![]() Script itself could also be written out in a multitude of ways. These are symbols that look visually like Mayan hieroglyphs but do not fall into any of the one thousand plus characters regularly used by the Maya and were not signs the same way standard glyphs are. Though many vessels use glyphs to identify their subjects, many more such as the above Bowers vessel are decorated with pseudo-glyphs. Pottery vessels seem to further confirm that it was the elite class, not artisans who were responsible for almost all writing. Given the small pool of individuals who could compose hieroglyphics and the amount of time that went into carving the large characters that appear on stellae, evidence indicates that it was scribes who likely drew out outlines of the hieroglyphs in advance. It is almost certainly the case that most peasants in Maya society were illiterate, but more so even than that it is highly likely that many of the stone carvers and potters could not read or write. Vessel with Waterbird and Fish, Late Classic Period (700-900)īowers Museum Foundation Acquisition Fund Purchase To make it more complex, often time the two types of hieroglyphics (logograms and syllabograms) would be paired in non-standardized ways. ![]() The equivalent in English would be if we had characters for syllables rather than individual letters whose combinations can make a variety of sounds. However, the same word could also be formed from phonetic hieroglyphics or syllabograms which when read together would sound out the word. Most common nouns had logograms for example, the logogram for jaguar was a disembodied and slightly abstracted jaguar head. Due to the complexity of the hieroglyphics used by the Maya and the variable ways something might be written, it required grueling coursework to be able to learn how to properly express ideas. Both men and women were included in this group, and there was also a chief scribe or ak k’u hun responsible not only for recordkeeping but for many of the important events that might be subject to being recorded such as marriages and ceremonies. What we do know from signatures appearing on texts is that in Mayan culture there was an elite class of scribes-usually formed from aristocracy and in many cases even the king-who were the only individuals with the ability to write. Reading and writing within the Mayan context is an interesting subject, and certain aspects of it are still debated. ![]() Temple of the Inscriptions, Palenque, Mexico
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