Location: 20.214945° N, 87.429521° W
Tulum or Tuluum is an archeological site of an ancient Mayan city. It is located in the peninsula of Yucatan, southeast Mexico, State of Quintana Roo in an area called the Riviera Maya along the Caribbean Sea. The site is part of the national park since 1981 Tulum. The foundation of the city appears to date back some 564 entries as indicated. The Mayan city of Coba, whose apogee lies at about 650 used the site of Tulum as an important fishing port and can also betrade for trade to other cities of the region. Artifacts made of flint, pottery from the Yucatan Peninsula, objects of obsidian or jade from Guatemala and the bells and brass rings of the central plateau of Mexico, demonstrate the importance of such exchanges. The structure 59 also shows the footprint of the style of classic Mayan era.
Tulum - The Walled City
In the Yucatec language, Tulum means “wall”, referring to the large barricade that surrounds the settlement. In the Mayan language, Tulum was called Zama, meaning “dawn,” an appropriate name given its eastern location. It seems “Tulum” is the name given to the site by explorers Stephens and Catherwood in 1841. Stephens and Catherwood visited Tulum just before the beginning of the Caste War in 1847, long after the city was abandoned. Their visit to Tulum is outlined in their famous book “Incidents of Travel in Yucatan”. It is important to note that Juan José Gálvez is actually credited with Tulum’s rediscovery in 1840.History of the Site
The earliest date found in the site is A.D. 564 , an inscription on a stelae. This places Tulum within the Classic Period, though we know that its heyday was much later, 1200 – 1521 A.D., during the Late Post-classic Period. Tulum was the primary location for the Maya’s extensive trade network with both maritime and land routes converging here. Artifacts found in or near the site confirm contact with Central Mexico and Central America. Archeologists found copper rattles and rings from the Mexican highlands; flint and ceramics from the Yucatán, and jade from Guatemala. Tulum was the hub for international trade and responsible for the distribution of goods into the Yucatan through Coba, Chichen Itza and connecting settlements. Tulum was thought to also be a religious center for priests with the walls protecting the sacred leaders. Archaeologists have evidence that the population was killed off by the Spaniards when they introduced Old World diseases into the area as a way to destroy the native population. Tulum remained inhabited about 70 years after the Conquest, when it was finally abandoned. Documentation of this demise can be found in the writings of Friar Diego de Landa’s Observations on the Yucatan Peninsula. Local Maya continued to visit the temples to burn incense and pray until the late 20th century.Fast facts about Tulum Ruins
- Tulum site is one of the very few walled cities build by the Maya. These walls are located on only three sides of the settlement as the ocean protects the eastern borders.
- The ruins are situated on 12-meter (39 ft) cliffs along the Caribbean
- Tulum had an estimated population of 1,000 to 1,600 inhabitants.
- The wall around Tulum is three to 5 meters (16 ft) in height, 8 m (26 ft) thick and 400 m (1,300 ft) long on western wall parallel to the sea.
- The Castillo (main pyramid/castle) is 7.5 m (25 ft) tall and appears to have built in stages.
- Tulum was a major crossroads of trade from both land and sea managing trade from Central and South America into the Yucatan.
- Tulum honored the “diving god” or “descending god” and “the god of the bee”, an important insect for the Maya even today.
- During the Caste War, Tulum was occupied by members of the Talking Cross cult
- Tulum is the single most frequently visited Maya ruin in the Yucatán Peninsula, receiving thousands of visitors every day.
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