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Excavations at Cerro Tilcajete: A Monte Albán II Administrative Center in the Valley of Oaxaca
by Christina Elson
University of Michigan Press, 2007 eISBN: 978-1-951519-84-1 | Paper: 978-0-915703-66-1 Library of Congress Classification F1219.8.Z37E57 2007 Dewey Decimal Classification 972.7401
ABOUT THIS BOOK | TOC | REQUEST ACCESSIBLE FILE
ABOUT THIS BOOK
This volume, part of a series on the prehistory and human ecology of the Valley of Oaxaca, Mexico, focuses on Cerro Tilcajete, a secondary administrative center below Monte Albán, the capital of the prehispanic Zapotec state. TABLE OF CONTENTS
Contents List of Tables, 000 List of Illustrations, 000 Introduction to Volume 14,000 Acknowledgments, 000 CHAPTER 1. INTRODUCTION TO ELITES AT SECONDARY CENTERS IN THE ZAPOTEC STATE An Overview of Cerro Tilcajete and the Early Zapotec State Anthropological Approaches to Defining Zapotec Elites Zapotec Elites As Members of Socioeconomic Groups Zapotec Elites as Administrators Zapotec Elites, Power Sharing, and Conflict Summary CHAPTER 2. ELITE BEHAVIOR IN THE EARLY ZAPOTEC STATE Zapotec Polities in the Sixteenth Century Zapotec Nobles Zapotec Policy Makers Zapotec Priests Zapotec Warriors Zapotec Merchants Summary CHAPTER 3. THE OAXACA VALLEY IN THE TERMINAL FORMATIVE PERIOD (100 B.C.-A.D. 200) Archaeological Indicators of Elite Behavior The Regional Picture The Settlement Hierarchy I-Shaped Ballcourts Pottery Production Network Monte Alb¿n The North Platform Governmental Palace The Main Plaza The Mound of the Carved Stone The Northeast Zone Zone East of Building P The El Pitahayo Mounds Mounds and Terraces on the North Slope Summary San Jos¿ Mogote Dainz¿ Regions Outside the Valley The Cuicatl¿n Ca¿ada Ejutla Summary CHAPTER 4. CERRO TILCAJETE IN MONTE ALBçN II Surface Data Site Layout and Occupational History Surface Ceramics as Possible Clues to Status Other Materials from the Surface Summary Excavation Data Temples and Civic-Ceremonial Buildings Structure 2 Mound E Residential Excavations Structure 1 Structure 3 Structure 4 Pottery Types Believed to Reflect Status Ceramic Types and Forms Found in Residences Ceramic Types and Forms Found in Middens Subsistence Activities Household Ritual Figurines and Urns Incense Burners Mortuary Ritual Obsidian Shell Summary CHAPTER 5. CERRO TILCAJETE AND THE DECLINE OF THE ZAPOTEC STATE Monte Alb¿n The Oaxaca Valley in the Classic Period The Chronology of the Late Classic and Epiclassic Jalieza Cerro Tilcajete The Adoratory and Mound F at Cerro Tilcajete The North Mound Complex Structure 5 Ceramics Summary CHAPTER 6. CONCLUSIONS Appendix A: Ceramic Terms, Analysis, and Illustrations Appendix B: Inventory of Human Remains From Surface Collections and Features in Structures, by William Duncan, 000 Appendix C: The Shell Assemblage from Cerro Tilcajete, by Gary M. Feinman and Linda M. Nicholas, 000 Appendix D: Resumen en Espa¿ol References Cited Tables 3.1 Settlement hierarchy and population ranges for Monte Alb¿n Late I and Monte Alb¿n II sites. 4.1 Mounds and plaza dimensions at Cerro Tilcajete. 4.2 Surface data by collection unit. 4.3 Surface data by collection unit (non-vessels). 4.4 Surface ceramic categories by zone. 4.5 Ceramics coded in Test Pit 1, Mound E. 4.6 Descriptive data from Structure 4 burials. 4.7 Ceramics in residential structures by paste, diagnostic form, and type. 4.8 Ceramics in residential structures by form. 4.9 Minimum number of vessels in Feature 1, Structure 3. 4.10 Minimum number of vessels in Feature 6, Structure 4. 4.11 Minimum number of vessels in Feature 2, Structure 4. 4.12 Ceramics by weight and number in Feature 2, Structure 4. 4.13 Figurines in residential structures. 4.14 Obsidian in Structures 1-4. 5.1 Paste and weight of sherds in Feature 1, Mound E. 5.2 Diagnostic sherds in Feature 1, Mound E by type. A.1 Data on G.12 motifs and rim forms from residential structures. A.2 Diagnostic elements of G.29 vessels in residential structures. A.3 Diagnostic aspects of orange-paste ceramics. A.4 Bowl and vase rim forms coded for cream-paste vessels. A.5 Motifs on C.11 and C.12 vessels. A.6 The frequency of cream paste types of all decorated cream vessels coded. A.7 Shell found in surface collections. A.8 Shell in excavations by excavation area and genus. A.9 Shell in excavations by excavation area and ornament class. A.10 Shell in excavations by object and genus. A.11 Shell in excavations by ornament type and genus. Illustrations Frontpiece. Monte Alb¿n as viewed from Cerro Tilcajete's Main Plaza. 1.1 Mexico, showing the location of the Oaxaca Valley. 1.2 The Oaxaca Valley showing places mentioned in the text. 1.3 Cerro Tilcajete from an adjoining hilltop to the south. 2.1 Formative Period depiction of Cociyo. 2.2 Plan of Yagul's ceremonial core. 3.1 Plan of Cerro Tilcajete showing mound groups and the ceremonial core. 3.2 The Monte Alb¿n II Settlement Hierarchy in the Oaxaca Valley. 3.3 The I-shaped ballcourt at Monte Alb¿n. 3.4 Cream paste bowl with incised lightning designs and bulbous supports. 3.5 Orange paste bowl with red-painted designs found at Cerro Tilcajete. 3.6 Plan of Monte Alb¿n's ceremonial core. 3.7 Plan of the Pitahayo mound group at Monte Alb¿n. 3.8 A detailed view of the North Mound Platform at Monte Alb¿n. 3.9 Three ceramic statues from Tomb 113, a Monte Alb¿n II tomb at Monte Alb¿n. 3.10 An urn from the antechamber of Tomb 104 at Monte Alb¿n. 3.11 Plan of Tomb 95 and 96 in the Pitahayo mound group. 3.12 Plan of Tomb 77 and 78 in the Pitahayo mound group. 3.13 Map of San Jos¿ Mogote. 3.14 Map of Dainz¿. 4.1 The relationship between El Palenque, Cerro Tilcajete, and Jalieza. 4.2 Plan of Cerro Tilcajete showing surface collection and terraces. 4.3 Map showing the frequency of cream paste ceramics across the surface of Cerro Tilcajete. 4.4 Plan of Structure 2, Mound B. 4.5 Profile of the east retaining wall of Mound B. 4.6 Profile of the west plaza-facing wall of Mound B. 4.7 Plan of Monte Alb¿n II structures on Mound E. 4.8 Plan of Structure 1, Mound A. 4.9 Plan of the south wall of Structure 1. 4.10 Photo of the south wall of Structure 1 showing plastered adobes. 4.11 Photo of the southeast corner of Structure 1 showing plastered adobes. 4.12 Modeled gray paste ceramic ornament showing a deceased individual. 4.13 Plan of Structure 3, Area C. 4.14 North profile of Structure 3, Area C. 4.15 West profile of Structure 3, Area C. 4.16 West profile of Feature 1, Structure 3, also east profile of Structure 3. 4.17 Plan of Feature 1, Structure 3, Area C. 4.18 Plan of Structure 4. 4.19 Photo of Burial 2, Structure 4. 4.20 Gray paste turkey rattle, Burial 1, Structure 4. 4.21 Orange paste figurine of a person with an elaborate headdress. 4.22 Orange paste whistle of a man with an elaborate headdress and walking stick. 4.23 Photo of Burial 4, Structure 4. 4.24 Gray paste figure, Burial 4, Structure 4. 4.25 Caf¿ paste bowl with an incised step-fret motif, Burial 4, Structure 4. 4.26 Photo of Feature 2, Structure 4, a storage room. 4.27 Photo of Feature 4, Structure 4, a hearth. 4.28 Fragments from stuccoed and painted vessels. 4.29 Rim forms for vases with lids. 4.30 Rim forms for serving wares. 4.31 Rim forms for utilitarian wares. 4.32 Figurines in residential excavations. 4.33 Incense burner fragments in residential structures. 5.1 The Tomb 105 residence at Monte Alb¿n. 5.2 The Oaxaca Valley showing major Classic Epiclassic sites. 5.3 Photo of the Early Classic Jalieza site 5.4 Photo of the Late Classic-Epiclassic Jalieza site. 5.5 The Plaza I Adoratory platform. 5.6 Bifacially flaked chert knife found on the Adoratory, Plaza I. 5.7 The post A.D. 500 layout of Plaza I. 5.8 Photo of Structure 5, Mound E. 5.9 Plan of Structure 5, Mound E. 5.10 The tomb in Mound F, Plaza I. 5.11 Stylized G.35 vessels forms found in Feature 1, Mound E. A.1 G.12 bowl bases. A.2 G.12 rim decoration. A.3 G.21 rim forms. A.4 G.12 bowl base motifs. A.5 G.12 rim motifs A.6 G.15, G.16, G.25, and G.26 vessels forms. A.7 G.34 vessels. A.8 G.29 vessels. A.9 A.9 vessels. A.10 A.11 vessels. A.11 K.17 vessels with incised motifs. A.12 Incised motifs on K.17, C.11, and C.12 vessels. A.13 Photo of C.11 sherds. A.14 C.7 and C.11 vessels A.15 C.12 and C.20 vessels. An Introduction to Volume 14 of the Series by Kent V. Flannery and Joyce Marcus This volume; the fourteenth in our series of monographs on the prehistory and human ecology of the Valley of Oaxaca; deals with Cerro Tilcajete, a secondary administrative center below Monte Alb¿n, the capital of the prehispanic Zapotec state. To put Christina Elson's excavations at this secondary center into perspective, let us review what we have recently learned about Monte Alb¿n and its relationships with other sites in the Valley of Oaxaca. To be sure, our knowledge abof Monte Alb¿n's relations with areas outside the Valley of Oaxaca has also expanded during the last decade, and interested readers will want to consult those contributions as well (e.g., Balkansky 1998, 2002; Feinman and Nicholas 1990, 1993; Spencer 1998, 2006; Spencer and Redmond 1997, 2001a). The Valley of Oaxaca has been the scene of extensive archaeological fieldwork throughout the twentieth century and into the twenty-first. Impressive early excavations were conducted at the city of Monte Alb¿n, situated on the top of a mountain 400 meters above the valley floor (e.g., Caso 1932, 1933, 1935, 1938, 1942; Bernal 1946, 1949; Acosta 1958-1959, 1965, 1974). The excavation team of Alfonso Caso, Ignacio Bernal, and Jorge Acosta worked there throughout the 1930s and 1940s, expanding on the pioneering work of Leopoldo Batres (1902) at the beginning of the twentieth century. These excavations laid the foundation for all the work that has followed. We owe a major debt to Caso, Bernal, and Acosta (1967) because their deep stratigraphic excavations established a well-defined ceramic chronology of five periods; Monte Alb¿n I, II, IIIa, IIIb/IV, and V; which allowed subsequent generations of archaeologists to focus on questions of social and political change. Three of the major questions were; How did Monte Alb¿n gain control over the Valley of Oaxaca? When did each part of the Valley of Oaxaca come under the sway of the capital? Did Monte Alb¿n establish new centers, or take over extant centers, to administer the various regions of the valley? Current evidence suggests that Monte Alb¿n was founded mainly by the former inhabitants of San Jos¿ Mogote and its satellite communities in the northern (Etla) subvalley (Marcus and Flannery 1996). It is no surprise, therefore, that when it came time for Monte Alb¿n to establish a regional administrative center for the Etla subvalley during Monte Alb¿n II, it chose to put that center atop the earlier site of San Jos¿ Mogote (Flannery and Marcus 1983:111-13; Marcus 1999; Marcus and Flannery 2004). Comparable Period II centers are known from other subvalleys, but until recently their history was not known in the detail of San Jos¿ Mogote. The Oaxaca Settlement Pattern Project (Blanton et al. 1982; Kowalewski et al. 1989) identified San Mart¿n Tilcajete in the southern (Zimatl¿n-Ocotl¿n) subvalley as the second largest pre-Monte Alb¿n site in the valley (San Jos¿ Mogote being the largest). In 1993, Charles Spencer and Elsa Redmond began intensive surface pickup and mapping at three related archaeological sites near San Mart¿n Tilcajete; SMT-11a, SMT-11b, and SMT-23. In subsequent seasons, Spencer and Redmond excavated extensively at two of these three sites, SMT-11a ("El Mogote") and SMT-11b ("El Palenque") (Spencer and Redmond 2001b, 2003, 2004a, 2004b, 2004c, 2005, 2006). Christina Elson took on the task of excavating the third site, SMT-23 or "Cerro Tilcajete" (Elson 2003). Spencer and Redmond's excavations indicated that the El Mogote site (SMT-11a) had not participated in the founding of Monte Alb¿n, and instead had behaved like a political rival. Instead of losing population during Early Monte Alb¿n I (= Period Ia), as San Jos¿ Mogote had, El Mogote had doubled its size to 52.8 hectares, and created a ceremonial plaza oriented 25¡ east of true north, providing a defiant contrast to the true north-south orientation of Monte Alb¿n's main plaza. At the end of Period Ia, El Mogote's main plaza was abandoned in a conflagration, almost certainly as the result of a raid by Monte Alb¿n (see Beckmann et al. 2002; Redmond and Spencer 2006; Spencer in press a, in press b; Spencer and Redmond 2001b, 2003, 2004a-c, 2005, 2006). Spencer and Redmond's research has further documented the Tilcajete polity's resistance to Monte Alb¿n's attempt to take over its region. During Late Monte Alb¿n I (= Period Ic), El Mogote's population moved uphill to a more defensible location at the El Palenque site (SMT-11b) and built a new ceremonial plaza with the same orientation as El Mogote's. It also added defensive walls. Throughout Period Ic, Monte Alb¿n seems to have denied El Palenque full access to the luxury pottery and imported obsidian that it made available to other communities that were its allies. The rivalry between Monte Alb¿n and the Tilcajete polity continued for centuries until a final attack by Monte Alb¿n, during the first century B.C., left the palace and major temples at El Palenque destroyed by fire (Spencer 1999, 2003; Spencer and Redmond 2001b). This time, Tilcajete did not recover. Victorious Monte Alb¿n then turned to a mountain overlooking the burned El Palenque site and created an administrative center for the Ocotl¿n region. This new Monte Alb¿n II mountaintop administrative center, Cerro Tilcajete (SMT-23), is the subject of this Memoir. Elson excavated there for three seasons (1999- 2001) and showed that, in contrast to San Jos¿ Mogote (Marcus and Flannery 1996), Cerro Tilcajete was a newly created regional center rather than a reoccupied earlier site. One goal of Elson's excavations was to document the nature of Cerro Tilcajete's ties to Monte Alb¿n, especially the links between the elite families at the capital and those at Cerro Tilcajete. By Period II, the site of Monte Alb¿n had become the capital of a fully developed state and had begun to solidify its core region, investing in the administration of the area within one to two days' travel of the capital (Marcus 1992; Spencer 1998). Elson's work moves us away from our usual top-down, capital-centric Monte Alb¿n focus, and in so doing, gives us new insights into secondary administrative centers in a pristine state. For more than 100 years, archaeologists have speculated about Monte Alb¿n's impact on the rest of its valley (Bernal 1967, 1989; Bernal and Oliveros 1988; Marcus and Flannery 1996; Marcus 1983:113-15; Paddock 1966, 1983), and with this study some of their questions are answered. We can now see that Monte Alb¿n brought different subvalleys under its control gradually, using a variety of strategies. We believe that the future excavation of second-tier centers in other parts of the valley would continue to open up new avenues for understanding first-generation states. Bibliography Acosta, Jorge R. 1958-59 Exploraciones arqueol¿gicas en Monte Alb¿n, XVIII temporada. Revista Mexicana de Estudios Antropol¿gicos 15:7-50. 1965 Preclassic and classic architecture of Oaxaca. In Handbook of Middle American Indians, vol. 3, edited by Robert Wauchope and Gordon R. Willey, pp. 814-36. Austin: University of Texas Press. 1974 Informe de la XIV temporada de exploraciones en la zona arqueol¿gica de Monte Alb¿n, 1945-1946. Cultura y Sociedad 1(2):69-82. Balkansky, Andrew K. 1998 Urbanism and early state formation in the Huamelulpan Valley of southern Mexico. Latin American Antiquity 9:37-67. 2002 The Sola Valley and the Monte Alb¿n State: A study of Zapotec Imperial Expansion. Memoirs, no. 36. Museum of Anthropology, University of Michigan. Ann Arbor. Batres, Leopoldo 1902 Exploraciones en Monte Alb¿n. M¿xico: Inspecci¿n y Conservaci¿n de la Rep¿blica Mexicana, Calle Gante. Beckmann, Jennifer, Charles S. Spencer, and Elsa M. Redmond 2002 Early State Development at San Mart¿n Tilcajete. New York: American Museum of Natural History. http://anthro.amnh.org. Bernal, Ignacio 1946 La cer¿mica precl¿sica de Monte Alb¿n. Master's thesis, Escuela Nacional de Antropolog¿a e Historia, M¿xico. 1949 La cer¿mica de Monte Alb¿n IIIa. Doctoral dissertation, Universidad Nacional Aut¿noma de M¿xico, M¿xico. 1967 Excavaciones en Dainz¿. Bolet¿n del Instituto Nacional de Antropolog¿a e Historia 27, pp. 7-13. M¿xico. 1989 Official Guide. Oaxaca Valley. Instituto Nacional de Antropolog¿a e Historia, M¿xico: Salvat. Bernal, Ignacio, and Arturo Oliveros 1988 Excavaciones Arqueol¿gicas en Dainz¿, Oaxaca. M¿xico: Instituto Nacional de Antropolog¿a e Historia. Blanton, Richard E., Stephen A. Kowalewski, Gary M. Feinman, and Jill Appel 1982 Monte Alb¿n's Hinterland, Part I: Prehispanic Settlement Patterns of the Central and Southern Parts of the Valley of Oaxaca, Mexico. Memoirs, no. 15. Museum of Anthropology, University of Michigan. Ann Arbor. Caso, Alfonso 1932 Las exploraciones en Monte Alb¿n, temporada 1931-1932. Instituto Panamericano de Geograf¿a e Historia, Publicaci¿n 7. M¿xico. 1933 Las tumbas de Monte Alb¿n. Anales del Museo Nacional de Arqueolog¿a, Historia y Etnograf¿a, Tomo VIII, pp. 641-47. M¿xico. 1935 Las exploraciones en Monte Alb¿n, temporada 1934-1935. Instituto Panamericano de Geograf¿a e Historia, Publicaci¿n 18. M¿xico. 1938 Las exploraciones en Oaxaca, quinta y sexta temporadas, 1936-1937. Instituto Panamericano de Geograf¿a e Historia, Publicaci¿n 34. M¿xico. 1942 Resumen del informe de las exploraciones en Oaxaca, durante la 7» y la 8» temporadas 1937-1938 y 1938-1939. Vigesimoseptimo Congreso Internacional de Americanistas, Actas de la Primera Sesi¿n, Celebrada en La Ciudad de M¿xico en 1939, tomo 2, pp. 159-87. M¿xico: Secretaria de Educaci¿n P¿blica, Instituto Nacional de Antropolog¿a e Historia. Caso, Alfonso, Ignacio Bernal, and Jorge R. Acosta 1967 La Cer¿mica de Monte Alb¿n. Memorias del Instituto Nacional de Antropolog¿a e Historia, no. 13. M¿xico, D.F. Elson, Christina M. 2003 Cerro Tilcajete: un centro secundario del estado zapoteco temprano (100 a.C.- 200 d.C.). Arqueolog¿a 31:5-24. Feinman, Gary M., and Linda M. Nicholas 1990 At the margins of the Monte Alb¿n state: settlement patterns in the Ejutla Valley, Oaxaca, Mexico. Latin American Antiquity 1:216-46. 1993 Shell ornament production in Ejutla: implications for highland-coastal interaction in ancient Oaxaca. Ancient Mesoamerica 4:103-19. Flannery, Kent V., and Joyce Marcus 1983 San Jos¿ Mogote in Monte Alb¿n II: a secondary administrative center. In The Cloud People: Divergent Evolution of the Zapotec and Mixtec Civilizations, edited by Kent V. Flannery and Joyce Marcus, pp. 111-13. New York: Academic Press. Kowalewski, Stephen A., Gary M. Feinman, Laura Finsten, Richard E. Blanton, and Linda M. Nicholas 1989 Monte Alb¿n's Hinterland, Part II: Prehispanic Settlement Patterns in Tlacolula, Etla, and Ocotl¿n, the Valley of Oaxaca. Memoirs, no. 23. Museum of Anthropology, University of Michigan. Ann Arbor. Marcus, Joyce 1983 Monte Alb¿n II in the Macuilxochitl area. In The Cloud People: Divergent Evolution of the Zapotec and Mixtec Civilizations, edited by Kent V. Flannery and Joyce Marcus, pp. 113-15. New York: Academic Press. 1992 Dynamic cycles of Mesoamerican states. National Geographic Research and Exploration 8:392-411. 1999 Early architecture in the Valley of Oaxaca: 1350 B.C.-A.D. 500. In Mesoamerican Architecture as a Cultural Symbol, edited by Jeff Karl Kowalski, pp. 58-75. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Marcus, Joyce, and Kent V. Flannery 1996 Zapotec Civilization: How Urban Society Evolved in Mexico's Oaxaca Valley. New York and London: Thames and Hudson. 2004 The coevolution of ritual and society: new 14C dates from ancient Mexico. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 101:18257-61. Paddock, John 1966 Ancient Oaxaca. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press. 1983 Monte Alb¿n II in the Yagul-Caballito Blanco area. In The Cloud People: Divergent Evolution of the Zapotec and Mixtec Civilizations, edited by Kent V. Flannery and Joyce Marcus, pp. 115-17. New York: Academic Press. Redmond, Elsa M., and Charles S. Spencer 2006 From raiding to conquest: warfare strategies and early state development in Oaxaca, Mexico. In The Archaeology of Warfare: Prehistories of Raiding and Conquest, edited by Elizabeth N. Arkush and Mark W. Allen, pp. 336-93. Gainesville: University of Florida Press. Spencer, Charles S. 1998 A mathematical model of primary state formation. Cultural Dynamics 10:5-20. 1999 Palatial digs. Natural History 108(2):94-95. 2003 War and early state formation in Oaxaca, Mexico. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 100(20):11185-87. 2006 Modeling (and measuring) expansionism and resistance: state formation in ancient Oaxaca, Mexico. In History and Mathematics: Historical Dynamics and Development of Complex Societies, edited by Peter Turchin, Leonid Grinin, Andrey Korotayev, and Victor C. de Munck, pp. 170-92. Moscow: Russian State University for the Humanities. In press a Territorial expansion and primary state formation in Oaxaca, Mexico. In Latin American Indigenous Warfare and Ritual Violence, edited by Richard Chacon and Ruben Mendoza. Tucson: University of Arizona Press. In press b Testing the morphogenesist model of primary state formation: the Zapotec case. In Macroevolution in Human Prehistory, edited by Anna Prentiss, Ian Kuijt, and James C. Chatters. Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press. Spencer, Charles S., and Elsa M. Redmond 1997 Archaeology of the Ca¿ada de Cuicatl¿n, Oaxaca. American Museum of Natural History, Anthropological Papers 80. New York. 2001a The chronology of conquest: implications of new radiocarbon analyses from the Ca¿ada de Cuicatl¿n, Oaxaca. Latin American Antiquity 12:182-202. 2001b Multilevel selection and political evolution in the Valley of Oaxaca, 500-100 B.C. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 20:195-229. 2003 Militarism, resistance, and early state development in Oaxaca, Mexico. Social Evolution and History 2(1):25-70. 2004a Conquest warfare, strategies of resistance, and the rise of the Zapotec early state. In The Early State: Its Alternatives and Analogues, edited by Leonid E. Grinin, Robert L. Carneiro, Dmitri M. Bondarenko, Nikolai N. Kradin, and Andrey V. Korotayev, pp. 220-61. Moscow: Uchitel Publishing House. 2004b Primary state formation in Mesoamerica. Annual Review of Anthropology 33:173-99. 2004c A Late Monte Alb¿n I phase (300-100 B.C.) palace in the Valley of Oaxaca. Latin American Antiquity 15:441-55. 2005 Institutional development in Late Formative Oaxaca: the view from San Mart¿n Tilcajete. In New Perspectives on Formative Mesoamerican Cultures, edited by Terry G. Powis, pp. 171-82. British Archaeological Reports, International Series 1377. Oxford, UK: Archaeopress. 2006 Resistance strategies and early state formation in Oaxaca, Mexico. In Intermediate Elites in Precolumbian States and Empires, edited by Christina Elson and R. Alan Covey, pp. 21-43. Tucson: University of Arizona Press. Acknowledgments My excavations at Cerro Tilcajete began in 1999. Several years earlier, in 1994, Charles Spencer and Elsa Redmond had mapped the site and made intensive surface collections. I am indebted to them not only for encouraging me to work at Cerro Tilcajete, but also for graciously providing me with their site map and surface collections to analyze. In all, I excavated for three seasons and conducted two seasons of analysis. Although the analysis continues, this Memoir seeks to provide the most important results of my research thus far, in terms of the site's chronology, architecture, and material remains. The National Science Foundation, the Foundation for the Advancement of Mesoamerican Research, Inc., the University of Michigan, and the American Museum of Natural History funded the project. In Oaxaca, I thank the National Institute of Anthropology, its director Eduardo L¿pez Calzada, and its representatives Marcus Winter and Cira L¿pez Mart¿nez for assistance. At Cerro Tilcajete, Luca Casparis and Michelle Crossier expertly directed some excavation areas. Many skilled workmen from the municipality of San Mart¿n Tilcajete climbed more than 100 m to the site each day and worked carefully to uncover the structures and features. Since completing work at Cerro Tilcajete, Luca Casparis and I have gone on to work at Jalieza, the successor to the Tilcajete site. In Luca I am lucky to have a great co-director with whom I can plan to work for the many years it will take to sort out the long-term processes affecting Ocotl¿n after 100 B.C. Heartfelt acknowledgments must go to the many people who helped me get to, and get through, graduate school. I consider myself lucky to have had a series of committed professors, including Gabriela Uru¿uela, Patricia Plunket, William Parry, Gregory Johnson, Jeffrey Parsons, Robert Whallon, John O'Shea, Conrad Kottak, and David Frye. Graduate school was made less of an ordeal by studying with an amazing cohort made up of Kamyar Abdi, Alan Covey, Patrick Livingood, and Jason Sherman. Alan Covey worked with me at Cerro Tilcajete, helped me code thousands of sherds, and listened patiently and supportively to a million little complaints all while completing his own dissertation work in Peru. Alan and I defended our dissertations the same day and I am as proud of his work and accomplishments as he is of mine. While being a young academic can be hard, having four truly outstanding advisors; Charles Spencer, Elsa Redmond, Kent Flannery, and Joyce Marcus; who time and time again offered enthusiastic support and encouragement made the work more worthwhile. The realm of moral support belongs to my family; James, Sue, Elizabeth, and Scott Elson; who think archaeology and archaeologists are pretty odd but are firm believers in doing what one likes. Finally, I want to thank my husband Kevin, who has kept me grounded and my priorities in order while somehow managing to get me to focus all my efforts on writing this monograph.
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Excavations at Cerro Tilcajete: A Monte Albán II Administrative Center in the Valley of Oaxaca
University of Michigan Press, 2007 eISBN: 978-1-951519-84-1 | Paper: 978-0-915703-66-1 Library of Congress Classification F1219.8.Z37E57 2007 Dewey Decimal Classification 972.7401
ABOUT THIS BOOK | TOC | REQUEST ACCESSIBLE FILE
ABOUT THIS BOOK
This volume, part of a series on the prehistory and human ecology of the Valley of Oaxaca, Mexico, focuses on Cerro Tilcajete, a secondary administrative center below Monte Albán, the capital of the prehispanic Zapotec state. See other books on: Elite (Social sciences) | Kings and rulers | Power (Social sciences) | Social archaeology | Valley See other titles from University of Michigan Press |
Nearby on shelf for Latin America. Spanish America / Mexico / Antiquities. Indians:
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