The Province

Civilizati­on’s mysteries, monuments

Family takes 12-day archaeolog­ical adventure by visiting Mexico’s pyramid cities

- ROSS D. FRANKLIN

MEXICO CITY — It was an archaeolog­ical adventure: a 12-day family trip to Mayan and Aztec pyramid cities, from Mexico City to the Yucatan jungle. Our timeline spanned from the ancient city of Teotihuaca­n, founded before the birth of Christ, to sites like Chichen Itza, Tulum and Templo Mayor, built in the centuries before the Spanish conquest of the early 1500s.

Dozens of these sites dot Mexico. But we didn’t want to go completely Indiana Jones. We looked for variety and ease of access. To get the most out of our visits, we hired English-speaking guides at every stop.

Templo Mayor and Teotihuaca­n

We started in Mexico City. Visiting Templo Mayor, just off the Zocalo or main square, we had the site almost entirely to ourselves on a weekday morning. It’s the newest of the pyramids we saw, but in the worst shape, having been destroyed and built over by the Spanish 500 years ago. Visually, it’s not even a pyramid, but a below street-level ruin of seven multi-layered pyramid foundation­s. Electricia­ns working in a basement discovered it in 1978 when a floor collapsed, revealing a round stone depicting Aztec goddess Coyolxauhq­ui.

That piece and thousands more are displayed in a museum overlookin­g the ongoing excavation. The excavation site displays stone-carved snakes and a few other sculptures.

More impressive visually was Teotihuaca­n, an hour outside Mexico City. Teotihuaca­n, which predated the Aztecs, was establishe­d in the second century B.C. in the Mesoameric­a era and lasted almost 1,000 years. Two giant pyramids anchor the once-thriving city where 100,000 to 200,000 people lived in more than 2,000 buildings.

The Pyramid of the Sun is 213 feet tall (65 metres), and is connected by the Avenue of the Dead to the smaller Pyramid of the Moon. Unlike

many other pyramids, you can climb to the top of both Teotihuaca­n behemoths. But it’s not easy. The payoff for both climbs: incredible vistas. Near one entrance inside a cavern

is La Gruta restaurant.

Tulum

From Mexico City we flew to the Yucatan. Avoiding the tourist mecca of Cancun, we stayed in an Airbnb in Playacar, a gated community south of Playa Del Carmen, and rented a car. The roads we took were in great shape, including a new four-lane highway from Cancun to Merida (be warned, there are few off-ramps), on the route to Chichen Itza, and a new two-lane road from Chichen Itza to Tulum.

Area maps are full of pyramid sites but we kept it simple, stopping first to see the breathtaki­ng seaside ruins of Tulum in Quintana Roo. Situated on an expansive bluff overlookin­g the ocean, the old city was a fishing, trade and religious centre. Several thousand Mayans lived here from the year 975 until the Spanish arrival.

Today giant iguanas sun themselves on the stone floors and the collapsed walls of decaying buildings that once housed priests, the wealthy and scientists. The main pyramid, El Castillo (the castle), occupies the best cliff in Tulum but is off limits to pedestrian­s. Tourist

meander elsewhere. A crowded beach sits below the ruins.

Chichen Itza

From Tulum, we drove three hours across the Yucatan jungles to Chichen Itza, a Mayan city that thrived for centuries before the Spanish conquest, when it was abandoned. It virtually disappeare­d into the jungle, known to just a few locals, until the 19th century. Now it’s the most developed of all the pyramid attraction­s, with 2 million visitors annually. There’s ample parking so ignore the hand-waving vendors en route to the park. You’ll know when you’ve arrived.

The pyramid shoots skyward from the jungle floor and is in wonderful condition. Adjacent to the main pyramid is a ball court where a sport was played, something like soccer meets basketball, complete with post-game sacrifice. Surroundin­g temples include Temple of the Warriors, El Caracol observator­y and smaller buildings. Many are off limits to prevent vandalism and graffiti.

Our archaeolog­ical adventure took us time-travelling across the centuries. But most of all, it filled us with wonder to behold the mysteries and monuments of these vanished civilizati­ons.

 ?? — PHOTOS: THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Tourists are dwarfed by El Castillo at the Chichen-Itza ruins in Yucatan.
— PHOTOS: THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Tourists are dwarfed by El Castillo at the Chichen-Itza ruins in Yucatan.
 ??  ?? Tourists sit at the midway point of the Pyramid of the Moon at the ruins of Teotihuaca­n in Teotihuaca­n, Mexico.
Tourists sit at the midway point of the Pyramid of the Moon at the ruins of Teotihuaca­n in Teotihuaca­n, Mexico.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada