This volume retraces the development and magnificent flowering of Mayan architecture in Mexico, Guatemala, Honduras, and Belize over the period 300 B.C.-A.D. 1500. Tikal, the earliest Mayan religious center, Palenque, famous for its ceremonial center, and Copan, with its hieroglyphic staircase featuring 2500 glyphs, are among the cites featured.
Henri Stierlin, nacido en Alejandría en 1928. Entre 1964 y 1972, una colección de 16 volúmenes titulada Architecture Universelle fue editada bajo su dirección por las Éditions de l’Office du Livre. Ha publicado también Tanis-Trésor des Pharaons, París 1987, Les Pharaons bâtisseurs, París 1992 y L’Or des Pharaons, París 1993.
Profusely illustrated in color, this is a survey of several Mayan sites focused on architecture, both general construction and decorative design, from Olmec precursors to Spanish conquest. It is not complete (Coba, for instance, is barely mentioned), but it does attempt to be thoroughly representative of the monumental stone structures at some of the foremost ceremonial sites--at many of which the author believes aristocrats to have dwelled. Other architectural matters, such as irrigation systems, the dwellings of commoners, isolated stone 'stupas' and other structures, are not covered. Although written for the general public and designed as a coffee-table book, some of the language is technical. Egregiously missing are any maps detailing areas greater than the ceremonial centers themselves. This, to me, is an incredible oversight.
I think the author makes some unsupported assertions about the Mayan peoples and their culture. But the photos and maps are spectacular and informative, and the author includes a lot of data and explanations of the buildings and their purposes. I liked the discussions of the architectural elements.