Deciphering the Maya Code

Resource for Grades 5-12

WGBH: Nova
Deciphering the Maya Code

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Running Time: 2m 17s
Size: 6.8 MB

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Source: NOVA: "Lost King of the Maya"

This media asset was adapted from NOVA.

Resource Produced by:

WGBH Educational Foundation

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WGBH Educational Foundation

Collection Credits

Collection Funded by:

Leon Lowenstein Foundation

In this video segment adapted from NOVA, learn about the writings found in ancient Maya codices—books written on bark. Although 16th-century Spanish priests burned many of these codices, four books and other structures featuring Maya hieroglyphs survived. Breakthroughs in efforts to decipher the Maya writings have shown that the Maya used a number system to precisely chart the 365-day solar cycle, predict solar and lunar ecplipses, and track the complex orbit of Venus.

open Background Essay

The ancient Maya created the only original writing system in North, Central, and South America. Their system has been called hieroglyphs, or glyphs, because it was once thought to resemble Egyptian hieroglyphs. Mayan writing used two types of symbols in their writing: phonetic symbols, which show how to sound out a word, and ideograms, which use pictures or symbols to represent what something means. Using this writing system, Mayan scribes could write any word from their spoken language.

Although written English is similar to written Mayan in that both use phonetic symbols to create words, there are big differences. While the English alphabet uses 26 symbols, or letters, to make all words, Mayan words were written using about 800 symbols! Each of these symbols represented a syllable, rather than an individual letter. Scribes could choose from multiple symbols to represent the same sound. For example, a scribe could use three different symbols to write the "ba" sound.

Mayan glyphs were painted on pottery, carved into wood or stone buildings and statues, and written into paper books called codices (ko'-dih-seez). (One paper book is called a codex.) The writings often told the story of kings, key dates, and important events. One amazing discovery has been a stairway in the city of Copán that is covered in over 2,000 hieroglyphs. It tells the story of the kings who ruled the city, including how one king was beheaded after he lost a sacred Mayan ball game. The ancient Maya also created calendars and celestial almanacs, in which they recorded the movements of the stars and planets. They used this information to plan important rituals and events, such as when to go to war.

Although many remains of Mayan glyphs have been found on pottery and structures, only four codices remain. Many were burned by Spanish priests who thought the books promoted superstitions and devil worship. To save the books from the priests, the Maya buried them in the earth. Unfortunately, the heat and humidity of the region destroyed them.


open Discussion Questions

  • Why did the Spanish priests burn the Maya writings?
  • What kinds of things did the Maya record in their books?
  • Why might these things be important to them?

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