Guatemala, Rethaluleu, Asintal. Takálik Ab´aj. Discovery of the necklace of the  ancestor of the Mayan- Señor de la Greca - Lord of the Fret Design, the Return  to the ancestor at Tak’alik Ab’aj. This is the latest finding at the ancient  city of Tak'alik Ab'aj. Tak'alik Ab'aj fulfilled for almost two millenniums, a  rich and vigorous role in Mesoamerican history.  
The sculptured monuments buried there through the centuries, whose tops still  emerge from the ground, gave way to the name, which in the K'iche' language  means Standing Stone. Tak'alik Ab'aj is an ancient pre-Hispanic city situated in  El Asintal, Department of Retalhuleu at the pacific piedmont of Guatemala. This  important long distance trade and cosmopolitan cultural center is transcendent  because of its long history which endured 1700 years (800 B.C. - 900 A.D). At  its beginnings Tak'alik Ab'aj interacted and participated with the Olmec  culture, and at its surmise, was one of the protagonists in the development of  the early Maya culture.
Deep inside Structure 6, one of the most important ceremonial buildings of  the Central Group at Tak’alik Ab’aj, in 2011 the team of the National  Archaeological Park Tak’alik Ab’aj, lead by archaeologists Christa Schieber de  Lavarreda and Miguel Orrego Corzo of the Guatemalan head office for Cultural and  Natural Heritage, Ministry of Culture and Sports, concluded with the excavation  of a very special offering yielding a necklace of more than 70 beads of jadeite  of different forms and outstanding beauty. This “Necklace offering” is situated  more than 4 m at the bottom of the building and was deposited there between 190  b.C. and 10 a.D. (Late Preclassic); it is the most ancient of a series of ritual  acts succeeding each other through centuries orbiting around one same vertical  axis. This sequence of extraordinary offerings apparently corresponds to  dedication rituals to the different architectonic versions from Late Preclassic  to Early Classic.
The “Necklace offering”, due to its special nature, appears to represent the  departing point to which are focused the subsequent later offerings. Among  those, highlights the notorious “Jadeite mosaic offering” which build the two  miniature ceremonial heads discovered in 2010 (see news Guatemala-Times 10 of  May 2010 http://www.guatemala-times.com/archeology/takalik-abaj/1555-mysterious-mayan-ceremonial-head-found-at-takaalik-abaaj-.html),  giving place to the creation of the allegoric name – “Señor de la Greca” (“Lord  of the Fret design”) – for a personage which must have had been one of the most  powerful rulers of Tak’alik Ab’aj. At the archaeological site of this ancient  city various cases of evidences have been found which tell us about the act of  returning or referring to the parting points or ancestral orientations, or  “calling into presence” the ancestors themselves. In the present case, the  “Necklace offering” may refer to the ancestor of the powerful ruler named “Señor  de la Greca” (Lord of the Fret design).
The characteristics of the “Necklace offering” invite to think about the  possibility that it may represent the burial of an infant or more plausibly an  exhumation undertaken in Late Preclassic times, introduced into the middle  preclassic version of Structure 6. The extraordinary beauty and quality of the  jadeite necklace manifests an utmost expression of status, and the radiocarbon  date of 190 b.C. to 10 a.D. of the content of a vessel at the southern end of  the space framed by cobble stones in the manner of a very narrow cist, situates  this offering or possible burial – 100 years prior to the magnificent royal  burial No. 1 discovered some years ago at Tak’alik Ab’aj – as one of the  earliest with such an outstanding piece of jewelry.
This date might go even further back in time, possibly Middle Preclassic  if the interpretation as an exhumation can be confirmed, which would put into  evidence even more the magnitude of this kind of early manifestation of power at  Tak’alik Ab’aj.
With this purpose, this year analysis of the presence of calcium and phosphor  traces in the material directly associated to the necklace will be undertaken  with the cooperation of the Department of Archaeology and Chemistry of  University del Valle of Guatemala, as well as the archaeologists expect to be  able to date some organic remains.
With this last finding a new precious “bead” has been added to the “necklace”  of the most significant discoveries in the last years at Tak’alik Ab’aj, and  which have brought us closer to the possible actors behind those historic events  and whose signature remains manifest in their material legacy. Some of these  personages were immortalized in some of the sculptures at Tak’alik Ab’aj, and  their names and important dates of their lives as rulers were sculpted in stone.  But it has not been possible to decode those ancient texts, so these personages  have made themselves acquainted to the archaeologists by means of their public  buildings and artistic expressions.





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