Cholula

The entrance to the Great Pyramid is via a tunnel on the north side.  Excavators from the Proyecto Cholula used mining techniques to dig tunnels into the interior of the pyramid in order to identify different phases of construction.  So for example, entering from the north visitors pᴀss through several facades from earlier buildings.  These are visible as areas of stone masonry covered with cement, but were subsequently encased in adobe brick as fill for a later construction stage.  Because the Great Pyramid was made of adobe brick the tunnels are remarkably stable, as opposed to the rubble fill of most other pre-Columbian pyramids. Tunnels that are open to the public feature electrical lighting and run level with the entrance, but other tunnels followed ancient staircases down to the original ground surface (about 10 m below the public tunnel) and up to the top of the early pyramid stages.

tunnel in pyramid

Tunnel inside Great Pyramid

 

Staircase in pyramid    End of tunnel

Staircase leading down                                   Original step at lower right, note adobe fill

 

Inside the tunnels of the Great Pyramid excavators found a series of polychrome murals, relating to different construction stages.  The earliest were a repeating panel known as the “Chapulines” (grᴀsshoppers), although they more closely represent larval bodies with skeletal heads.  Other murals included checkerboard patterns in black and white, and a netted jaguar.  The most extensive murals are known as the Bebedores (drinkers), and feature nearly 150 life sized individuals in the process of drinking out of ceramic bowls, while sitting around larger vessels that presumably held the liquid.  These figures are arranged in two panels, and appear to be seated on woven rugs or jaguar skins.  They wear loin cloths, and have elaborate hairstyles.  Some of the individuals appear in the process of transformation into animals, and this has been suggested as evidence that they were imbibing alcoholic and/or hallucenogenic substances, such as pulque. No strong stylistic parallel to the Bebedores exists in Mesoamerica, though there is some similarity to the miniature figures on the Tlalocan mural from Teotihuacan, and to the courtly scenes on Maya polychrome vases.  Based on the position of these murals in the construction sequence, and on stylistic elements, they are believed to date to the Epiclassic period (c. 600-800 CE), though more rigorous research needs to be done on this fascinating mural.

Bebedores figure

Detail from Bebedores mural

 

 

 

 

 

Related Posts

Ramses II: The Legendary Pharaoh of Ancient Egypt.

Ramses II (1303 BCE–1213 BCE), often regarded as one of the most influential and powerful rulers in history, reigned during the pinnacle of Ancient Egypt’s New Kingdom….

The Silver Coffin of King Psusennes I: A Unique Royal Burial

The Silver Coffin of King Psusennes I, dating to the 21st Dynasty (c. 1047–1001 B.C.), stands as one of ancient Egypt’s most remarkable funerary artifacts. Discovered in…

The Girl in the Coffin: A Forgotten Child Who Slept for 140 Years

In 2016, workers renovating a simple San Francisco home stumbled upon something extraordinary. Beneath the soil, resting silently for more than a century, lay a small coffin…

Unearthing the Past: The Remarkable Discovery of a Woolly Mammoth

In the frozen soils of Siberia and other parts of the northern hemisphere, time has preserved an incredible legacy from the Ice Age. The woolly mammoth (Mammuthus…

A Hidden Marvel in the Egyptian Desert: The 60-Ton Granite Sarcophagus

The vast, enigmatic Egyptian desert has once again revealed a stunning relic from antiquity — a colossal 60-ton granite sarcophagus that has remained untouched for millennia. This…

Discover the Hidden Animal Carvings in the Ancient Inca Walls of Cusco!

The ancient city of Cusco, Peru, once the heart of the Inca Empire, stands as a testament to the remarkable skills and deep cultural beliefs of the…