To the Ends of the Earth
Quest for the Lost
City
Finding out more
WEBSITES
The licensing of
archaeological material for export from the United Kingdom
www.parliament.the-stationery-office.co.uk/pa/
cm199900/cmselect/cmcumeds/371/0041308.htm
The antiquities
trade in the United Kingdom recent developments
www.soton.ac.uk/~jmg296/croatia/brodie.htm
Two documents by Dr Neil Brodie the first, the text of a memorandum
to the parliamentary Select Committee on Culture, Media and Sport, and
the second, a paper given at the World Archaeological Congress in 1998.
Both give a comprehensive account of the present state of play for trafficking
in archaeological treasures.
Archaeology
www.archaeology.org/online/news
Latest news on Maya and other finds from the Archaeological Institute
of America. Good pictures and links to other websites.
Maya Archaeology
www.maya-archaeology.org/
Shows how digital technology can help build up a photographic archive
of Maya art and treasures. Lots of links to other websites.
Lessons in Maya
Calendrics and Writing
www.well.com/user/pac/maya/mayacal
Traveller Paul Clanon's lighthearted introduction to the mysteries and
complexities of the Maya calendar and Maya script. Easy to read and good
for beginners.
The Classic Maya
Calendar and Day Numbering System
www.eecis.udel.edu/~mills
Professor David L Mills' website gives a full account of this difficult
subject.
BOOKS
Ancient Civilizations
of the New World by Richard E W Adams (Westview, 1997) £8.99.
Concise yet sweeping look at the origins and development of ancient New
World cultures, including that of the Maya. It tackles not only all aspects
of their social organisation but also the question of why they collapsed
so quickly when the Europeans arrived.
Ancient Civilizations
of the Aztecs and the Maya, edited by Arthur M Schlesinger (Chelsea
House, 1999) £15.95.
Superbly illustrated reprints of articles from National Geographic
magazine, providing a tour through the forgotten cities and mysterious
temples of Central America.
The Ancient Maya
by Robert J Sharer (Stanford University Press, 1994) £19.95.
Originally published about 40 years ago, this is the fifth edition of
a weighty tome that covers all aspects of Maya life and beliefs in a scholarly
way. Many maps, plans and illustrations.
Maya Monuments
by Nigel Hughes (Antique Collectors Club, 2000) £25.
Beautiful paintings by Nigel Hughes take you on a trip through the monuments
of a lost civilisation. Mainly pictures, with brief textual descriptions.
Maya Script
by Maria Longhena (Abbeville, 1999) £25.
A handbook of the symbolic figures or glyphs that were the
Maya's writing system and which give readers a vivid portrait of this
complex society.
The Ancient American
Civilisations by Friedrich Katz (Phoenix, 1972) £12.99.
Still in print, this scholarly overview of the Maya, Incas and Aztecs
tells the story of these peoples from prehistoric times to the Spanish
conquest of 1517.
FILMS
Aguirre, Wrath
of God (1972): directed by Werner Herzog, starring Klaus Kinski, Ruy
Guerra, Helena Rojo, Cecilia Rivera.
In 1560, a party of Pizarro's conquistadors descend into the Peruvian
jungle in search of El Dorado. In the process, one of them, Aquirre (Kinski),
succumbs to megalomania and madness. Based on a true story.
El Dorado (1988):
directed by Carlos Saura, starring Omero Antonutti, Eusebio Poncela, Lambert
Wilson.
French/Spanish epic in which conquistadors endure the dangers of the Peruvian
jungle in search of the city of gold.
Lost Horizon
(1937): directed by Frank Capra, starring Ronald Colman, H B Warner, Thomas
Mitchell, Edward Everett Horton, Sam Jaffe.
Four people, fleeing a Chinese revolution, crashland in a hidden valley
in Tibet. Here they find Shangri-La, an idyllic civilisation where the
weather is always good and people are gentle and kind and live to a great
age. Based on James Hilton's novel. The 1973 musical version is best avoided.
The Lost World
(1925): directed by Harry O Hoyt, starring Wallace Beery, Lewis Stone,
Bessie Love.
Professor Challenger leads an expedition to prove his claim that prehistoric
life exists on a remote plateau in South America. Based on the novel by
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. This silent version is infinitely preferable to
the 1960 remake.
She (1965):
directed by Robert Day, starring Peter Cushing, Ursula Andress, Christopher
Lee, John Richardson.
Ancient papers lead a Cambridge professor and his friends to a lost city
in Africa ruled over by a queen (Andress, 'She who must be obeyed') who
cannot die unless she falls in love. Based on the novel by H Rider
Haggard.
The
Lost City
The
search for Site Q
Who
are the Maya?
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facts
Other
lost cities
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