

Hero image 0 of Patron Gods and Patron Lords : The Semiotics of Classic Maya Community Cults (Hardcover), 0 of 1
Patron Gods and Patron Lords : The Semiotics of Classic Maya Community Cults (Hardcover)
(No ratings yet)
Key item features
In the first comprehensive treatment of Classic Maya patron deity veneration, Joanne P. Baron demonstrates the central importance of patron deity cults in political relationships between both rulers and their subjects and among different Maya kingdoms. Weaving together evidence from inscriptions, images, and artifacts, Patron Gods and Patron Lords provides new insights into how the Classic Maya polity was organized and maintained.
Using semiotic theory, Baron draws on three bodies of evidence: ethnographies and manuscripts from Postclassic, Colonial, and modern Maya communities that connect patron saints to pre-Columbian patron gods; hieroglyphic texts from the Classic period that discuss patron deity veneration; and excavations from four patron deity temples at the site of La Corona, Guatemala. She shows how the Classic Maya used patron deity effigies, temples, and acts of devotion to negotiate group membership, social entitlements, and obligations between individuals and communities. She also explores the wider role of these processes in politics, arguing that rituals and discourses related to patron deities ultimately formulated Maya rulership as a locally oriented institution, which limited the ability of powerful kingdoms to create wider religious communities.
Applying a new theoretical approach for the archaeological study of ideology and power dynamics, Patron Gods and Patron Lords reveals an overlooked aspect of the belief system of Maya communities.
Using semiotic theory, Baron draws on three bodies of evidence: ethnographies and manuscripts from Postclassic, Colonial, and modern Maya communities that connect patron saints to pre-Columbian patron gods; hieroglyphic texts from the Classic period that discuss patron deity veneration; and excavations from four patron deity temples at the site of La Corona, Guatemala. She shows how the Classic Maya used patron deity effigies, temples, and acts of devotion to negotiate group membership, social entitlements, and obligations between individuals and communities. She also explores the wider role of these processes in politics, arguing that rituals and discourses related to patron deities ultimately formulated Maya rulership as a locally oriented institution, which limited the ability of powerful kingdoms to create wider religious communities.
Applying a new theoretical approach for the archaeological study of ideology and power dynamics, Patron Gods and Patron Lords reveals an overlooked aspect of the belief system of Maya communities.
Specs
- Book formatHardcover
- Fiction/nonfictionNon-Fiction
- Publication dateDecember, 2016
- Pages244
- Age range18 - 99 Years
- Original languagesEnglish
Current price is USD$57.33
Price when purchased online
Out of stock
How do you want your item?
Out of stock
About this item
Product details
"Baron demonstrates the central importance of patron deity cults in political relationships between both rulers and their subjects and different Maya kingdoms. Weaving together evidence from inscriptions, images, and artifacts"--Provided by publisher. In the first comprehensive treatment of Classic Maya patron deity veneration, Joanne P. Baron demonstrates the central importance of patron deity cults in political relationships between both rulers and their subjects and among different Maya kingdoms. Weaving together evidence from inscriptions, images, and artifacts, Patron Gods and Patron Lords provides new insights into how the Classic Maya polity was organized and maintained. Using semiotic theory, Baron draws on three bodies of evidence: ethnographies and manuscripts from Postclassic, Colonial, and modern Maya communities that connect patron saints to pre-Columbian patron gods; hieroglyphic texts from the Classic period that discuss patron deity veneration; and excavations from four patron deity temples at the site of La Corona, Guatemala. She shows how the Classic Maya used patron deity effigies, temples, and acts of devotion to negotiate group membership, social entitlements, and obligations between individuals and communities. She also explores the wider role of these processes in politics, arguing that rituals and discourses related to patron deities ultimately formulated Maya rulership as a locally oriented institution, which limited the ability of powerful kingdoms to create wider religious communities. Applying a new theoretical approach for the archaeological study of ideology and power dynamics, Patron Gods and Patron Lords reveals an overlooked aspect of the belief system of Maya communities.
In the first comprehensive treatment of Classic Maya patron deity veneration, Joanne P. Baron demonstrates the central importance of patron deity cults in political relationships between both rulers and their subjects and among different Maya kingdoms. Weaving together evidence from inscriptions, images, and artifacts, Patron Gods and Patron Lords provides new insights into how the Classic Maya polity was organized and maintained.
Using semiotic theory, Baron draws on three bodies of evidence: ethnographies and manuscripts from Postclassic, Colonial, and modern Maya communities that connect patron saints to pre-Columbian patron gods; hieroglyphic texts from the Classic period that discuss patron deity veneration; and excavations from four patron deity temples at the site of La Corona, Guatemala. She shows how the Classic Maya used patron deity effigies, temples, and acts of devotion to negotiate group membership, social entitlements, and obligations between individuals and communities. She also explores the wider role of these processes in politics, arguing that rituals and discourses related to patron deities ultimately formulated Maya rulership as a locally oriented institution, which limited the ability of powerful kingdoms to create wider religious communities.
Applying a new theoretical approach for the archaeological study of ideology and power dynamics, Patron Gods and Patron Lords reveals an overlooked aspect of the belief system of Maya communities.
Using semiotic theory, Baron draws on three bodies of evidence: ethnographies and manuscripts from Postclassic, Colonial, and modern Maya communities that connect patron saints to pre-Columbian patron gods; hieroglyphic texts from the Classic period that discuss patron deity veneration; and excavations from four patron deity temples at the site of La Corona, Guatemala. She shows how the Classic Maya used patron deity effigies, temples, and acts of devotion to negotiate group membership, social entitlements, and obligations between individuals and communities. She also explores the wider role of these processes in politics, arguing that rituals and discourses related to patron deities ultimately formulated Maya rulership as a locally oriented institution, which limited the ability of powerful kingdoms to create wider religious communities.
Applying a new theoretical approach for the archaeological study of ideology and power dynamics, Patron Gods and Patron Lords reveals an overlooked aspect of the belief system of Maya communities.
info:
We aim to show you accurate product information. Manufacturers, suppliers and others provide what you see here, and we have not verified it. Â
Specifications
Book format
Hardcover
Fiction/nonfiction
Non-Fiction
Genre
Social Science/Archaeology, History/Latin America - Central America, History/Native American, Religion/History, Religion/Religion, Politics & State
Publication date
December, 2016
Warranty
Warranty information
Please be aware that the warranty terms on items offered for sale by third party Marketplace sellers may differ from those displayed in this section (if any). To confirm warranty terms on an item offered for sale by a third party Marketplace seller, please use the 'Contact seller' feature on the third party Marketplace seller's information page and request the item's warranty terms prior to purchase.
Similar items you might like
Based on what customers bought
Rum Maniacs: Alcoholic Insanity in the Early American Republic, (Hardcover) $56.66
$5666current price $56.66Rum Maniacs: Alcoholic Insanity in the Early American Republic, (Hardcover)
The Domestic Commentary On The Old (new) Testament, By A Clergyman Of The Church Of England [r. Shittler] (Hardcover) $40.95
$4095current price $40.95The Domestic Commentary On The Old (new) Testament, By A Clergyman Of The Church Of England [r. Shittler] (Hardcover)
A Synodal Church: The Christian Faithful on Pilgrimage, (Hardcover) $58.00
$5800current price $58.00A Synodal Church: The Christian Faithful on Pilgrimage, (Hardcover)
The Culting of America: What Makes a Cult and Why We Love Them, (Hardcover) $27.55 Was $32.99
$2755current price $27.55, Was $32.99$32.99The Culting of America: What Makes a Cult and Why We Love Them, (Hardcover)
When the Church Harms God's People, (Hardcover) $45.54
$4554current price $45.54When the Church Harms God's People, (Hardcover)
God Knoweth How to Deliver the Godly Out of Temptation (Hardcover) $17.49
$1749current price $17.49God Knoweth How to Deliver the Godly Out of Temptation (Hardcover)
St. Hippolytus and the Church of Rome in the Earlier Part of the Third Century : From the Newly-Disc (Hardcover) $38.74
$3874current price $38.74St. Hippolytus and the Church of Rome in the Earlier Part of the Third Century : From the Newly-Disc (Hardcover)
God I Am So F**king Angry with You!, (Hardcover) $48.99
$4899current price $48.99God I Am So F**king Angry with You!, (Hardcover)
Routledge Library Editions: The Ancient Gods and Heroes of the Greeks, (Paperback) $41.99
$4199current price $41.99Routledge Library Editions: The Ancient Gods and Heroes of the Greeks, (Paperback)
Tooke's Pantheon of the Heathen Gods and Illustrious Heroes, (Hardcover) $36.95
$3695current price $36.95Tooke's Pantheon of the Heathen Gods and Illustrious Heroes, (Hardcover)
The Divine Wisdom of the Dracvida Saints (Hardcover) $36.70
$3670current price $36.70The Divine Wisdom of the Dracvida Saints (Hardcover)
The Mind: The Pulpit of GOD, (Hardcover) $25.88
$2588current price $25.88The Mind: The Pulpit of GOD, (Hardcover)
Pre-Owned Baby's First Bible (Hardcover) 0784704600 9780784704608 $3.99 Was $4.89
2 optionsAvailable in additional 2 options$399current price $3.99, Was $4.89$4.89Pre-Owned Baby's First Bible (Hardcover) 0784704600 9780784704608
God's Blessed Angel (Paperback) $14.20
$1420current price $14.20God's Blessed Angel (Paperback)
Liquordom In New York City (Hardcover) $26.95
$2695current price $26.95Liquordom In New York City (Hardcover)
Get in the Game 2: A Multidimensional Perspective: The Metaphysical Lawbook of Divine Justice, (Paperback) $27.20
$2720current price $27.20Get in the Game 2: A Multidimensional Perspective: The Metaphysical Lawbook of Divine Justice, (Paperback)
Asbury Theological Seminary Series in World Christian Revita: Voices from the Fair (Paperback) $36.33
$3633current price $36.33Asbury Theological Seminary Series in World Christian Revita: Voices from the Fair (Paperback)
The Benevolent Deity: Ebenezer Gay and the Rise of Rational Religion in New England, 1696-1787, (Hardcover) $65.96
$6596current price $65.96The Benevolent Deity: Ebenezer Gay and the Rise of Rational Religion in New England, 1696-1787, (Hardcover)
Pre-Owned Grace Grows Best in Winter (Hardcover) 080283616X $9.17
$917current price $9.17Pre-Owned Grace Grows Best in Winter (Hardcover) 080283616X
Go Goddess!: From Depleted to Divine (Hardcover) $30.30
$3030current price $30.30Go Goddess!: From Depleted to Divine (Hardcover)
Customer ratings & reviews
0 ratings|0 reviews
This item does not have any reviews yet
