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The City of the Sacred Well

Chapter 4: LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
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About This Book

The narrative recounts Edward Herbert Thompson’s decades of archaeological work at Chichén Itzá, detailing excavations of plazas, pyramids, tombs, and the deep Sacred Well and the recovery of artifacts and inscribed stones. It combines vivid field episodes and local legends with clear descriptions of Maya art, architectural techniques, religious practices, and interpretive commentary, supported by photographs and chaptered reports of specific discoveries such as bas-reliefs and ceremonial buildings. Personal anecdotes and assessments of cultural development frame the technical observations, offering both adventure-driven storytelling and accessible archaeological explanation.

LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS

A last forward swing and the bride of Yum Chac hurtles far out over the well
Frontispiece
 
FACING PAGE
The Nunnery, the only three-storied structure in the Sacred City
64
The second story of the Nunnery
65
All that remains of the third story of the Nunnery. Several inscribed stones built hit or miss into the wall were doubtless taken from the older city
65
El Castillo, the Temple of Kukul Can, on its great pyramid, is the center of the Sacred City and the largest edifice
112
Looking down into the Sacred Well. Because of the size of the well and the fringe of trees about it, the whole scene cannot be photographed
113
A sculpture in bas-relief showing a warrior-priest in ceremonial attire, representing the Maya hero-god Kukul Can, the plumed serpent
240
A religious ceremony depicted in the Temple of Bas-Reliefs. This is but a small section from the interior walls, which contain more than eighty figures
241