Thursday, August 15, 2024

Sierra Gorda Part 4: The ancient Huastec people

 

This head of a Huastec boy is part of a full-sized statue. The ears have large holes intended to contain jade spools for personal decoration. The skull was sculpted to show a deliberate deformity. Such deformations were performed by elite parents on the skulls of their infants when the bones were still soft. The purpose was to create an appearance that immediately identified the person as one of the elite class. There are also traces of tattoos on the forehead. 

This posting will focus on the ancient Huastec people who occupied the Sierra Gorda and other areas that comprised the region called the Huasteca. They were an artistic culture and carried on an active trade with people on the coast such as the Totonacs, as well as those of the interior, including the Teotihuacans, Toltecs, and Aztecs. They also had contact with the people of western Mexico known as the Shaft Tomb Culture, who lived in what are now the states of Jalisco, Colima, and Nayarit.

Overview

The Huastec culture occupied parts of the Gulf Coast and Sierra Madre OrientalThe area shown in pink above is called the Huasteca. It incorporates parts of the Mexican states of Vera Cruz, Hidalgo, Querértaro, San Luis Potosi, and Tamaulipas. The Huastec occupation of this area began as early as 1500 BC. Their language is still spoken by
66,000 people, about two-thirds of whom live in San Luis Potosí and one-third in Vera Cruz. The ancient Huastecs were never a single kingdom, much less an empire like the Aztecs. Instead they lived in a large number of independent city-states, like the ancient Greeks. 

The Huastec Adolescent

The "Adolescent of Tamuin" statue is located in the Querétaro Regional Museum. It is a replica of the original, which is in the Museum of History and Anthropology (INAH) in Mexico City. The original was found at a ruined Huastec city near the pueblo of Tamuin in the state of San Luis PotosíHowever, the sign on the base of the statue above indicates that a similar statue was found in Jalpan, in the Sierra Gorda, close to an ancient Huastec city named Tancama

The Adolescent of Tamuin is considered the finest piece of Huastec art in existence. The right hand of the nude statue has its fingers curled in a way that could have once held a flagpole. The oval eyes and the open mouth are features that suggest a strong Teotihuacan influence, possibly brought about by trade contacts. It is even possible that Huastec artists visited Teotihuacan itself during the period when the two civilizations were contemporaries.


Rear view of the Adolescent statue. The life-size adolescent figure appears small, but in the pre-hispanic era people in general were smaller than those of today. Note the odd protrusion in the middle of the statue's back. I was surprised at what I found when I examined the figure more closely.

Most of the cultures of pre-hispanic central Mexico arrived as part of a series of great migrations from the far north that occurred periodically through the centuries. Unlike these others, the Huastecs migrated from what is now Guatemala, near the border with the modern Mexican state of Chiapas

Scientists have determined this through linguistic studies. The Huastec language is an offshoot of Proto-Mayan, from which the many Mayan dialects evolved. It is believed that the Huastecs developed their version of Proto-Mayan around 2000 BC. Five hundred years later, around 1500 BC, they began their great migration toward the Huasteca


On the statue's back are the upside down head of a child and the outlines of its body. The child appears to be strapped on like a papoose. Some scientists believe that the presence of this papoose suggests a link to the god QuetzalcoatlThe outline of the child's body on the replica is too faint to be seen clearly. It is much sharper on the original statue in the Mexico City museum. This may be because the mold used to make the replica did not fully pick up some of the details. 

Over a period of at least 200 years, the Huastecs slowly migrated northward. First, they moved northeast along the Rio Usumacinta, which today forms the border between Mexico and Guatemala. Eventually they turned northwest, following the Gulf Coast. About 1200 BC, the migrants arrived in the area of central Veracruz. For a while, they settled there among a Mixe-Zoque-speaking population who had arrived about 200 years previously. These were the people who eventually developed into the Olmec civilization. 


The neck, left arm, and shoulder are covered with simulated tattoos. At the base of the neck, you can see four small concentric circles and two more on the upper left of the back. Each circle is bisected by two vertical and two horizontal lines. The Teotihuacan and Aztec civilizations both use similar circles in religious contexts. In the Nahuatl language, they are called chalchihuites ("precious stones" or "emeralds"). They represent blood or water, both essential to life. The four lines in each circle may represent the four sacred directions of the world (north, south, east, west), with the circle's center representing the world's center.

As the Olmec civilization rose to power the Huastecs were pushed northward. They moved along the coast and into mountainous areas like the Sierra Gorda, San Luis Potosí, and Tamaulipas. By about 1100 BC, they had settled the region we now call the Huasteca.  However, the rise of the Olmecs in central and southern Veracruz effectively cut off the Huastecs from their Maya-speaking cousins in Yucatan and Guatemala. This isolated them from the later developments of the Maya civilizations in those areas and made the Huastecs a distinct cultural group. 
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Three more large circles appear on the right hip and leg. These are also concentric and have the same vertical and horizontal lines. However, unlike the smaller circles, the larger ones each contain a complex design in their centers. This design appears to be the same in each of them. According to the History and Anthropology Museum of Mexico City, some of the designs on the statue refer to maiz (corn). This is another association with Quetzalcoatl, the god who pre-hispanic people believed gave the gift of maiz to mankind. Some scientists suggest that the statue may be a representation of Quetzalcoatl himself.

Like many other cultures in Mesoamerica, the Huastecs were strongly influenced by the Olmecs, who have become known as the "Mother of Cultures". The Olmecs were the first to build stepped pyramids and the first to play the Mesoamerican ball game. They also pioneered large scale production of maiz, created a 365-day calendar, invented the concept of zero, and may have developed Mesoamerica's first written language (this is disputed). The cities the Huastecs later built show that they adopted many of these Olmec innovations.

Ancient artifacts of the Huastec culture

Necklace with an animal head pendant. The necklace was made with bone and shell. The beautiful little rabbit head appears to have been carved from bone. Jewelry like this was created both for personal use and for trade. Since there were no draft animals in pre-hispanic Mesoamerica, everything had to be carried by human porters. Therefore, items for trade needed to be light and compact. Trade networks throughout the Americas existed from a very early time and were responsible for the spread of goods and cultural ideas. 

While the Huastecs adopted many Olmec innovations, no evidence of a written language has yet been discovered in the Huasteca. The elaborate system of hieroglyphics that the Maya of Guatemala and Yucatan developed did not come about until many centuries after the Olmecs had cut the Huastecs off from those areas.  Consequently, we know very little about their history or system of government during the twelve hundred years between the end of their migration in 1100 BC and the beginning of the Classic Era around 100 AD. Much about the Huastec civilization remains a mystery. 


Jewelry was made from a variety of seashells. The shells would have come primarily from the Gulf Coast, but some could have arrived through trade routes from the Caribbean or even the Pacific Coast. The two shells on top are from some kind of clam, while the four in the middle row appear to be from mollusks, given their spiral openings. The three on the bottom left are probably cowrie shells. I can't identify the six small pieces on the bottom right, Worldwide, people have been making jewelry from shells for as much as 135,000 years

Over the centuries, waves of Nahuatl-speaking migrants settled to the west of the Huasteca.  Further north, fierce nomads inhabited the great deserts. To the south were the Olmecs and later the Totonacs. Being surrounded by these other groups increased the isolation of the Huastecs from much of the rest of Mesoamerica. However, the ruggedness of the Huasteca also spared them for a long time from the incursions of outsiders through invasions or migrations. However, with the rise of the Aztec Empire, all this changed.


Miniature masks and ceremonial pipe, all from Teotihuacan. The finely detailed little masks were probably made from molds. The use of molds to mass produce trade items was a Teotihuacan innovation. The larger mask in the upper right was sculpted from stone and carries the features typical of Teotihuacan facial sculptures. Pipes for smoking tobacco were used for ceremonial purposes as well as for everyday consumption.

The Aztec pattern of conquest started with trade. Their traveling merchant-traders were called Pochteca and they were agents of the state as well as businessmen. During their trading forays, they spied out the riches of the land and the people in an area. If the inhabitants refused to trade, suspecting treachery, the Aztecs took this as a provocation justifying a military response. However, if trade was allowed, eventually the Aztecs proposed that the area's inhabitants become part of the Empire. If these proposals were rejected, military force was always available to change peoples' minds.


A large and heavily weathered stone head, also of Teotihuacan origin. The great trading city of Teotihucan (100 AD - 650 AD) was founded in the Valley of Mexico. It dominated Mesoamerica during the Classic era both economically and culturally. After it fell, nothing comparable existed in Mexico until the Aztec Empire, nine hundred years later. During the period between the rise of Teotihuacan and the rise of the Aztec Empire, the isolation and ruggedness of the Huasteca seems to have spared its people from conquest. 

However, in the mid-1400s, the Huastec city-states finally lost their independence when the Aztecs invaded and conquered them. Following the usual Aztec practice, they left the Huastec culture and governing elites in place for the most part, but demanded regular tribute and recognition of the supremacy of the Aztec emperor. Less than a century later, the Aztecs themselves fell to the Spanish conquistadors and, not long after that, the Huasteca became part of Nueva España. See Part 2 of this series for an account of the arrival of the Spanish and so-called Spiritual Conquest by the Franciscans and other evangelical Orders.


Fragment of a Teotihuacan-style ceremonial "yoke" worn by ball players. Ornamental stone yokes like this were worn on the front of the waist of players during the game's ceremonies. The actual yokes used in play were made of leather and wood and protected a player's midsection against the impact of the heavy rubber ball. The stone version would have been too heavy to use during these intense ball games. According to the display's sign, the design is Teotihuacan. This may be another example of an import or it might have been a copy by a local artisan. 


Clay statue of a seated man with a bowl. This sculpture shows a strong resemblance to those produced by the people of the Shaft Tomb Culture in western Mexico. The figure's long straight nose, high forehead, and seated position holding a bowl are all typical features of the lifelike sculptures they produced. Once again, it is difficult to determine whether this was an import or an imitation by a local sculptor.

By the late Post-Classic period, the Huastecs were producing copper alloys to make jewelry and tools. Metallurgy probably arrived in the Huasteca from trade with the Shaft Tomb people and the Tarascan Empire of Michoacan. Both of them were actively engaged in metallurgy, a practice that they had acquired through trade with the civilizations on the west coast of South America.


A clay statue of an inquisitive deer peers up at visitors. The little statue is missing its left foreleg and part of one antler. I found it a charming example of the work of a long-ago Huastec artisan. The Sierra Gorda abounds with wildlife, including white-tailed deer. The sculptor clearly knew his subject and caught the stance and expression of the deer perfectly. The opening on the deer's back might have been used for burning incense.

This completes Part 4 of my Sierra Gorda series. I hope you have enjoyed it. If so, please leave any thoughts or questions in the Comments section below or email me directly. If you leave a question, please include your email address so that I may respond in a timely manner.

Hasta luego, Jim

















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