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Diving the Virgin Islands - Vivien Lougheed
Yucatan, Cancun & Cozumel
Vivien Lougheed
Hunter Publishing, Inc
comments@hunterpublishing.com
© Hunter Publishing, Inc.
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form, or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the written permission of the publisher.
This guide focuses on recreational activities. As all such activities contain elements of risk, the publisher, author, affiliated individuals and companies disclaim any responsibility for any injury, harm, or illness that may occur to anyone through, or by use of, the information in this book. Every effort was made to insure the accuracy of information in this book, but the publisher and author do not assume, and hereby disclaim, any liability or any loss or damage caused by errors, omissions, misleading information or potential travel problems caused by this guide, even if such errors or omissions result from negligence, accident or any other cause.
Introduction
Things You Must See & Do
History
Government
Economy
People & Culture
Geography
Environments
Offshore
Parks
Notable Parks & Sites
Archaeological Sites
Climate
Plant Life
Animal Life
Travel Information
National Holidays
What to Take
Required Documents
Traveling with Pets
Health
Medical Insurance
Staying Healthy
Fevers & Worse
Treatment Options
Hospitals
Emergency Services
Water
Money Matters
Banking/Exchange
Taxes & Tipping
Price Scales
Planning Expenses
Dangers & Annoyances
Consulates in Cancún
Need to Know
Hours of Business
Electricity
Communication
Culture Shock
Food
Favorite Dishes
Booking a Room
Getting Here
Getting Around
Information Directory
Airlines
Banks
Car Rental Companies
Courier Services
Emergencies in Mexico
Government Offices
Insurance Companies
Medical & Health Care
Useful Websites
Maya Ruins
Becán
Calakmul
Chacmultun
Chichén Itzá
Cobá
Dzibilchaltún
Edzná
Ek` Balam
El Rey Ruins
Izamal
Kabáh
Labná
Mayapan
Oxkintok
Sayil
Tulum
Uxmal
X’Cambo
Xel-Há
X’lapak
Yaxuna
Cancún
History
Getting Here & Around
What to See & Do
In the Air
On Water
Aquariums, Water Parks & Water Tours
Booze Cruises
Diving & Snorkeling
Dive Sites Near Cancún
Adventures on Horseback
Bullfights
At the Zoo
Adventures on Foot
On Wheels
Tour Operators
Nightlife
Shopping
Hotels
Restaurants
Isla Mujeres
History
Orientation
Getting Here & Around
What to See & Do
Tour Operators
Nightlife
Shopping
Hotels
Restaurants
Isla Holbox
History
Orientation
Getting Here
What to See & Do
Tour Operators
Hotels
Restaurants
Riviera Maya
Getting Here
Puerto Morelos
What to See & Do
On Horseback
On Water
Snorkeling & Diving
Tour Operators
Nightlife
Shopping
Hotels
Restaurants
Punta Brava
Playa del Carmen
History
Getting Here & Around
What to See & Do
Nightlife
Shopping
Hotels
Playa del Secret
Punta Maroma
Tres Rios
Punta Bete
Xcalacoco
Restaurants
Cozumel
Getting Here & Around
History
Getting Here & Around
Festivals
What to See & Do
Beaches
Dive/Snorkel Sites
On the Links
On Wheels
Tour Operators
Nightlife
Shopping
Hotels
Restaurants
Puerto Aventuras
What to See & Do
On Horseback
In the Air
On Water
On Foot
Tour Operators
Nightlife
Shopping
Hotels
Restaurants
Xpu-Há
Hotels
Restaurant
Tulum
Getting Here & Around
What to See & Do
Cenotes
Adventures on Water
Theme Park
Nightlife
Shopping
Hotels
Restaurants
Chetumal
History
Getting Here & Around
What to See & Do
Fiestas
The Ruins & Other Attractions
Excursions in Nature
Nightlife
Shopping
Hotels
Restaurants
Laguna de Bacalar
Getting Here & Around
What to See & Do
Tour Operators
Nightlife
Hotels
Restaurant
Xcalak
Adventures in Water
Diving
Where to Stay
Mérida
History
Getting Here & Around
Car Rentals
Orientation
Useful Telephone Numbers
Medical
Consulates
Festivals
What to See & Do
The Zocalo
Parks
Art
Adventures on Foot
Adventures in Nature
The Ruins
The Church of Umán
Bike Trips
Learning the Language
Tour Operators
Nightlife
Shopping
Hotels
Restaurants
Progreso
History
Getting Here & Around
What to See & Do
In Town
Adventures In Nature
Beaches
Tour Operators
Nightlife
Hotels
Restaurants
South of Mérida
The Puuc Route
Loltún Caves
Uxmal
Tikul
Santa Elena
The Convent Route
Acanceh
Tecoh
Grutas de Tzabnah
Tekit
Mama
Chumayel
Teabo
Tipikal
Mani
Oxkutzcab
The Hacienda Route
Hacienda Xcanatun
Hacienda Temozon
Hacienda San José Cholul
Hacienda Santa Rosa
Hacienda Katanchel
Hacienda Yaxcopoil
Celestún
Getting Here & Away
What to See & Do
Flamingo Tour
Celestún Biosphere Reserve
Hotels
Places to Eat
From Mérida East to Valladolid
Izamal
Getting Here & Around
Festivals
What to See & Do
Shopping
Hotels
Restaurants
Piste
Cenotes
Hotels
Valladolid
Getting Here & Away
What to See & Do
Nightlife
Shopping
Hotels
Restaurants
Campeche
History
Campeche City
Getting Here & Around
What to See & Do
Exploring the Wall & Forts
Beyond the City Walls
Tour Operators
Nightlife
Hotels
Restaurants
North of Campeche
Jaina
East of Campeche
Hopelchén
South of Campeche
Hotels
Ciudad del Carmen
Hotels
Restaurants
East of Compotón
Xpujil
Orientation
Getting Here & Away
Ruins
Hotels & Restaurants
Introduction
Northerners like to leave icy climates for sun, sand and warm water. The Yucatán has these. But some travelers are looking for more than this so they move inland across the jungles that hide Maya ceremonial caves and ruins and exotic plants and animals. Mexicans are good at helping travelers forget the ice and snow by building luxury spas and resorts that include romantic restaurants with just enough Mexican flavor to make them exciting but not so much as to make them strange.
Mexico has also improved access to the jungle, the ruins and to colonial cities where dancers and musicians in traditional clothes perform in the plazas and restaurants. Air-conditioned tour buses with English-speaking guides take us to the caves at Loltún or the World Heritage Site of Chichén Itzá and we swim like Maya virgins in the green waters of the cenotes. We visit wildlife reserves and internationally recognized wetlands that seethe with 10,000 pink flamingos and we take photos. The Mexicans return us to our hotels in time to sip colored fruit drinks decorated with hibiscus flowers and spiked with Mexican tequila. We then watch the red fire of the sun sink into the ocean.
Some of us go on our own and stay in quaint local hotels, eat foods sold by street vendors and ride third-class buses. We try speaking Spanish and we laugh at ourselves when hopelessly lost because we didn’t understand what was said to us.
For many, the Yucatán becomes a favorite destination. Travelers return again and again and the welcoming Mexicans treat us like royalty.
Things You Must See & Do
Chichén Itzá - World Heritage Site
LoltúnCaves
ColonialCityofCampeche
Flamingos at Celestún
Sleep in a grass and reed hut on the beach at Tulum
Watch traditional dancing at the plaza in Mérida
History
History gives us the stories that compel our imaginations to appreciate what we have come to see. It gives us reasonable explanations for the question why?
.
The Yucatán was home to one of the greatest pre-Columbian civilizations in America , the Maya. At its height, the Maya civilization had an estimated population of over a million. They left magnificent temples and a rich culture still practiced today.
But even before the Maya, who?
Paleo-Indians
The main pattern of Paleo-Indian settlement in the Americas (about 20,000-7,000 BC) is generally agreed upon, though dates and details keep changing and infighting among anthropologists and archaeologists is intense. By about 20,000 BC, the last ice age was into a long decline. Beringia, the low-lying area connecting Asia and North America , provided a route for migrating humans down into ice-free southern Alberta . The rest of the Americas was wide open, but the migrants moved south along the mountain chains. They stuck to the highlands because these areas supported the large herbivores that they ate: mammoth, mastodon, caribou, bison, horse, giant armadillo, giant sloth, guanaco, llama, and vicuña.
The dating of sites shows the progression, first north to south, then east to west. These dates also show how long the process took. Sites like Monte Verde in southern Chile have been reliably dated to about 12,000-10,000 BC. Estimates are that in Mesoamerica ( Mexico and Central America ) the highlands may have been populated as early as 18,000 BC.
Archaeologists also learned from the sites how the Paleo-Indians lived. In Monte Verde there were wood and skin huts containing brazier pits. Mastodon and other large herbivore bones were found, along with the remains of seeds, nuts, berries, and roots. Tools included stone hand axes, choppers, and scrapers; some of these tools may have had wooden handles. The weapons were wooden lances and stones chosen or shaped so they could be hurled by slings.
Once the Americas were occupied from top to bottom, population pressure and global warming resulted in movement into the lowlands, along the coastlines (which were farther out to sea then), and onto the Caribbean islands. Increasing temperatures changed the highlands in particular, leaving them less habitable. In Mesoamerica the grasslands turned to deserts, and the large herbivores disappeared, leaving smaller game like rabbits and deer.
Along the Gulf of Mexico and the Caribbean , the grasslands turned into forests. Since Mesoamerica was and still is rich in edible plants, such as mesquite, cactus, and agave, people ate more grains, fruits, and vegetables and less meat, though domesticated ducks and dogs were used as a meat supply. By 11,000 BC, wild corn, onions, amaranth, avocado, acorns, piñon nuts, chili peppers, maguey, and prickly pear were added to the human diet. By 8000 BC, the Paleo-Indian period of Mesoamerica was coming to an end. Chasing game was giving way to clearing land, cultivating domestic plants, and raising domestic animals.
By 7000 BC, the nomadic hunters were growing crops, especially squash, avocados, and chili peppers. By 5000 BC, maize - a small, wheat-like ancestor of corn - was being grown in the Tehuacan Valley of Southern Mexico. By 3000 BC, pit house settlements were popular. A pit house is a tent-like wood, wattle, and daubed-mud structure erected over a hole dug into the ground. By 2300 BC, pottery replaced stone jars and bowls, village life was the norm, and the population was exploding.
Olmec Culture
Although no burial sites have ever been found, it is believed the Olmecs were a highly sophisticated group that lived in south and central Mexico from about 1000-300 BC. They are credited with developing the first large religious ceremonial centers and temples in the Yucatán and the first signs of jaguar worship appeared in their temples. During the height of their civilization, they carved massive 10-foot-high basalt-stone heads that adorned their plazas. The Olmecs also had advanced stone sewer systems in their cities. They devised some of the first writing and the 260-day calendar. They were an agrarian society but, since they were close to the ocean, supplemented their diets with fish.
By 300 BC other tribes such as the Toltecs and eventually the Aztecs arrived and assimilated. Because of their advanced civilization, the Olmecs are considered by some anthropologists to be the mother culture of Mesoamerica .
The Olmecs have two face styles in their artwork; one similar to the Semitic tribes of the bible and the other of African or Polynesian style.
Maya Culture
The origins of the Maya in Paleo-Indian America have not yet been traced. Their language, it has recently been discovered, is similar to Uru, the working class tribe of the Andes (the Aymara and Quechua were the warriors and aristocrats) and Chipaya in the highlands of the Andes , so their migration pattern could be as complex as that of the Arawaks and Caribs, who came north from Venezuela .
The archaeological record dates Mayan sites in Southern Mexico , Guatemala , Northern Honduras , El Salvador , and Belize back to 2000 BC at least. The earliest known Maya settlement in the Yucatán was at Dzibilchaltún, occupied from around 1500 BC to 1000 BC. But the Yucatán wasn’t heavily populated until after the collapse of Tikal in Guatemala . The Maya seem to have then migrated from the highlands to the ocean.
During the Classic Period of the Maya civilization (250-1000 AD), the biggest centers were in Guatemala , and the Mexican states of Chiapas , Campeche , Yucatán and Tabasco , and as far south as Honduras and El Salvador . After the fall of Tikal , the last centers to exist in the Yucatán were Tulum and Mayapan. The Post Classic Period lasted at least 600 years, until the Europeans arrived.
Palenque
The details of Maya civilization are gradually falling into place, though big pieces of the story are missing, like why the civilization began to decline shortly before the Europeans arrived. By that time, the big cities had been abandoned, and the center of Maya power was shifting north to the Yucatán. Overpopulation and depletion of land is the usual explanation. An overly rigid social structure, that favored inherited rank and knowledge over ability, is another.
Maya civilization, along with the sister Mesoamerican civilizations such as the Zapotec and Mixtec around Oaxaca and the Olmecs on the Gulf of Mexico , started to flourish around 500 BC. This was a result of agriculture and the gradual improvement of technology and techniques that settled agricultural life permits. There was more time for consolidation and improvement. Textiles replaced hides, ceramics replaced worked stone, bricks replaced wattle. More and more plant types were domesticated (seeds selected, sorted, and planted); Mesoamerica , particularly the Guatemalan highlands, was for a time one of the world centers of plant domestication. After harvests, fields were burned, and seeds were planted with a pointed, fire-hardened digging stick - the same slash-and-burn method used today.
K’awil, the god of sustenance who accepts precious items such as blood, semen, maize, rubber and dough, is associated with royal power and is often seen on scepters used by kings during ceremonies.
Governance too became more technical. The extended family units of the Paleo-Indians gave way to village clusters, and leadership became more bureaucratic - though the Maya city-states were never part of a monolithic empire as with the Incas and Aztecs. During the Classic Period, Maya society was divided into ranks and classes. The supreme rulers inherited their positions, and were both secular and religious leaders, or priest-nobles. Artisans, merchants, and farmers were also separate classes and inherited their specialties.
While Europe seemed to be stagnating during and after the decline of Roman power, Mesoamerican civilizations flourished.
The Mayan language was written; the Maya seem to have inherited a set of pictorial symbols from the Olmec. The symbols were like Chinese ideograms: a single picture equaled a word, an idea or a number. But some glyphs are phonetic syllables that spell out words. Decoding is still in progress. Unfortunately, Spanish priests destroyed as much of this writing as they could. Almost everything written on parchment and bark was burned. The Catholic Church considered the writing heretical. But giant, carved-stone stellae that record important events and astronomical calculations survived.
Maya glyphs, Palenque
The Maya also developed a numerology that they used effectively, especially in their calculations of time. Their number system was based on 20, with the numbers 1 to 19 indicated by dots and dashes and the zero by a shell. This was much more efficient than the Roman numeral system being used in Europe . The fact that the Maya had conceived of a zero put them ahead of European mathematicians. Using their number system and astronomical observations, they calculated the year at 365.2425 days, long before Europeans arrived at their estimation of 365.2422 days. The Maya lunar calendar used a system of 18 months each with 20 days to equal 360 days, with the final five unlucky
days at the end. They even devised a Venusian calendar, after calculating the orbit of Venus to within a few seconds, a full 1,000 years before Europeans were able to achieve this, and the Maya knew that Venus passed between the earth and the sun every 584 days. Modern calculations put it at 583.92 days.
These calculations, too, were carved on stone stellae, probably to teach the public. No one knows why the Maya were so interested in time. Macro-time, that is; they don’t seem to have paid much attention to counting hours and minutes.
According to the Maya calendar, the next apocalypse will be on December 23, 2012. The Maya believe that humans, like other animals, have high and low population density periods and that the current cycle of life began August 11, 3114 BC.
In engineering, the Maya were like the Egyptians in terms of the size of their projects. They built clay-lined reservoirs in places where water was scarce, and causeways to direct the flow of water or move it from place to place. They terraced hills - necessary when you live in mountains and depend on agriculture. They put swamps into production (mostly growing maize and cacao) with a system of raised fields,
dredging out soil and piling it at set intervals, usually by a method of creating intersecting ridges and expanding the intersections. From the air, these raised fields look like small islands connected by dykes.
Finally, the Maya built those incredible ceremonial centers in their cities. They did this without metal tools, without the wheel (though they had toys with wheels) and without the arch. Basically, they backpacked in rubble, dumped it, shaped it level by level (if a pyramid was being constructed), and then faced it with limestone blocks held together by mortar. Plazas were sloped to let water run off; in dry areas, they sloped into reservoirs or lined trenches that led to reservoirs. Roads connecting the plazas were made of rubble topped with limestone chips and packed with giant stonerollers. Temples were built on the tops of pyramids, and roof combs topped the temples, making the structures quite high.
Heavy stone lintels and corbel vaults were used in adjoining palaces and temples. With the vault, the stones in a wall were inched inward until the two sides met at the top. Vaults are claustrophobic compared to archways if a room was being created, and it made for narrow doors too when it was used instead of a lintel.
Commerce and trade flourished among the Maya. Gold came from southern Central America but generally the Maya were not into metals. Salt was harvested along the coasts by 300 BC or earlier. Sea salt was eaten with food and used to preserve meat and fish for storage and transportation. Products from coastal areas - such as salt and shells used in tools and jewelry - were transported far inland and traded for food and jade. This was all done using backpacks, since the Maya did not use pack animals. However, they did build dugout canoes capable of holding up to 50 people as well as some freight. Cacao beans were used as currency. Cacao was the Maya’s favorite drink; the beans were roasted, ground, and mixed with maize and water.
The Maya had drugs too. Their alcohol was a fermented honey and bark drink called balche. It may have been used only for ceremonial purposes, though it would take a lot of evidence to convince me of that. The Maya were into visions as a part of their religious rituals, hallucinations created mainly by bloodletting but also by the use of balche and wild tobacco, which is much more potent than our tobacco. And for sports there were those ballparks, always in the ceremonial centers of the cities. The game featured a five-pound rubber ball and was a combination of basketball, football, and soccer. Protective clothing was worn, made of wicker or leather.
Ek Chuah was the Maya God of war and human sacrifice. The captains of losing ball teams were all sacrificed to this deity. The idea was to extract the victim’s heart, while it was still pumping. This was usually done by plunging a dull knife into the chest of the captain. The blood from the heart was smeared on the stone image of Ek Chuah. If the sacrifice took place in a temple on top of a pyramid, the priests tossed the body to the pyramid’s base, where it was skinned. The head priest then put on the skin and danced. Players who earned less respect were sometimes shot with bows and arrows rather than cut up with a knife.
Toltecs
The Toltecs ruled from the 10th to the 12th centuries and were the last dominant group before the Aztecs conquered Mexico . Although the center of their civilization was at Tula , just north of Mexico City , they had expanded as far east as the Gulf Coast . They were an agricultural society with a religion that required human sacrifice, mostly of enemy prisoners.
The most famous center of the Toltecs was Chichén Itzá, where they had a sophisticated observatory that allowed the scientists to predict accurate celestial movements.
K Explaining a solar eclipse, the Maya said that the sun’s face was bitten.
Legends state that in 987 the ruler of the Toltecs, Quetzalcoatle, was defeated and sent onto the Gulf on a raft of snakes. In the same year, Kukulkan, the Serpent God, arrived in Chichén Itzá and the city flourished. Other anthropologists claim that Quetzalcoatle was around for centuries before this. Toltec pottery was found as far south as Costa Rica .
The Toltec’s capital city of Tula was invaded by the Aztecs and the Toltec civilization went into decline.
The Spanish
The Valdivia Shipwreck of 1511
Before the Spanish arrived in full force, a small group of shipwrecked Europeans, who were sailing from the Darien in Panama to Santo Domingo , went aground. Eighteen survivors drifted for two weeks before landing near Cancún. The Europeans came ashore only to be fattened up by the Maya so they could be served as gourmet dinners for local chiefs. As the natives licked their fingers and watched Jeronimo de Aguilar and Gonzalo Guerrero grow for the next feast, the two made good use of their time in the cages and befriended some of the locals. They gained respect and, in turn, earned their freedom. They made the village their home. Guerrero even married the daughter of a chief and raised a family. Once the Spanish arrived, Aguilar begged for his freedom from the tribe and was released but Guerrero stayed with his Maya family. Aguilar worked as a translator for the Spanish. But he too was attracted to the Mexican way of life and after a few years of working with the Spanish returned to marry an Aztec woman.
Conquistadors
The Spanish had trouble colonizing Maya territory. Compared to the Maya, the Aztecs were pushovers and even the Incas were fairly easy. After two years in America , Cortéz in 1519 pillaged the Maya island of Cozumel but he couldn’t get a stronghold on the Yucatán mainland. Looking for gold, he sailed south along the Honduran and Belize coastlines, but found the area uninviting - swamp and jungle inhabited by unfriendly Maya.
Cortéz then sailed north to Vera Cruz and by 1521 had marched even farther north, with Aguilar as his scout and interpreter. There were numerous battles, with Guerrero leading the Maya against Cortéz and Aguilar. Guerrero was eventually killed fighting his former friend.
On his quest to conquer Central and South America , Cortéz all but destroyed the Toltecs, Quiche and Cakchiquel in Guatemala , Nicaragua , El Salvador and Honduras . The Guatemala Maya were gradually driven towards the Yucatán.
Colonization
Between 1527 and 1547 Francisco de Montego, father and son, carried on a bloody 20-year colonization of the Maya in the Yucatán. These were by far the biggest and bloodiest battles fought by the Spaniards in their New World , and they fought for an area that had no gold or silver. Montejo was subdued and forced to retreat in 1528, but he returned three years later with a huge army and established headquarters at Chichén Itzá. He was again defeated in 1535 so he turned over the power to his son, who established the central ruling city of Mérida . The Maya king of the area converted to Catholicism and became an ally of Montejo’s. The rest of the peninsula followed suit and, within 11 years, the conquest of the Yucatán was complete. The Montejo descendants who resided in Mérida became the richest family in the Yucatán and remain so to this day.
The Spanish succeeded in ruling the Yucatán mainly because the Maya were at the same time involved in civil war. Also, ruling classes in Europe were giving more power to the church leaders who ruled more reasonably than the conquistadors. Finally, smallpox spread and killed at an alarming rate, thus weakening the power of the Maya.
The Maya took another hit when Friar Diego de Landa in 1562, under the guise of conversion, destroyed thousands of religious sculptures and numerous hieroglyphic manuscripts supposedly containing works of the devil.
Only four of the original books survived the fires of Landa. Those unwilling to accept the new religion were tortured and murdered.
Friar Diego de Landa
The Maya who accepted the new dogma creatively mixed the two religions so that their earth gods would not be forsaken. The Spanish, on the other hand, relocated, re-educated and re-enslaved the Maya so their lives began to replicate those of the Spanish except, of course, for their standard of living.
Because of his brutal treatment of the natives under the guise of an inquisition,
Landa was sent back to Spain where he stood trial and was ordered by the Pope to write an account of his time in the Yucatán. Ironically, his book, Relación de las Cosas de Yucatán, is the only remaining account of how the Maya lived before the arrival of the Spanish.
Pirates
Spaniards wishing to settle in the Yucatán were given free farms and Indians to work that land. Since there was no gold and the soil was poor, colonization was slow. The largest group of settlers was the priests.
Life along the seas was a bit more exciting. There were the privateers, the British, French and Dutch pirates who stole about 70% of all the gold leaving the New World (mostly South America ) for Europe . The pirates needed ports to outft and fix ships. Campeche was one such place.
Sir Francis Drake
The most famous of these men was Sir Francis Drake, who robbed $9 million worth of treasure from the Spanish fleets. For this he was knighted. On the other hand, the Spanish still call him el Draque,
after a Maya mythological boogeyman. A co-worker of Drake’s was Captain Morgan, who did more work in Belize than the Yucatán but had an equally good/bad reputation as Drake.
When England gave up supporting piracy, Drake had died, but the famous Blackbeard continued to work the trade, though he held no discrimination against any country and robbed ships from everywhere. He then sold the goods to any purchaser with money, regardless of nationality. He made his beachside home in Quintana Roo and his descendents still live in Punta Allen about 95 mi (150 km) south of Cancún.
Born around 1680 as Edward Teach, Blackbeard intimidated his opponents by appearing on deck wearing a three-cornered hat, numerous swords, knives and pistols and by lighting hemp he had woven around his beard. To add to the intimidation, his flag was the devil holding a spear pointing to a bleeding heart. He was finally killed in a bitter battle against Lieutenant Robert Maynard. Blackbeard was stabbed more than 20 times and shot five times before he succumbed, at which time Maynard cut off his head and hung it on the bow of the ship.
Rebellions
The Spanish empire disintegrated after Napoleon invaded Spain in 1807. In Mexico , the fight for independence started three years later under the leadership of Father Miguel Hidalgo. A full-fledged revolution broke out, with Mexico winning independence from Spain in 1821.
In the Yucatán, the Maya took advantage of the weakening power of Europe and joined the fight for independence. When Agustin de Iturbide declared himself emperor and pronounced Mexico a republic, the Mexicans weren’t happy. The new rulers were Spaniards. Those with mixed or Indian blood were inferior. Discontent and battle continued until, in 1824, the Yucatán, which at that time included the states of Campeche and Quntana Roo, the Chiapas and Guatemala , won its independence. The states were among the first of the Mexican federation.
Benito Juárez , above, one of Mexico ’s greatest heroes, became president and tried to unify the country, but the struggles never really ended. The white ruling class couldn’t share power with the Indians. The Yucatán was declared a department ruled by the central government in Mexico City . Insurrection erupted and in 1838 the Yucatán was again declared independent. However, the central Mexican government wanted the Yucatán in the federation, so Juárez sent Andres Quintana Roo to Mérida to work out an agreement. He succeeded and a treaty was signed. But Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna, the next president of Mexico ignored the agreement, so again those in the Yucatán rebelled by removing all flags of Mexico from public buildings. Instead they flew the flag of the Yucatán. The central government placed embargos on the ports that blocked commerce and Santa Anna sent in an army that the Yucatecans quickly defeated. Mexico then gave the Yucatán self-rule. This treaty was signed in 1843.
The American-Mexican War broke out but the Yucatán refused to participate and announced its neutrality. But the Maya were still unhappy. The ruling group was Spanish hidalgos or criollos.
Being Castillano, a Spaniard from Spain , put you at the top of the social, economic and ruling class in Mexico . The criollos, those of pure Spanish blood born in America followed, and the mestizos who were of mixed blood came next. Finally, the Indians, the peasant workers, existed at the bottom.
Stephens & Catherwood
John Lloyd Stephens, an American lawyer who needed an extended vacation, went on a world tour that eventually ended in the Yucatán and Central America . He was chasing a rumor about ancient cities hidden in the jungles. Stephens’ father was a congressman wanting to make political connections for the purpose of trade in Central America and he wanted a viable route for a canal that would shorten sailing times between the Atlantic and the Pacific. Although Stephens was unsuccessful in fulfilling his father’s wishes, he managed to write a bestselling book, Incidents of Travel in Central America, Chiapas and Yucatán, which has stayed in print for almost 200 years. The illustrator was Frederick Catherwood. The book compelled archaeologists to leave the comfort of their oak desks and do some field work.
As luck would have it, shortly after Stephens’ book was published, the Caste War broke out in the Yucatán, halting professional exploration for almost 50 years.
The Caste War, 1847-1901
The Caste War was mainly a fight over land. As the Spanish asserted control in the Yucatán and Guatemala , they set up a kind of feudal system, handing large estates (haciendas) out to their soldiers and bureaucrats. The Maya and other Indians (peones) worked on these haciendas, and were exploited mercilessly. They still are, by the descendents of the original landed aristocracy. But regularly the Maya continue to rise in revolt.
After Europeans took control of the Yucatán and created large estates, owned by them and later by criollos, the mestizos and Indians worked on these estates. In the process, the Maya lost ownership of traditional lands, which were mostly jungle that the elite considered unusable. The estates grew crops, which were mostly agave, for export to Europe . The landowners produced a fiber from the agave that was made into rope, which in turn sold for a good price. Sugarcane too was seen as a lucrative cash crop.
The Spanish brought African slaves with them who declared themselves free after landing in the Yucatán. They settled in small towns called Palenques and assimilated with local Maya who were not on the estates. The offspring are called Zambo.
As the estates expanded, the sacred cenotes or wells that had supplied villages with water for centuries fell into private ownership and the Indians had to pay for water. The cost of water and imposed church taxes led to extreme poverty. The Indians were also often blamed for crimes and disasters they never committed. When three Maya were executed in Valladolid after protesting for land reform, the Indians rebelled by marching into Valladolid and butchering 85 people. They carried the mutilated bodies through the streets in a victory march. The Spaniards, in retaliation, captured a Maya leader and raped a 12-year old Indian girl.
The Maya went to war and succeeded in driving the non-Indians from the Yucatán except for those living in the cities of Mérida and Campeche .
However, at that time, Mexico had settled financially with the US after the Mexican-American War and could afford to arm their men heavily with new weapons. They sent troops into the Yucatán. By 1850, the Maya lost half the territory they’d won three years earlier.
In the southeast where the Maya still had control, they received a message from the Talking Cross,
which they believed was God communicating with them. The village of Chan Santa Cruz (now called Puerto Felipe Carrillo), where the apparition occurred, became a sacred pilgrim site and political center for resistance.
With the strategic port of Chan Santa Cruz being in Maya hands, the British - who ruled Belize and traded at Chan Santa Cruz - considered the Yucatán an independent nation. Skirmishes continued for almost another 30 years until the Maya and the Mexican governor from the State of the Yucatán signed a peace and trading treaty that also gave the Maya an independent area from just north of Tulum to the Belize border and inland by a few hundred kilometers.
But the Maya themselves were split. Some disagreed with those following the Talking Cross and declared themselves independent. The Mexican government gave the separatists guns in exchange for autonomy under the Mexican umbrella. There were also the Icaiche Maya, who rebelled against the separatists, the Talking Cross and the Belize Maya.
The British signed a treaty in 1893 with Mexico that recognized the border at Chetumal between Mexico and Belize . The land to the north, including all land the Maya had claimed in their earlier treaty for independence, was considered Mexican. More wars erupted until 1901 when Mexican troops marched into Chan Santa Cruz and stayed. General Ignacio