The Lost Mayan Pyramids

El Mirador in the northern of province of El Petén, Guatemala.
El Mirador, hidden in the northern of province of El Petén, Guatemala for 2,000 years.

I. Mesoamerican Guatemala
At first glance, modern Guatemala is an unlikely place to find the ancient, lost legacy of the ancient Mayan people. This is for two reasons. Number one, Guatemala is at what was once presumed to be the extreme south of the ancient Mayan empire - an empire that stretched out across the Yucatan Peninsula encompassing Guatemala, Honduras, Belize and southern Mexico.

Number two, starting in 1518 AD, the Spanish Empire re-made the entire country into their own image nearly 500 years ago destroying ancient monuments and history along the way.

When the Spanish Empire was finished conquering Guatemala, they forever changed the native people and their customs transforming the country into a European model while draining the it of it's identity as well as it's silver and gold. Both were used to fuel Spanish wars and swell the ranks of their rising empire.

What could remain today from Mesoamerican culture after a spiritual and economic decimation that was fully realized hundreds of years ago?

Only the impenetrable Central American rain forests in the unexplored, wild lowlands could hold long lost answers and keep these secrets for thousands of years. The jungle alone would shelter the roots of the Mayan culture while the Spanish Empire rose and fell. It also managed to hold these secrets while Guatemala fell into the chaos of civil war after the Spanish left in 1829 AD after a 300 year rule.

The jungle held these secrets until modern archeologists, led by Dr. Richard Hansen Senior Scientist at the Institute for Mesoamerican Research from the Department of Anthropology of Idaho State University, began an exhaustive campaign of discovery in the northern province of El Petén that started with recovering the ancient Mayan capital in 2008.

A Pre-Classic Mayan Calendar circa 250 AD made 1,750 years before the arrival of the Spanish Conquistadores.

II. The Lost Jungle Empire
Six-hundred years before the rise of the Spanish Empire in Central America in the 16th Century, the Mayans were the unquestioned rulers of much of Mexico and Central America for thousands of years. Recent discoveries made by Dr. Hansen suggest that they ruled from Pre-Columbian northern Guatemala.

From near modern El Petén, the Mayans established a civilization that began in 2000 BC while Stonehenge rose in England and the first horses were being tamed in Europe.

By 600 BC, the Maya had developed the world's first highways, monumental architecture, massive urban planning, agriculture and even turkey farming used to feed massive populations of priests, warriors and peasants.

These Maya, identified by Dr. Hansen as "The Kingdom of the Snake" or "Lords Of Kan" ("kan" being the Mayan word for snake) were extraordinary in their complexity and depth of knowledge yet were utterly wiped out before the first Conquistadores landed in the New World.

A panel found at nearby Cancuén in the Pasión subregion of the central Maya lowlands in El Petén.

What happened to such a large, sophisticated civilization? Why were their monuments so remarkably intact 2400 years after they disappeared? What caused what has been called "The Classic Maya Collapse"?

To attempt to answer such a question we must first understand the ancient history of this region.

Traditionally, archaeologists have divided the history of Central America into three distinct periods. They are: The Pre-Classic period from 2000 BC to 250 BC, the Classic period from 250 AD to 900 AD and the Calistic Period from 900 AD to 1500 AD.

The last period, the Calistic, encompasses a time that begins with the end of the Mayan culture and ends with the dissolution of the Aztecas. The Aztecas, as a recognized historical fact, were wiped out by the arrival of the Spanish in 1518. But could the Aztecas themselves have been responsible for the end the Mayas in 900 AD at the start of the Calistic Period?

In 2008, modern archeologists made an incredible and shocking find in the dense jungle canopy that may provide more answers to this question. This is a new find that archeologists, including experts at the Smithsonian, believe was once the capital of the Mayan world, the lost city of El Mirador - once home to over 200,000 ancient people from the year 700 BC to 900 AD.

El Mirador in the northern of province of El Petén, Guatemala.
The city of El Mirador located in the very strategic center of the Yucatan Peninisula along the far northern border of modern Guatemala.

III. Ancient Site, Modern Purpose
El Mirador, meaning "observation point" in Spanish, is theorized to have been the heart of a huge Mayan metropolis. The city flourished in the late Pre-Classic period near 300 BC and reached a possible population of 200,000 people by it's sudden end in 900 AD.

To add to this theory's credibility, in 1995 Dr. James O’Kon published a paper that suggested that the Usamacinta River, nearby to El Mirador in Yaxchilán, was the site of the world's largest ancient bridge. Dr. O'Kon also suggested this was in fact a brick-and-mortar suspension bridge. This innovation was built 1300 years before the Brooklyn Bridge between 700 AD - 500 AD. The massive bridge would have served the Maya in transporting warriors and farmers from the nearby north western city of Yaxchilán to El Peten. Soldiers and merchants from across the country would have had a clear route to and from the Mayan capital providing long-term security and sustenance.

Yet this highway could have also contributed in aiding the Mayan's arch-enemies as well. Obsidian arrowheads and spear tips, that originate near Mexico City hundreds of miles away in ancient Aztec territory, dot the landscape around El Tigre pyramid complex inside of El Mirador.

These remarkably well-preserved weapons also contain DNA evidence about the battles that took place in the city. Researchers are currently analyzing this evidence that they indicate appear to come from two sources - Mayan and Aztec.

This discovery suggests that El Mirador was the site of a ferocious battle inside it's city walls against it's fiercest enemy. It is inconclusive at this point if the Aztecas destroyed the Maya in their capital in 900 AD but the evidence is mounting.

A variety of possible factors have also been identified as contributing to the end of the Maya including ecological collapse, natural catastrophe, drought, disease, cultural evolution, internal revolt, overpopulation or a combination of these factors.

The remaining populations that abandoned cities like El Mirador moved north into the upper Yucatan Peninsula in modern Mexico.

Today, Dr. Hansen is continuing to uncover sprawling plazas, temple structures and ancient monuments. Yet, Dr. Hansen's effort are at risk due to the fighting of drug cartels who discourage research and tourism and local cattle barons who continue to slash-and-burn the forests surrounding the El Mirador Basin.

References:
Wikipedia, Guatemala
Wikipedia, El Mirador
Wikipedia, History Of Geatemala
Wonder Mundo, El Mirador, An Ancient Maya Metropolis
Smithsonian Magazine, El Mirador The Lost City Of The Maya
Google Maps, El Mirador Location Site

The Old Man Of The Mountain

The ruins of the fortress of Alamut in the mountain country of Iran.
The ruins of the fortress of Alamut in the mountain country of Iran.

I. The Abbasid And The Order Of The Assassins
In 1258 AD, the largest Mongol horde ever assembled, directed by Genghis Khan's grandson Möngke Khan and personally led by his brother Hulagu, completely destroyed the jewel of the Middle East: the city of Baghdad in modern Iraq.

At this time, Baghdad was the largest city in the world. It was also the seat of the 500 year-old Sunni Islamic Abbasid Caliphate (750 AD – 1258 AD). The powerful Caliphate's rule expanded across North Africa, Iraq, Iran, Turkey, Saudi Arabia, Israel, Afghanistan, Egypt, India, Pakistan and Lebanon (see map below). It had established itself by destroying the massive Umayyad Caliphate that had stretched as far as Cordoba in Spain. The Umayyad were non-denominational Islamic rulers, incorporating both Sunni and Shi'a wings into their empire until their downfall in their capital in Iraq in 750 AD.

That uprising was famously led by a imam (priest) called Ibrahim who claimed to be a descendent of Muhammad's youngest uncle. Ibrahim achieved considerable success but was captured in 747 and died in prison. The uprising was taken up by his brother Abdallah, known by the name of Abu al-'Abbas as-Saffah, who defeated the Umayyads in 750 AD in the Battle of the Zab near the Great Zab river. Abbas was subsequently proclaimed the Caliph (religious ruler) of his new empire: the Sunni Abbasid Empire[0].

The Abbasid faced many enemies during their reign. Parallel caliphates such as the Fatimids (909-1171), a Shi'a caliphate based in Egypt in northern Africa, and large military threats such as the Seljuq Empire (1037-1194) in Turkey provided no shortage of battles and insurrections within the Middle East up until the time of the Mongol invasions in 1208 AD.

By the time that the approaching Mongol horde tore through modern Iraq and Iran the Abbasid were already deeply scarred from being entrenched in a state of constant warfare from two sides for hundreds of years against two enormous military powers which they only narrowly triumphed against.

The massive Mongol cavalry overwhelmed the Abbasid's defensive remaining positions in the east. They burned the colossal libraries and madrassas (schools) that produced the skilled leaders and teachers of the Abbasid world. By doing so, the Mongols annihilated all who stood in their path or would be able challenge them one day. After their attacks on the borderlands and desert cities, the armies of Inner Asia filled the ancient Mesopotamian irrigation canals that fed large cities, like Baghdad, with the rotting carcasses of the war dead to poison the water supply. Their tactics scattered the best and brightest of the Golden Age of Islam into the barren sands and effectively ended the Abbasid empire.

Two years before Baghdad fell, in 1256 AD, the most feared warriors of the Abbasid were destroyed by the Mongols before they could be an effective military threat to the Horde's plan to surround and lay siege to the capital. They fell in their isolated mountain stronghold of Alamut in nothern Iran. Today, these men are remembered as the Assassins.

The word "assassin" comes into being to describe lone or small groups of highly dangerous soldiers encountered by European Crusaders the called the Hashshahsin. The Hashshahsin were a secretive military society from the Islamic sect of Ismailis of the Shi'a wing of the Islamic religion. The Ismailis were made up of Persians (Iranians) and Syrians that were employed by the Sunni Abbasid, taking a non-demoninational page from the Umayyad, to serve as enemies of the Seljuk Empire that ruled from 1037-1194 in Turkey and the dominate Shi'a Caliphate, The Fatmid Caliphate, in ancient northern Africa from 909-1171 AD.

The word hash or hashish also comes into being from descriptions of the Iranian Order of Assassins whose induction methodology reportedly included drugging prospective members with a local drug, hashish. Christian Crusaders first reported them as early as 1080 AD.

Two Arabic words become important contributions to the modern word "assassin". The first word is "hashishiyya". It was originally used as a slur to describe the Ismali sect as irreligious, social outcasts. This is important to understand how the Order began, as misunderstood outcasts from society.

The second word is "Hasaneen" (ha'sah'neen) which literally means followers of Hasan. The Order of Assassins was founded by the dynamic Shi'a leader Hasan-i Sabbah. In the year 1094 AD, Hasan established the Order's permanent base of operations high in the mountains of northern Iran.

Sabbah, and the Shi'a imams who followed him, used the religious organization to secure military power within the Abbasid empire due to their indispensable and lethal abilities. Hasan-i Sabban was so successful that he is still referred to as "Sayyidna" meaning "Our Master" in Arabic.

II. From Missionary To Master
Let us next look at the man the Golden Hordes of Genghis Khan and Christian Crusaders learned to fear. Let us look at the life of Hasan-i Sabbah, the Grand Master of Assassins.

Sabbah himself began life near modern Tehran in Rayy, Iran. He spent his early life as a wandering Persian missionary of the Ismali tradition learning and teaching mathematics, astronomy and history. While he was traveling in Egypt in 1071 AD, at the age of 17, his teaching and his connections to the government of the parallel caliphate of the Fatmid Caliphate brought Sabban to the attention of the highest of the local authorities - who promptly imprisoned him.

The crime: heresy and inciting unrest - both capital offenses.

The Abbasid Caliphate (750 AD – 1258 AD) stretched from northern Africa past modern Saudi Arabia.
The Abbasid Caliphate (750 AD – 1258 AD) reached from northern Africa past modern Saudi Arabia. Alamut was located near the Tabaristan region. (Larger View)

Hasan was not executed but was eventually released. He was taken from the desert prison in Egypt and deported back to Iran. There, he continued his missionary work in northern Iran where he gathered many Shi'a and Ismali followers in the mountain fortress called Alamut. In Arabic Alamut means "Eagle's Teaching" or alternatively "Eagle's Nest".

The famous story of the founding of Alamut is that the crafty Hasan-i Sabbah asked the Governor of medieval Tehran to buy a piece of land "large enough to covered by the skin of a cow". The official, in his haste to be seen as doing a favor for the popular missionary, agreed. Saban then cut the cow hide into hundreds of tiny pieces and spread them over the mountainside.[1]

It was here at Alamut, in the Alborz Mountains in the Tabaristan region 60 miles north of modern Tehran and south of the Caspian Sea, that Hasan-i Sabah would become known as The Old Man Of The Mountain.

He was named after his reclusive habit of permanent entrenchment in the near impenetrable stronghold in the mountains. Something from the Egyptian prison must simmered deeply within Sabban as he turned the religious order into a merciless society devoted to committing politically aimed murders. From the Eagle's Nest he used the same feverish zeal that he had once pursued knowledge and religious release with to seek out enemies and threats and eliminate them.

Hasan-i Sabbah lived in Alamut from 1094 AD to 1124 AD, ordering his men to seek out political leaders, sheiks, and English crusaders of his day and executing them.

The structural system of Ismali Missionary service that Sabbah was trained in started at the lowest position of "footsoldier" or "Fida'i", followed by "Rafik" or "comrade", and finally the "Da'I" or "missionary".

Sabbah, a Da'I himself, modeled his own secret society of assassins much in the same way. Alamut's order started at the top with himself as "Grand Headmaster", then “Greater Propagandists”, followed by "Propagandists", then the "Companions" (also called Rafiks), and the "Adherents" ("Lasiqs" also known by the Ismali title "Fida'i"). Interchangeable titles among the lower ranks meant that Sabbah could double his foot-soldiers and sergeants - or disavow them from the "inner order" after they failed or succeeded "too well". This is much like the modern concept of "plausible deniability".

It was from among these new enlistees, the Lasiqs or Fida'i, who were trained to become some of the most feared assassins - the newest and most zealous of the Assassins. These men were often self-sacrificing agents or suicide bombers of their day - carrying poisoned daggers to court or into madrassas. There they would assassinate key figures despite without fear of any consequences afterward. It's worth noting that Fida'i also means "sacrifice" in Arabic.

The Lasiqs were fully indoctrinated much like today's suicide bombers are. They were brainwashed with the fanatical belief that they would be rewarded with Paradise after their murderous mission as a martyr ended. Sabbah himself set up this indoctrination by drugging initiates in the cult, drugging them with hashish and then allowing them access to his personal gardens and harems which he described to them as Heaven itself. A heaven that would await them after their mission was complete.

Hasan-i Sabbah survived many intrigues in his mountain fortress before Alamut was eventually passed on to new Grand Masters and then to Shi'a imams before Hulagu besieged it in 1256 AD.

After Hulagu's Mongol guard murdered the current ruler of Alamut, Khudavand Khurshah who had surrendered after a long battle, he took possession of the vast libraries of Alamut - one of the last of the great repositories of knowledge in the ancient Middle Eastern world to survive the Mongol invasion. Afterwards, Alamut was demolished to it's very foundations.

III.After The Horde And The Abbasid In Southern Iran and Cairo
When in was clear that the Mongols intended to destroy the city, Muslims feared that a supernatural disaster would strike if the blood of Al-Musta'sim, a direct descendant of Muhammad's uncle and the last reigning Abbasid caliph in Baghdad, was spilled. The Shiites of Persia stated that no such calamity had happened after the deaths of the original Shiite leader Hussein.

Nevertheless, as a precaution and in accordance with a Mongol taboo which forbade spilling royal blood, Hulagu had Al-Musta'sim wrapped in a carpet and trampled to death by horses on February 20th 1258. The Caliph's immediate family was also executed.

Following the devastation of Baghdad, a few surviving members of the Abbasid dynastic family led by the eldest amongst them, Ismail II, made their way into the region of Fars in Southern Iran where they rebuilt libraries and learning centers in the region. There they have lived until modern times.

In 1261, an Abbasid caliphate was re-established in Cairo, Egypt. The first Abbasid caliph of Cairo was Al-Mustansir. The Abbasid caliphs in Egypt continued to maintain the presence of authority, but it was confined to religious matters. The Abbasid caliphate of Cairo lasted until the time of Al-Mutawakkil III, who was taken away as a prisoner by Selim I to Constantinople where he had a ceremonial role. He died in 1543, following his return to Cairo.

NOTES:
[0] = Cited from Wikipedia Umayyad Caliphate, Abbasid Revolution.
[1] = Cited from a story recounted on Alamut.com


References:
Wikipedia, Hashshashin
Wikipedia, Hasan-i-Sabbah
National Geographic, Iran's Castle Of The Assassins
Hub Pages, Battle Of Baghdad
Disinfo, Hasan bin Sabbah
Encyclopedia Iranica, Ismaili History