The
Pre-Columbian city now known as 'Copán' is a locale in extreme western
Honduras, in the
Copán Department, near to the
Guatemalan border. It is the site of a major
Maya kingdom of the Classic era.
The kingdom, anciently named '''Xukpi''' (Corner-Bundle), flourished from the
5th century AD to the early
9th century, with antecedents going back to at least the
2nd century AD. Its name is an apparent reference to the fact that it was situated at the far southern and eastern end of Maya territory. The nearby modern village of Copán Ruinas itself may have anciently been known as 'Oxwitik'.
Description of the ruins

Location of Copán
The site in Copan is perhaps best known for producing a remarkable series of portrait stelae, most of which were placed along processional ways in the central plaza of the city and the adjoining "
acropolis" (a large complex of overlapping step-pyramids, plazas, and palaces). The stelae and sculptured decorations of the buildings of Copán are some of the very finest surviving art of ancient
Mesoamerica.
Many structures are elaborately decorated with stone sculptures, usually constructed from a mosaic of carved stones of a size that one person could carry.
The site also has a large court for playing the
Mesoamerican ballgame.

Ruins of one of the side buildings of the main ballcourt
At its height in the late classic period Copán seems to have had an unusually prosperous class of minor nobility, scribes, and artisans, some of whom had homes of cut stone built for themselves (in most sites a privilege reserved for the rulers and high priests), some of which have carved hieroglyphic texts.
The buildings suffered significantly from forces of nature in the centuries between the site's abandonment and the rediscovery of the ruins. There have been numerous
earthquakes -- none of the roofs of the stone buildings were intact when the site was rediscovered, and the hieroglyphic stairway had collapsed. The Copán river changed course and meandered, destroying part of the acropolis (revealing in the process its stratigraphy in a large vertical cut) and apparently wiping out various subsidiary architectural groups in the region. In the long period when the site was overgrown the buildings and sculptures suffered from the invasive thick jungle vegetation and periodic forest fires.
Archeologists have consolidated and restored many structures at the site.
Pre-Columbian history
The fertile Copán River valley was long a site of agriculture before the first known stone architecture was built in the region about the
9th century BC.
A
kingdom seems to have been established in Copán in
159. It grew into one of the most important Maya sites by the
5th century. Large monuments dated with hieroglyphic texts were erected in the city from
435 through
822.
Xukpi was one of the more powerful Maya city states, a regional power, although it suffered a catastrophic defeat at the hands of the kingdom located at
Quirigua in
738. It eventually withered in the face of the depletion of natural resources which was a factor in bringing most of the Classic-Age Maya city-states to their end.
The area continued to be occupied after the last major ceremonial structures and royal monuments were erected, but the population declined in the
8th century -
9th century from perhaps over 20,000 in the city to less than 5,000.
The ceremonial center was long abandoned and the surrounding valley home to only a few farming hamlets at the time of the arrival of the
Spanish in the
16th century.
List of known Xukpi rulers

Stela H detail, depicting King "18 Rabbit"
:1.
K'inich Yax K'uk' Mo' ("Great-Sun First Quetzal Macaw") before 435
:2. "K'inich Popol Hol" ("Great-Sun ?"); c. 437
:3. "Ruler 3", name unknown; c. 455
:4. "Ku Ix" (possibly ''K'altuun Hix'' or ''Tuun K'ab' Hix''); c. 465
:5. "Ruler 5", name unknown; c. 476
:6. "Ruler 6" (''Muyal Jol'' ?); c. 485
:7. B'alam Nehn, ("Jaguar Mirror"; "Waterlily-Jaguar") after 504-544
:8. "Ruler 8" (''Wi'-Ohl-?'', "Head on Earth"); 532-551
:9. "Ruler 9" (''Sak-lu'' ?);551-553
:10. "Moon Jaguar" (''tzi-b'alam'', "? Jaguar"); 553-578
:11. Butz' Chan ("Smoke Serpent", "fire-eating serpent"); 578-628
:12. Chan Imix K'awiil ("Smoke Jaguar"); 628-695
:13.
Uaxaclajuun Ub'aah K'awiil ("18 Rabbit"); 695-738
:14. K'ak' Joplaj Chan K'awiil ("Smoke Monkey"); 738-749
:15. K'ak' Yipyaj Chan K'awiil ("Smoke Shell"; "Smoke Squirrel"); 749-763
:16. Yax Pasaj Chan Yopaat ("
Yax Pac") 763-after 810
: (probably period where throne was vacant)
:17? Ukit Took'; 822
: Royal ceremonial center of city abandoned by 984
The first sixteen names, from
Yax K'uk' Mo' to
Yax Pac (Yax Pasah), are depicted on
Altar Q, an artifact that has provided researchers clues to the history and origins of Copán.
[1]
Copán in modern times
By the time of the Spanish conquest of Honduras, the site had long been overgrown by rainforest. Although this large ruined city was known locally since early colonial times, it remained largely unknown by the outside world until a series of explorers visited it in the early
19th century.
Juan Galindo wrote a description of the ruins in
1834, which was published the following year. This sparked the interest of
North American explorer and travel writer
John Lloyd Stephens and
English architect and draftsman
Frederick Catherwood whose illustrated books describing Copán and other sites excited a great deal of interest in
Mesoamerican antiquities among American and European scholars, and its publication is regarded as the commencement of modern Mayan studies which continue to this day.
The site was the subject of one of the first modern archeological surveys and excavations in the Maya area, conducted by the
Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology of
Harvard University from
1891 to
1900. Further excavations and restorations were begun by the
Carnegie Institution of Washington in the
1930s, the Peabody Museum again in the
1970s, followed by the Government of Honduras's ''Proyecto Copán'' beginning in the late
1970s and continuing to this day.
''See also:''
★
Maya civilization
Further reading
★ ''Informal Empire: Mexico and Central America in Victorian Culture'' by Robert D. Aguirre, Minneapolis and London: University of Minnesota Press, 2005.
★ ''Copán'' by Francis Robicsek, Museum of the American Indian, 1972
★ ''Scribes, Warriors and Kings: The City of Copán and the Ancient Maya'' by William L. Fash, Thames and Hudson, 2001
External links
★
Interactive map of Copan Ruins
★
"Lost King of the Maya" site on pbs.org companion site to "Nova" television documentary on Copán
★
Hieroglyphs and History at Copán by David Stuart on peabody.harvard.edu
★
Copan Ruins Facts and News
★
La Pintada, a Maya Chorti village near Copan Ruinas
★
Images from Copan
★
Map of Copan area