PREFACE
IN recent years a reawakening has taken place in the study
of American archæology and antiquities, owing chiefly to the labours of a band of
scholars in the United States and a few
enthusiasts in the continent of Europe. For the greater
part of the nineteenth century it appeared as if the last word had been written upon Mexican
archæology. The lack of excavations and exploration had cramped the outlook of
scholars, and there was nothing for them to work upon save what had been done in this
respect before their own time. The writers on Central America who lived in the third quarter
of the last century relied on the travels of Stephens and Norman, and never appeared to
consider it essential that the country or the antiquities in which they specialised should
be examined anew, or that fresh expeditions should be equipped to discover whether still
further monuments existed relating to the ancient peoples who raised the teocallis of Mexico
and the huacas of Peru. True, the middle of the century was not altogether without its
Americanist explorers, but the researches of these were performed in a manner so perfunctory
that but few additions to the science resulted from their labours.
Modern Americanist
archaeology may be said to have been the creation of a brilliant band of scholars who,
working far apart and without any attempt at co-operation, yet succeeded in accomplishing
much. Among these may be mentioned the Frenchmen Charnay and de Rosny, and the Americans
Brinton, H. H. Bancroft, and Squier. To these succeeded the German scholars Seler,
Schellhas, and Förstemann, the Americans Winsor, Starr, Savile, and Cyrus Thomas, and
the Englishmen Payne and Sir Clements Markham. These men, splendidly equipped for the work
they had taken in hand, were yet hampered by the lack of reliable data -a want later
supplied partly by their own excavations and partly by the painstaking labours of Professor
Maudslay, principal of the International College of Antiquities at Mexico, who, with his
wife, is responsible or the exact pictorial reproductions of many of the ancient edifices in
Central America and Mexico.
Writers in the sphere of Mexican and Peruvian myth have
been few. The first to attack the subject in the light of the modern science of comparative
religion was Daniel Garrison Brinton, professor of American languages and archaeology in the
University of Philadelphia. He has been followed by Payne,
Schellhas, Seler, and Rrstemann, all of whom, however, have confined the publication of
their researches to isolated articles in various geographical and scientific journals. The
remarks of mythologists who are not also Americanists upon the subject of American myth must
be accepted with caution.
The question of the alphabets of ancient
America
is perhaps the most acute in present-day pre-Columbian archaeology. But progress is being
made in this branch of the subject, and several scholars are working in whole-hearted
co-operation to secure final results.
What has Great Britain accomplished
in this new and fascinating field of science? If the lifelong and valuable labours of the
late Sir Clements Markham be excepted, almost nothing. It is earnestly hoped that the
publication of this volume may prove the means of leading many English students to the study
and consideration of American archaeology.
There remains the romance of old
America.
The real interest of American mediaeval history must ever circle around Mexico and Peru-her
golden empires, her sole exemplars of civilisation; and it is to the books upon the
character of these two nations that we must turn for a romantic interest as curious and as
absorbing as that bound up in the history of Egypt or Assyria.
If human interest is
craved for by any man, let him turn to the narratives of Garcilasso el Inca de
la Vega and Ixtlilxochitl,
representatives and last descendants of the Peruvian and Tezcucan monarchies, and read there
the frightful story of the path to fortune of red-heeled Pizarro and cruel Cortés, of
the horrible cruelties committed upon the red man, whose colour was "that of the
devil," of the awful pageant of fold-sated pirates laden with the treasures of palaces,
of the stripping of temples whose very bricks were of gold, whose very drain-pipes were of
silver, of rapine and the sacrilege of high places, of porphyry gods dashed down the
pyramidal sides of lofty teocallis, of princesses tom from the very steps of the throne-ay,
read these for the most wondrous tales ever writ by the hand of man, tales by the side of
which the fables of Araby seem dim -the story of a clash of worlds, the conquest of a new,
of an isolated hemisphere.
It is usual to speak of America as "a continent
without a history." The folly of such a statement is extreme. For centuries prior to
European occupation Central America was the seat of
civilisations boasting a history and a semi-historical mythology second to none in richness
and interest. It is only because the sources of that history are unknown to the general
reader that such assurance upon the lack of it exists.
Let us hope that this book may
assist in attracting many to the head-fountain of a river whose affluents water many a plain
of beauty not the less lovely because bizarre, not the less fascinating because somewhat
remote from modern thought.
In conclusion I have to acknowledge the courtesy of the
Bureau of American Ethnology, which placed in my hands a valuable collection of
illustrations and allowed me to select from these at my discretion. The pictures chosen
include the drawings used as tailpieces to chapters; others, usually half-tones, are duly
acknowledged where they occur.
LEWIS SPENCE