The Project Gutenberg eBook of Ancient America, in Notes on American Archaeology
Title: Ancient America, in Notes on American Archaeology
Author: John D. Baldwin
Release date: August 21, 2008 [eBook #26382]
Most recently updated: January 4, 2021
Language: English
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Transcriber’s Note
A number of typographical errors have been maintained in the current version of this book. They are marked and the corrected text is shown in the popup. A list of these errors is found at the end of this book.
ANCIENT AMERICA,
IN
NOTES ON AMERICAN ARCHÆOLOGY.
By JOHN D. BALDWIN, A.M.,
AUTHOR OF “PRE-HISTORIC NATIONS.”
WITH ILLUSTRATIONS.
NEW YORK:
HARPER & BROTHERS, PUBLISHERS,
FRANKLIN SQUARE.
Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1871, by
John D. Baldwin,
In the Office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington.
PREFACE.
The purpose of this volume is to give a summary of what is known of American Antiquities, with some thoughts and suggestions relative to their significance. It aims at nothing more. No similar work, I believe, has been published in English or in any other language. What is known of American Archæology is recorded in a great many volumes, English, French, Spanish, and German, each work being confined to some particular department of the subject, or containing only an intelligent traveler’s brief sketches of what he saw as he went through some of the districts where the old ruins are found. Many of the more important of these works are either in French or Spanish, or in great English quartos and folios which are not accessible to general readers, and not one of them attempts to give a comprehensive view of the whole subject.
Therefore I have prepared this work for publication, believing it will be acceptable to many who are not now much acquainted with the remains of Ancient America, and that some who read it may be induced to study the but as Ancient America covers all time previous to the discovery by Columbus, they may not be deemed out of place. Materials for the paper on “Antiquities of the Pacific Islands” came to me from the Pacific World while I was preparing the others. The discovery of the Pacific is so intimately connected with the discovery of America, that this paper would not be out of place even if the Mexican and Peruvian traditions did not mention that a foreign people communicated with the western coast of America in very ancient times.
Worcester, Mass., November, 1871.
CONTENTS.
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.
| Page | ||
| 1. | Gateway at Labna | Frontispiece. |
| 2. | Great Mound near Miamisburg | 16 |
| 3. | Square Mound near Marietta | 18 |
| 4. | Works at Cedar Bank, Ohio | 19 |
| 5. | Works in Washington County, Mississippi | 20 |
| 6. | Works at Hopeton, Ohio | 22 |
| 7. | Principal Figures of the Hopeton Works | 23 |
| 8. | Graded Way near Piketon, Ohio | 25 |
| 9. | Great Serpent Inclosure | 29 |
| 10. | Fortified Hill, Butler County, Ohio | 30 |
| 11. | Stone-work in Paint Creek Valley, Ohio | 35 |
| 12. | Work on North Fork of Paint Creek | 36 |
| 13. | Ancient Work, Pike County, Ohio | 38 |
| 14. | Work near Brownsville, Ohio | 38 |
| 15. | Works near Liberty, Ohio | 39 |
| 16. | Work in Randolph County, Indiana | 40 |
| 17. 18. |
}Vases from the Mounds | 41 |
| 19. | Ancient Mining Shaft | 45 |
| 20. | Pueblo Ruin at Pecos | 80 |
| 21. | Modern Zuni | 81 |
| 22. | Ruins in the Valley of the Gila | 83 |
| 23. | Pueblo Building restored | 87 |
| 24. | Ground Plan of the Building | 88 |
| 25. | Arch of Los Monjas, Uxmal | 98 |
| 26. | Arch most common in the Ruins | 100 |
| 27. | Casa No. 1, Palenque | 107 |
| 28. | Casa No. 2 (La Cruz), Palenque | 108 |
| 29. | Great Wall at Copan | 112 |
| 30. | Ruins at Mitla | 116 |
| 31. | Great Hall at Mitla | 118 |
| 32. | A ruined “Palace” at Mitla | 119 |
| 33. | Mosaic Decoration at Mitla | 120 |
| 34. | Great Mound at Mayapan | 127 |
| 35. | Circular Edifice at Mayapan | 129 |
| 36. | Casa del Gobernador, Uxmal | 132 |
| 37. | Ground Plan | 132 |
| 38. | Two-headed Figure at Uxmal | 133 |
| 39. | Decorations over Doorway, Uxmal | 134 |
| 40. | Ground Plan of Las Monjas, Uxmal | 136 |
| 41. | Ruined Arch at Kabah | 139 |
| 42. | Casa Colorada, Chichen-Itza | 141 |
| 43. | Great Stone Ring | 143 |
| 44. | Great Mound at Xcoch | 145 |
| 45. | Bottom of an Aguada | 146 |
| 46. | Subterranean Reservoir | 147 |
| 47. | Plan of the Walls of Tuloom | 148 |
| 48. | Watch-tower at Tuloom | 149 |
| 49. | Specimen of Inscriptions on Stone | 190 |
| 50. | Specimen of the Manuscript Writing | 191 |
| 51. | Ancient Masonry at Cuzco | 227 |
| 52. | Ruins of a “Temple” on the Island of Titicaca | 228 |
| 53. | Ruin on the Island of Titicaca | 229 |
| 54. | Ruin on the Island of Coati | 231 |
| 55. | Monolithic Gateway at Tiahuanaco | 233 |
| 56. | Remains of Fortress Walls at Cuzco | 234 |
| 57. | End View of Fortress Walls at Cuzco | 235 |
| 58. | End View of Walls at Gran-Chimu | 238 |
| 59. 60. |
}Decorations at Chimu-Canchu | 238 |
| 61. | Edifice at Old Huanuco | 239 |
| 62. | Ground Plan of the Edifice | 240 |
| 63. | “Look-out” at Old Huanuco | 240 |
| 64. | Ruins at Pachacamac | 242 |
| 65. | Peruvian Copper Knives | 249 |
| 66. | Copper Tweezers | 249 |
| 67. | Golden Vase of Ancient Peru | 251 |
| 68. | Ancient Peruvian Silver Vase | 251 |
| 69. | Ancient Peruvian Pottery | 252 |
| 70. | Ancient Peruvian Pottery | 253 |
ANCIENT AMERICA.
I.
THE MOUND-BUILDERS.
One of the most learned writers on American antiquities, a Frenchman, speaking of discoveries in Peru, exclaims, “America is to be again discovered! We must remove the veil in which Spanish politics has sought to bury its ancient civilization!” In this case, quite as much is due to the ignorance, indifference, unscrupulous greed, and religious fanaticism of the Spaniards, as to Spanish politics. The gold-hunting marauders who subjugated Mexico and Peru could be robbers and destroyers, but they were not qualified in any respect to become intelligent students of American antiquity. What a select company of investigators, such as could be organized in our time, might have done in Mexico and Central America, for instance, three hundred and fifty years ago, is easily understood. In what they did, and in what they failed to do, the Spaniards who went there acted in strict accordance with such character as they had; and yet we are not wholly without obligation to some of the more intelligent Spaniards connected with the Conquest.
There are existing monuments of an American ancient history which invite study, and most of which might, doubtless, have been studied more successfully in the first part of the sixteenth century, before nearly all the old books of Central America had been destroyed by Spanish fanaticism, than at present. Remains of ancient civilizations, differing to some extent in degree and character, are found in three great sections of the American continent: the west side of South America, between Chili and the first or second degree of north latitude; Central America and Mexico; and the valleys of the Mississippi and the Ohio. These regions have all been explored to some extent—not completely, but sufficiently to show the significance and importance of their archæological remains, most of which were already mysterious antiquities when the continent was discovered by Columbus. I propose to give some account of these antiquities, not for the edification of those already learned in American archæology, but for general readers who have not made the subject a study. My sketches will begin with the Mississippi Valley and the regions connected with it.
THE MOUND-BUILDERS—THEIR WORKS.
An ancient and unknown people left remains of settled life, and of a certain degree of civilization, in the valleys of the Mississippi and its tributaries. We have no authentic name for them either as a nation or a race; therefore they are called “Mound-Builders,” this name having been suggested by an important class of their works.