Among planters and merchants. How the Tikal Lintels became “scientific objects”
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Stenz, ChristianEditorial
Universidad de Granada
Materia
Collecting practices Tikal History of archaeology Museums Plantations
Fecha
2024-02-03Referencia bibliográfica
Stenz, C. (2024). Among planters and merchants. How the Tikal Lintels became “scientific objects”. Dynamis, 44(2), 415–441. https://doi.org/10.30827/dynamis.v44i2.31696
Resumen
This article follows the trajectory of the so-called Tikal lintels from the former Mayan city of Tikal to the Natural History Museum in Basel. Focusing on a network of plantation owners and merchants in Guatemala, the article highlights the crucial role of economic
networks for the production and circulation of the Mesoamerican material culture in and from Central America in the second half of the nineteenth century. In this way, plantations can be studied as important places of encounter and curiosity where the meaning and material shape of Guatemala’s Mesoamerican material culture was transformed in a significant way.





