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San Martín Pajapan Monument 1 is a large Olmec basalt sculpture found on top of the San Martin Pajapan volcano, in the Tuxtla Mountains of the Mexican state of Veracruz. It is notable for its original location and its Olmec iconography. ==Description== Likely carved during the Early Formative period, before 1000 BCE, the 1.4 m (5.5 ft) high statue shows a crouching young lord. Caught in the act of raising a large ceremonial bar, his right hand is under one end and his left over the other end. This pose, nearly identical to that of the "twins" at El Azuzul, is thought to represent a ruler or shaman (or both) shown in the ritual act of raising the Mesoamerican world tree or axis mundi, an act that establishes the center of the world and connects the earthly plane with the worlds above and below.〔Pool, p. 118-119 and 143.〕 The plump face is proto-typically Olmec, with "no attempt to represent individuality".〔Fuente, p. 162.〕 The young lord wears a huge boxy headdress, the front of which is covered with what is apparently a mask.〔Diehl, p. 123, or Markham & Markham, p. 20.〕 The mask shows the cleft head, the almond eyes, and the downturned mouth characteristic of the Olmec were-jaguar supernatural, implying that the human had become, or was acting under the authority and/or the protection of, the supernatural.〔Fuente, p. 162, who refers further to an 1977 publication of hers.〕 Plumes flow backward along the sides of the headdress. From its top, vegetation – perhaps maize – is sprouting. This were-jaguar mask is identified with the Olmec rain god,〔Markham and Markham, p. 20.〕 and the iconography and the location of the statue reflect the widespread Mesoamerican belief in mountaintops as the dwelling of rain gods.〔Pool, p. 123.〕 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「San Martín Pajapan Monument 1」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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