Fr. 39.90

Blood on the Wind - An Uncivil War in the Classic Maya Lowlands

English · Hardback

Will be released 27.02.2026

Description

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The story most often commonly told about the Maya involves their spectacular collapse at the height of their civilization in the early ninth century CE. Crops died, disease and malnutrition spread, and scorched earth warfare became common. People lost faith in their governments and moved to the Caribbean coast, the mountains of Guatemala, or further afield. But there is another tale that is equally compelling. One hundred years earlier, a group of kings known as the Snakes created a League and were able to force, cajole, or convince their fellow rulers to work towards common causes. In so doing, they took the first small steps towards something that had never existed in the Maya area: an empire.

Blood on the Wind narrates this dramatic episode during the Classic Maya period (250-850 CE). From present-day central Mexico across central America, the League attempted to subdue their enemies and transition to an imperial force. In the heart of the lowlands, they created soaring temples, luxurious palaces, and public spaces that continue to captivate visitors to this region. Despite their achievements, a brutal, now forgotten war ensued, and the imperial experiment failed.

Bringing to light the colorful individuals involved and their ambitions and flaws, Mesoamerican expert James L. Fitzsimmons recovers the world of this embryonic empire. Family rivalry, greed, grievances, and blindly clinging to the past meant that future generations would live in an environment where each kingdom made its own political and economic choices--but without the benefit of a stronger union.

List of contents










  • Prologue

  • 1: The Rise of the Snakes

  • 2: Rebels and Outcasts

  • 3: Troubles in the East

  • 4: Perfect Men

  • 5: Usurpers

  • 6: Commoners

  • 7: Youth Defeats Experience

  • 8: Disorder

  • 9: An Unlikely Warlord

  • 10: The Beginning of the End

  • 11: Consequences

  • 12: A Provincial World

  • Epilogue



About the author










James L. Fitzsimmons is Professor of Anthropology at Middlebury College. Active in digs in the United States and Central America, he is the author of Death and the Classic Maya Kings and the editor of numerous books on Mesoamerican archaeology.


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