Encyclopedia Britannica Online
Pre-Columbian civilizations
Classic Central Veracruz
The Meso-American ball game was played throughout the area
and still survives in attenuated form in northwestern Mexico. On the eve of the
conquest, games took place in a rectangular court bordered on the long sides by
walls with both sloping and vertical rebound surfaces. There were two teams,
each composed of a small number of players. The ball was of solid rubber, of
substantial size, and traveled with considerable speed around the court. It
could not be hit or touched with the open hands or with the feet; most times
the player tried to strike it with the hip. Consequently, fairly heavy protective
padding was necessary to avoid injuries, which in some cases were fatal.
Leather padding was worn over the hips, and pads were placed on the elbows and
knees. A heavy belt was tied around the waist built up from wood and leather,
while in some parts of the Maya region and in Late Formative Oaxaca, gloves and
something resembling jousting helmets were worn.
The Classic Central Veracruz style is almost purely devoted
to the paraphernalia of the ball game and to the ball courts themselves. At the
site of El Tajín, which persisted through the end of the Late Classic,
elaborate reliefs on the walls of the courts furnish details on how this
equipment was used. Yugos ("yokes") were the stone counterparts of
the heavy protective belts. During the post-game ceremonies, which may have
featured the sacrifice of the captain and other players on the losing side,
these U-shaped objects were worn about the waists of the participants. On the
front of the yugo was placed an upright stone object that may originally have functioned
as a ball-court marker and that took two forms: hachas ("axes") or
thin stone heads, and palmas ("palms"). All are carved in an
elaborate low-relief style in which life forms are enmeshed in undulating and
interlaced scroll designs with raised borders. All of these items, and the
style itself, may have evolved out of late Olmec art on the Gulf coast.
Very often the yugos
represent the marine toad, a huge amphibian with swollen poison glands on the
head; in its jaws is a human head. The earliesthachas, which were
characteristically notched to fit on the yugos, were quite thick human heads
and may well date to the Late Formative or Proto-Classic. In time, these become
very thin and represent human heads wearing animal headgear. Palmas are paddle-shaped
stone objects with trilobed bases and exhibit a much richer subject matter than
either hachas or yugos, quite often illustrating brutal scenes of sacrifice and
death, two concepts that were closely associated with the ball game on the Gulf
coast.
Despite the definite presence of the style at Teotihuacán
and Cholula, Classic Central Veracruz is focused upon north central
Veracruz, where the type site of El Tajín is located, and
contiguous parts of Puebla. Today, this region is dominated by speakers of
Totonac, a distant relative of Mayan, and the Totonac
themselves claim that they built El Tajín. Whether or not Classic Central
Veracruz culture was a Totonac achievement, the style persisted through the Classic period and strongly influenced developments in distant regions.