Online Encyclopedia

PALENQUE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V20, Page 598 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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PALENQUE  , the

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modern name of a deserted city in Mexico, in the narrow valley of the Otolum, in the north
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part of the state of
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Chiapas, 8o m . S. of the Gulf
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port of Carmen . About 30 M. away, on the
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left
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bank of the Usumacinta
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river, stand the ruins of Men-che or Lorillard city . The
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original name of Palenque has been lost, and its
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present name is taken from the neighbouring
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village, Santo Domingo del Palenque . Unlike the dead cities of the
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Yucatan plains, Palenque is surrounded by wooded hills and overgrown by tropical vegetation . There is less stone
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carving on the exterior walls, door jambs and pillars of the buildings than on those of the Yucatan Peninsula; this is due to the harder and more uneven character of the
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limestone . Probably owing to the same cause, there is less cut stone in the walls, the Palenque builders using
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plaster to obtain smooth surfaces . There is, however, considerable carving on the interior walls, the best specimens being on the tablets, affixed to the walls with plaster . Modelling in stucco was extensively used . A few terra-cotta images have been found . Paint and coloured washes were liberally used to cover plastered surfaces and for ornamentation, and paints seem to have been used to bind plastered surfaces . The Palenque builders apparently used nothing but stone tools in their
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work .

The so-called

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Great Palace consists of a
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group of detached buildings, apparently ten in number,
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standing on two platforms of different elevations . Some of the interior structures and the detached one on the
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lower
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southern terrace are in a
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fair state of preservation . The plan of construction shows three parallel walls enclosing two corridors covered with the
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peculiar pointed arches or vaults characteristic of Palenque . The buildings appear to have been erected at different periods . A square tower rises from a central part of the platform to a height of about 40 ft., divided into a solid
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masonry
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base and three storeys connected by interior stairways . The Temple of Inscriptions, one of the largest and best preserved, is distinguished chiefly for its tablets, which contain only hieroglyphics . Sculptured slabs form balustrades to the steps leading up to the temple, and its exterior is ornamented with figures in stucco, the
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outer faces of the four pillars in front having
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life-
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size figures of
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women with children in their arms . The small Temple of Beau
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Relief stands on a narrow ledge of rock against the steep slope of the mountain . Its most important feature is a large stucco bas-relief, occupying a central position on the back wall of the sanctuary . It consists of a single figure, seated on a
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throne, beautifully modelled both in form, drapery and ornaments, with the face turned to one side and the arms out-stretched, and is reproduced by H . H . Bancroft .

The temples on the

east side of the Otolum are distinguished by tall narrow vaults, perforated by numerous square openings giving the appearance of coarse lattice work . The Temple of the Sun stands upon a comparatively low pyramidal foundation . The interior consists of the usual pair of vaulted corridors . The sacred tablet on the back wall of the sanctuary is carved in low relief in limestone, and consists of two figures, apparently a priest and his assistant making offerings . There are rows of hieroglyphics on the sides and over the central design . The Temple of the
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Cross is a larger structure of similar design and construction . The tablet belonging to this temple has excited controversy, because the design contains a representation of a Latin cross . The Temple of the Cerro, called that of the Cross No . 2, because its tablet is very similar to that just mentioned, PALERMO stands back against the slope of the mountain, and is in great part a ruin .

End of Article: PALENQUE
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