Mesoamerican ballgame
The Mesoamerican ballgame, known in Spanish as juego de pelota, was a sport with ritual associations played for over 3000 years by the peoples of Mesoamerica in Pre-Columbian times, and in a few places continues to be played by the local Amerind inhabitants.
Origins
The Mesoamerican ballgame may have originated with the Olmecs or perhaps earlier. Although one ball court was discovered at San Lorenzo Tenochtitlán, most evidence for the Olmec ballgame exists in the form of artwork. Early Olmec figurines depict wearing the same type of padded belts and padded arm and leg bands. Figurines were also found depicting female ballplayers wearing padded protection on their stomach and legs. The regalia of these figurines contain corn iconography which suggests an association between the ballgame and fertility rituals. The game followed Olmec trade networks out of Veracruz. Excavations by Michael Coe uncovered a number of ballplayer figurines at San Lorenzo which were radiocarbon-dated as far back as 1250-1150 BC. He also uncovered a stone monument, Monument 34, a life-size kneeling male wearing a padded belt, shoulder and knee protectors and a mirror pendant (a symbol of the Olmec Sun God). This monument could not be dated, but it is evidence of the growing significance of the ballgame in political and religious rituals.
Mythology
The Popol Vuh establishes the importance of the Maya ball game as more than just a sport. It provides important analogues for interpreting the ball game from a mythological perspective. The first adventures related to the ball game establish the relationship between people and gods. The story begins with the Hero Twins' father, Hun Hunahpu, and uncle, Vucub Hunahpu, born to the old gods Xpiacoc and Xmucane. The lords of the underworld, Xibalba got annoyed with the noise from the Hun Hunahpu and Vucub Hunahpu’s ball playing. The brothers’ ball court is located on the eastern edge of the Earth near the great abyss. The primary lords of Xibalba, One Death and Seven Death, send owls to lure the twins to play ball in the ball court of Xibalba, situated on the western edge of the underworld. It is a dangerous trip though, and the brothers fall asleep. They are sacrificed by the lords of Xibalba and buried in the ball court. The story relates the playing of the ball game with sacrifice. Hun Hunahpu’s head is cut off and placed in a fruit tree, which bears calabash gourds for the first time. This is also connected with the prominence of decorative cut heads of animals and birds worn as headdresses.
The story continues after the Hero Twins, Hunahpu and Xbalanque, are born. They find the ball game equipment in their father’s house and start playing the ball game, to the annoyance of the gods of Xibalba again. Unlike their father and uncle, the twins survive various tough tests, with the help of a mosquito (who bites each of the gods of Xibalba, forcing them to identify themselves to the boys). They go on to play the ball game with the lords of Xibalba. Along the way, the twins deceive the lords of Xibalba into thinking the twins are dead when they jump into a soup. Miraculously the twins are reborn as catfish, change back to human form, and perform mock sacrifices in which the victim is allegedly resurrected. When a couple of the lords of Xibalba, One Death and Seven Death, offer themselves for a mock sacrifice, the twins trick the gods and carry out a real sacrifice. The twins spare the lives of the remaining gods of Xibalba, but tell them that henceforth they will only be allowed to be offered sacrifices of animal blood and croton sap and that they can only bother people on Earth who are weak or have guilt. The twins are unsuccessful at their attempts at reviving their father so they leave him buried in the ball court of Xibalba. That’s why the words ball court and graveyard are synonymous. Ball courts became ritually linked with death in perpetuity.The ball court became a place of transition, a liminal stage between life and death. The ball court makers along the centerline of the playing field depicted mythical scenes of the ball game, usually bordered by a quatrefoil that marked an opening of a portal into another world. One lesson from the Popol Vuh is that playing the ball game can be life-threatening and also that trickery may be the only way to deceive your opponents.
Significance
The game appears in various myths, sometimes as a struggle between day and night deities, or the battles between the gods in the sky and the lords of the underworld. The ball symbolized the sun, moon, or stars, and the rings (see below) signified sunrise and sunset, or equinoxes. With the rise of Maya culture, the significance of the ritual ballgame becomes clearer. Much time and energy was spent building ball courts. Courts were considered to be portals to the Maya underworld and were built in low-lying areas or at the foot of great vertical constructions. The Great Ball Court at Chichen Itza is the largest ball court in Mesoamerica. A six-panel carving at Chichen Itza depicts a scene from the Popul Vuh (the Maya creation story), which has long sections relating stories of the ritual ballgames between the Maya Hero Twins and the demonic Lords of Xibalba, indicating the cosmological significance of the ballgame in Maya ideology. Additional evidence of the Maya game comes from Maya vase paintings. Maya vases are often painted with scenes of the ritual ballgame. Players are depicted wearing padding on their forearms and knees and U-shaped yokes. The players are also often depicted wearing elaborate headdresses indicating their high status and explaining humans’ place in the world.
Playing ball engaged one in the maintenance of the cosmic order of the universe and the ritual regeneration of life. It was a game of chance, skill, and trickery reflecting life. The team effort engaged individuals in shared behavior and culture, introducing, reinforcing, and reinventing the game of life and peoples’ place in the cosmic order. By Late Classic times, the ball game was ritually associated with the endemic warfare among city-states of the times. The success of military conquest was recreated in a public and ritual ball game, in which high-ranking war captives were defeated and sacrificed. Sometimes they were kept, tortured, and displayed for years before their sacrifice.
The game
As might be expected with a game played over so long a timespan in several different nations, details of the games varied over time and place, so the Mesoamerican ballgame might be more accurately seen as a family of related games. Some versions were played between two individuals, others between 2 teams of players. For the Aztecs, it was a nobles' game and was often associated with heavy betting. According to Fray Diego Duran, gambling was often a problem. People evidently bet everything they owned and even staked themselves, ending up as slaves.
The goal was to knock the ball into the opponent's end of the court; in post-Classical times, the object was to make the ball pass through one of two vertical stone rings that were placed on each side of the court; in the surviving version of ulama, the goal has evolved to resemble volleyball. Each player often had a teammate directly behind him or her to provide backup. The ball was thrown by hand into the court, and thenceforth the players hit it back and forth with hips, thighs, and upper arms (but not by kicking or throwing with one’s hands) and through hoops set along the side walls of the court. Both men and women played the game. Children also played the game casually for simple recreation. There are obviously no eye-witnesses to the Classic Maya ball game, but perhaps the sixteenth century Aztec ball game that the Spaniards witnessed may provide some comparisons. In the Aztec ball game points were lost by a player who let the ball bounce more than twice before returning it to the other team, who let the ball go outside the court, or who failed to pass the rather heavy ball (weighting 3 to 4 kilograms) through one of the stone hoops placed on each wall along the center line. In the Maya area there are similar hoops, some of which were quite high, as at Chichen Itza, where they were set 6 meter from the grond.
The ball game was extremely violent. The players worn protective quilted cotton armor, perhaps filled with unspun cotton, wrapped around waist yokes probably made of wood, but certainly not the stone yokes found at some sites. Hachas, or carved heads, often trophy heads, were set into the yokes, as shown on a Late Classic pottery figurine ball player wearing a yoke with a bird hacha. Brightly painted deer hides adorned with feathers were worn around the hips and provided some additional protection, as well as adding to the rich attire of the players. Players also wore knee pads and had protective wrappings on their legs and lower arms. On certain occasions, the players wore elaborate headdresses, the latter commonly depicted on painted pottery vessels. Some of the players were masked, as in the case of Yax Pac from Copan, underscoring the ritual play of the ball game.
There were often serious injuries, and occasionally death. Some bruises were so bad that they would have to be cut open, and the blood squeezed out. This would have certainly been significant in the rituals of sacrifice and bloodletting that accompanied the Aztec ballgame. On some occasions post-game ceremonies featured the sacrifice of the captain and other players on the losing (some references say "winning") side. The association of the game with sacrifice and death was particularly marked on the Gulf coast. A loser's skull might be used as the core around which a new rubber ball would be made. (Conversely, guides at Chichen Itza assert that the prize for the winning team was to be deified by losing their heads, supposedly at the hands of the losing team.) Human sacrifice became a more common outcome of the ball game, particularly at the royal courts of powerful cities. Late Classic Maya nobles were warriors and ball players. A step on a hieroglyphic staircase at Yaxchilan, for example, shows King Bird Jaguar defeating a war captive in the ball game, and there is a written reference to a war captive on an altar in Tikal. War captives played ball against the war victors, with the outcome being predetermined. Following the game which was a ritual reenactment of the defeat of a city-state, the captives were commonly decapitated or their hearts were torn out for blood sacrifice. The walls of the principle ball court at Chichen Itza depict opposing teams, with the leader of the winning team holding the decapitated head of the opposing leader, who kneels with blood in the form of snakes spewing from his neck.
The Ball
Understanding the importance of the rubber ball in the Mesoamerican ballgame is imperative if one is to grasp all of the levels of symbolism. Archaeological evidence indicates that rubber was already in use in Mesoamerica by the Early Formative Period (1600 BC). By the time of the Spanish Conquest, rubber was being exported from tropical zones to all over Mesoamerica. Iconography suggests that although there were many uses for rubber, rubber balls both for offerings and for ritual ballgames were the primary products. Solid rubber balls were burned in front of images of deities and inside pyramids and shrines. In addition to the symbolic equations already mentioned—such as the ball representing cosmological movement— the rubber balls were symbolic of fertility as both the Aztecs and the Maya equated the latex that flowed from inside of the tree with blood and semen.
The games was played with a hard rubber ball made from latex of the rubber tree (Castilla elastica), which was indigenous to Central America. The latex can be made into rubber by heating. This rubber was quite startling, to the sixteenth century Spaniards. Europeans of the time had no similar ball that could bounce for their sports. Although no rubber balls have been recovered from ancient Maya sites, three bowls the sacred cenote at Chichen Itza contain a mixture of rubber, copal, jade, and shell that had been burned as an offering before the vessels were thrown into the cenote. Somewhat deformed from centuries in the ground, the actual Olmec rubber ball from El Manatí, Veracruz, Mexico, was preserved because of its waterlogged setting. The balls evidently varied in size up to 30 centimeters in diameter and were solid.
The Court
Ball courts, especially those of the main political cities of the Late Classic Maya, were public spaces used for a variety of elite cultural events and ritual activities like musicals and festivals, and of course, the ball game. Pictorial depictions often show musicians playing at ball games. The depictions of masked players underscores the dramatic, ritual aspect of the ball game and the link with other forms of drama that may have unfolded on the court, as suggested by the painted murals at Bonampak, for example. Certainly, ordinary people also played the ball game, using fields unmarked by the grandiose stone-lined courts of the Royal Maya.
Most ball courts were I-shaped, with a long, narrow playing field flanked by vertical, sloping, or stepped walls that were plastered and brightly painted. The end zones evidently held temporary scaffolding for seating. It has been estimated that the average size of the field measured 36.5 meters by 9 meters, although there was tremendous variation. Stone friezes on the walls, as at Chichen Itza, depicted ritual sacrifice. The largest ball court is the main one at Chichen Itza, measuring 185 meters long and 70 meters wide – longer than an American football field.
The court or field where the game was played was called tlachtli by the Aztec and tlaxtli by neighboring central Mexican peoples; the game itself was called ollama, or ulama in Sinaloa (where it continues to be played); and poc-ta-tok was a Yucatec Maya name for the game.
Across Mesoamerica, ball courts were built and used for many generations, and their shapes and sizes vary. Some sites had multiple ball courts, and others had only one. Ballcourts are found in most sizable Mesoamerican ruins, although in some areas they are conspicuously absent.
Ancient cities with particularly fine ballcourts in good condition include Copán, Iximche, Monte Albán, Uxmal, and Zaculeu; the grandest ancient ballcourt of all is at Chichen Itza, measuring 166 by 68 metres. Strangely, a ball court has not been found in the ruins at Teotihuacan.
Ball game in art
Ball players and the ballgame are a common theme in Mesoamerican art. Vessels for the ritual consumption of cacao often depict detailed scenes of ball courts and ball players in full regailia--protective padding and elaborate headdresses. It is fitting that Maya vessels used for drinking cacao beverages are often decorated with scenes from the ritual ballgame; it represents many layers of symbolism. The cacao fruit is symbolic of a human heart because it is similarly divided into chambers. The beverage produced from cacao beans is dark and thick like blood, and is consumed in ritual practices. From another point of view, cacao beans are used as currency. It is thought that sacrifices performed following a ritual ballgame were attempts by rulers to appease the gods and ensure fertility and economic abundance. The rubber balls used in the ballgame also have economic symbolism in that the rubber used to produce them was also central to their trade economy. All of these layers interconnect so that scenes of the ritual ballgame, played to ensure economic stability and abundance, appear on vessels for drinking cacao--itself an economic staple, consumed ritually as a symbol for human blood. The vases are often rimmed with glyphs.
The ceramic cylinder vessels with ballgame scenes, although with unknown origin, were believed to have belonged to a kingdom centered near Zapote Bobal and El Pajaral, Guatemala. On one of the vessels found, there is a vertical column(glyph) that names a king of Motul de San José of the adjacent kingdom to the west that encompassed Lake Peten-Itza. The realtionship between the two domain is unclear, but it is possible that the scenes allude to an inter-kingdom contest, rather than the more familiar rituals of post-battle sacrifice or mythic re-enactment of the great Underworld game.
One of the most famous ceramic figurines of ballplayers were the so called "paired figurines" found in Jaina, Mexico (AD 600-900). They were found together during Mexican excavations on the Jaina Island in the early 1960s. These ballplayer figurines work together as a pair. Each goes down on his left knee and cocks the left arm, and they can easily be arranged to be in eternal play, the ball suspended in the observer's mind for all time. The maker of these figurines took care to detail the costumes. Protective wraps shield only one arm, from wrist to elbow, along with a single knee pad. Probably this was to show how they complete and complement each other in order to exist as a pair. Thick cotton quilting, perhaps attached to wicker or wood, is then held in place with great ropes or bands. The simple caps on their heads suggest that the figurines may once have sported elaborate headgear, now lost.
Other figurines, mainly found in Jalisco (Mexico), depicted seated ballplayers, in the American Etzatlán style of Jalisco, holding a large ball. The ceramic sculpture of Jalisco was used as funerary offerings in the tombs of members of important families. It is conjectured that depictions of ballplayers were meant to accompany the burial of a man who had been a skilled player.
Another piece of art relating the ball game were the circular stones found in La Esperanza, Mexico (existed around AD 591). The stones made from limestone were often set face-up in the central alley of ball courts where, as one of three, they demarked playing zones or scoring devices in the game. The examples from La Esperanza, a small site near the larger one of Chinkultic, Chiapas, Mexico, carry especially well preserved scenes. The most often depicted ballplayer wears a long kilt of animal hide, along with a heavy waist belt, knee and forearm protectors, as he kneels to strike a ball. The ball itself displays the finely incised portrait of Hun Hunahpu, the father of the Hero Twins. According to the Popol Vuh, the Underworld foes outwit Hunahpu, decapitate him, and introduce his head as a ball in the game. The scalloped cut-shell design of his headdress identifies the ballplayer himself to be an important Underworld deity. The captions to the scene, however, make clear that this is an impersonation ritual, and that the player is actually a lord of Chinkultic, a kingdom anciently known as Sky (chan). The rim inscriptions on one of the stones describe the dedication of the stone, and probably the ball court it once graced, on 19 May 591.
References
- Whittington E. Michael (Ed.) (2001). The Sport of Life and Death - The Mesoamerican Ballgame. Mint Museum of Art: Thames & Hudson. ISBN 0-500-05108-9.
- Scarborough, Vernon L. and Wilcox, David R. (Eds.) (1991). The Mesoamerican Ballgame. Tucson: University of Arizona Press.
- Berden, Frances F. (2005) The Aztecs of Central Mexico An Imperial Society, Wadsworth, California.
- Bradley, Douglas E. (1997) Life, Death and Duality: A Handbook of the Rev. Edmund P. Joyce, C.S.C. Collection of Ritual Ballgame Sculpture. University of Notre Dame.
- Carrasco, David and Scott Sessions (1998) Daily Life of the Aztecs People of the Sun and Earth, Greenwood Press, Connecticut.
- Foster, Lynn V. (2002) Handbook to Life in the Ancient Maya World. Facts On File, Inc., New York.
- Nadal, Laura Fillroy (2001) Rubber and Rubber Balls in Mesoamerica", in The Sport of Life and Death - The Mesoamerican Ballgame, Thames and Hudson, New York.
- The Ancient Maya, New Perspectives, Heather Mc Killop (2004)
- Courtly Art of the Ancient Maya, Thames and Hudson, Mary Miller and Simon Martin
- Recent Acquisitions, A selection 2001-2002, The Metropolitan Museum of Art (2002)
- Oxford Encyclopedia, Mesoamerican Culture, 2002
See also
External links
- The Sport of Life & Death: The Mesoamerican Ball Game- an educational web site.