archaeology Cambridge and New York Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 78882 3 OCLC 68965709 Taube Karl 2004 Olmec Art at Dumbarton Oaks PDF Pre Columbian Art at Dumbarton Oaks No 2 Washington DC Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection Trustees of Harvard University ISBN 0 88402 275 7 OCLC 56096117 Archived from the original PDF on 2008 02 27 Further reading editJoralemon Peter David 1971 A study of Olmec iconography Dumbarton Oaks Joralemon Peter David 1976 Olmec Dragon a study in pre Columbian iconography UCLA Latin American Studies Series v 31 pp 27 71 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Olmec religion amp oldid 1173877506, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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