Hello fellow bloggers!
This week we will be travelling via Google Maps
to two different sites; Pyramid B at Tula and the Temple of the Warriors at
Chichen Itza. Both temples are very comparable in construction thus indicating
the notion of cultural contact between the two empires, particularly the
invasion by the Toltec’s on Chichen Itza. We will examine the similarities and
differences between both sites before drawing a conclusion on the relevancy of
a Toltec occupation of Chichen Itza.
Pyramid B located in the Toltec site of Tula is a
step pyramid that approached by a broad stairway. At the top of the pyramid
stand four colossal Atlantean columns representing Toltec warriors. Scholars
conclude they once served at pillars to support the roof of a temple that stood
atop the pyramid. Each level signifies different motifs of varying deity
figures, such as the feathered serpent or jaguar. Furthermore, a large series
of columns occupy the surrounding area of the pyramid, which originally
supported a tremendous enclosed space.
Pyramid B, Tula |
The Temple of the Warriors is located in the
Yucatán site of Chichen Itza. It is a large stepped pyramid that features a number
of similarities with Pyramid B. The temple consists of four platforms, flanked
on the south and west sides by 200 round and square columns. All square columns
are carved in low relief, with Toltec warriors – one of the major indications
of contact between the groups. Like Pyramid B it is approached through a broad
staircase leading up to columns that once supported a rooftop. Unlike Pyramid
B, these columns represent serpents as opposed to the Toltec warriors. However,
although the serpent was commonly used with the Maya, it was much more common
with the Toltec’s, thus another significant connection.