Dresden Codex – Probably The Oldest And Best Preserved Book Of The Maya
A. Sutherland - AncientPages.com - Only four Mayan pictorial manuscripts have survived the organized book-burnings of Franciscan missionaries following the Spanish Conquest.
None of these pre-Conquest manuscripts, record chronicles or any type of history; they instead contain astronomy, divination, rituals and calendars.
Codex Dresden or Codex Dresdens is superior to the other three surviving Mayan codices. It's the oldest and best-preserved book of the Maya, which was written and painted on amatl paper (made from the bark of a ficus tree), around 1200 and 1250 in the Yucatan Peninsula.
It was purchased for the Dresden court library in 1739 in Vienna, Austria as a 'Mexican book' and in 1853 it was identified as a Mayan manuscript.
Dresden Codex
Artistically the Dresden Codex is superior to the other three surviving Mayan codices.
The Dresden Codex is 3.5 meters long, fan folded into 39, 9 centimeter wide pages, 20.4 centimeters high and painted on both sides. The paper itself is made from the fibers of a species of Ficus tree, called Amate in Yukatek, and coated with a fine layer of lime plaster. While the texts and numbers are painted in thin line red and black, the associated images are illustrated in beautiful polychromatic detail.
Scholars have suggested that Dresden is the work of no less than eight distinct scribes.
It contains various almanacs, divination calendars, astronomical tables, ritual regulations, and numerous representations of gods and calendars of Venus.
The Dresden Codex is a key document for the decipherment of Maya hieroglyphs and for the study of astronomy and chronology of the Maya.
While many other codices from pre-Columbian Mesoamerica exist, only the Dresden, Paris, Madrid, and Grolier Codices were written by the Maya. Exactly where the Dresden was written remains unknown.
Written by – A. Sutherland AncientPages.com Staff Writer
Copyright © AncientPages.com All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed in whole or part without the express written permission of AncientPages.com
More From Ancient Pages
-
Petroglyphs At The Winnemucca Lake: North America’s Oldest Known
Featured Stories | Sep 10, 2018
-
Strange Mummies Of Venzone: Ancient Bodies That Never Decompose Remain An Unsolved Mystery
Featured Stories | Oct 22, 2018
-
On This Day In History: Louis Braille – Creator Of Alphabet For Blind People Died – On Jan 6, 1852
News | Jan 6, 2017
-
Chumash Indians Used Shell Beads As Money 2,000 Years Ago – New Study
Archaeology | Jan 30, 2021
-
Strangest Maps Ever Created – You Have Never Seen Our World Like This!
Artifacts | Jun 25, 2014
-
Shieldmaiden Hervör’s Dangerous Quest For The Cursed Tyrfing Sword
Featured Stories | Apr 20, 2023
-
Roman glass-making furnaces discovered in Egypt’s Delta
Civilizations | Aug 25, 2015
-
Mysterious Chultuns – Ancient Underground Chambers Built By The Maya – But For What Purpose?
Featured Stories | Jun 24, 2017
-
Mystery Of 3,000-Year-Old African Civilization Garamantes And Its Ancient Secrets
Archaeology | Feb 16, 2015
-
Judas: A Famous Traitor Or A Hero?
Biblical Mysteries | Oct 16, 2017
-
Ruins Of Ancient Jerusalem Shed New Light On Earth’s Magnetic Field’s Behavior
Ancient Symbols | Aug 11, 2020
-
Humans Used Northern Migration Routes To Reach Eastern Asia
Archaeology | Jun 5, 2019
-
3,000-year-old knight discovered at the Palidli necropolis
Civilizations | Aug 22, 2015
-
11 Reconstructions Of Ancient Cities, Monuments And Sacred Sites
Civilizations | Jun 25, 2024
-
Secrets Of An Unusual And Mysterious Medieval Danish Axe Revealed By Scientist
Archaeology | Nov 25, 2022
-
Rare 2nd Temple-Era Etchings Of Menorah And Cross Discovered In The Judean Hills
Archaeology | Jan 8, 2017
-
Yet Another Beautiful Roman Mosaic In Hatay, Turkey
Archaeology | Jul 14, 2022
-
On This Day In History: Walpurgis Night Celebration In Northern Europe – On Apr 30
News | Apr 30, 2016
-
15,000-Year-Old Shell Beads Found Kebara Cave Are The Oldest Known Use Of Organic Red Pigments
Archaeology | Oct 27, 2023
-
Trapped 70,000-Year-Old Artifact Reveals Hidden Information About Early Humans
Archaeology | Dec 5, 2022