Mayan
Language
The civilization of the Maya was a prominent
and legendary culture that flourished in the region of
Mesoamerica that includes the modern-day countries of
Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras, and parts of Mexico and the
Yucatan. Archaeologists have found evidence that points to the
Maya civilization that dates back to 1000 BCE (Before the
Christian Era), but the highpoint of the culture was during the
Classical Period (250 - 900 CE), when the greatest amount of
building and symbolic inscriptions can be dated to. The origins
of this culture can be traced as far back as 5000 years,
however. The Mayan language is comprised of a family of
associated languages that are spoken in the region of the Maya,
from SE Mexico to Honduras. Though Spanish is the official
language of the entire region today, many of the Mayan language
are spoken by native peoples numbering approximately 3
million.
The Mayan language is probably most commonly
notable for its writing system, which was at its apex during
the Mayan Classical period (200 - 900 CE). It is commonly known
to researchers as Mayan Hieroglyphics. This written Mayan
language was adopted from components that reflected the
distinctions of the different sub-cultures of the Maya. This
writing system was logosyllabic, in which a single symbol or
character stands for a word. This script was famously carved on
buildings, pottery, and spiritual monuments until the 16th
century, when the Spanish arrived and eventually overtook the
area. Like Egyptian Hieroglyphics, the Mayan script utilized
both pictures and letters to keep records, dedicate monuments
and buildings, and portray myths and histories of their
people.
The Mayan peoples had several regional
languages that they spoke, and continue to speak today. One of
the Mayan languages, known as K'iche', is spoken by more than 2
million people in the highlands of Guatemala. The K'iche'
society was at its height when the Spanish arrived in Central
America. Mexico has its own native Mayan language, known as
Yucatec Maya. Around 900,000 people residing in the Yucatan
Peninsula speak this native Mayan tongue. Many of the native
Mayan languages are common primary languages spoken by people
in rural areas of the region today.
Another customarily significant Mayan
language is called Chol. It used to be spoken far and wide in
the region, but now is limited to Chiapas (an area of Mexico)
and parts of Guatemala. This and another Mayan language, called
Chorti, are thought of as most closely associated to the
language that shaped the famous inscriptions during the
Classical Period of the Mayan civilization.
The Classic Maya language is the main
language represented in Pre-Columbian carvings. It is directly
linked to the modern Mayan languages Chol and Yucatec. It is
not uncommon for modern speakers of these two languages to be
familiar with the Classic Mayan language. Like so many other
cultures that were overtaken, the Mayan people never went away
completely. Despite Spanish occupation of the region in the
16th century, the Mayan cultures remained. To this very day,
native Mayans, direct descendents of the fabled civilization,
continue to thrive in the very regions of their ancestors. Each
faction keeps up a collection of beliefs and traditions, often
uniting them together with many present-day practices, such as
Roman Catholicism, which was no doubt introduced by the Spanish
Conquistadors. The modern Mayan descendents maintain
considerable numbers in the regions that they have always
populated, and continue to use their native Mayan language in
addition to Spanish. We are fortunate that the Mayan culture
has been able to overcome the trials of new people coming to
their world, and that they have been able to preserve many of
the rituals and traditions of their legendary ancestors. The
preservation and continuation of the Mayan language is a
testament to the fortitude of this renowned culture.
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