帽子和头衔:玛雅朝臣的服饰和玛雅古典晚期宫廷的等级制度

Pub Date : 2024-05-13 DOI:10.1017/s0956536124000075
Charles D. Cheek
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引用次数: 0

摘要

玛雅人使用服饰来帮助他们组织社会交往。通过行为链和实践方法,我定义了男性朝臣的着装元素,以及在日常着装和上朝过程中如何将这些元素组合成服装。我在展示人类历史互动的花瓶上发现了朝臣的两组头饰,即标准头饰和特殊头饰。每个花瓶都具有纪念意义,必须向观众传达信息。我确定了在玛雅低地广为流传的六种标准帽子类型。这种分布意味着有一套基本的可识别角色,为典型的玛雅宫廷提供了政治-宗教结构,也许早在前古典晚期就有了。其中四种帽子类型与石刻爵位有关。每个头衔拥有者在花瓶视觉空间中的位置都意味着角色的等级。这些结果支持了我的假设,即服饰确实可以确定玛雅宫廷中的社会角色。
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Hats and titles: Maya courtier dress and hierarchy in the late Classic Maya court
The Maya used dress to help them structure social interaction. Taking a behavioral chain and practice approach, I define dress elements of male courtiers and how they were combined into outfits during the daily practices of dressing and attending court. I identify two groups of headgear, Standard and Special, among courtiers on vases showing historical interaction among humans. Each vase is considered commemorative and must communicate to an audience. I identified six Standard hat types that were widespread in the Maya Lowlands. The distribution implies a basic set of recognizable roles that provided the political-religious structure of the typical Maya court, perhaps as early as the Late Preclassic period. Four of the hat types are connected to glyphic titles. Each titleholder's position in the vase's visual space implies a hierarchy of roles. The results support my hypothesis that dress does identify social roles in the Maya court.
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