The Mayan Civilization: Science, Astronomy, and Mysterious Collapse — Fexingo History
For centuries, the Maya shaped their teeth as a mark of beauty, status, and spiritual devotion. In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the practice of dental modification among the Classic Maya elite. They discuss the materials used—jadeite, hematite, turquoise, pyrite—and the techniques of filing and inlaying that transformed ordinary teeth into intricate works of art. The conversation ranges from the symbolism of the T-shaped incisor (a reference to the wind god K'awiil and the maize god) to the dental remains found at burials in Copán, Palenque, and Tikal. They examine how tooth mutilation reflected social hierarchy, gender roles, and the Maya concept of beauty as a spiritual act. Lucas explains the possible connection between dental filing and the haab calendar, and why some teeth were filed with cross-hatch patterns that mirror woven textiles. Luna asks about the pain, the risk of infection, and what we know from skeletal evidence. They also touch on early Spanish accounts that recorded the practice with horror, and how modern bioarchaeology has revealed that dental modification likely began as early as the Preclassic period. The episode ends with the puzzling decline of the practice after the Spanish conquest, and what it reveals about Maya identity and resilience. No previous episode of this show has covered dental modification, making this a fresh angle on Maya culture and daily life. #Maya #DentalModification #Mesoamerica #Bioarchaeology #Copán #Palenque #Tikal #Kawiil #Haab #Jadeite #Pyrite #Turquoise #ClassicMaya #Ritual #Beauty #Archaeology #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]
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