Daily Mail

Discovered in Mexican jungle, lost palace of Mayan kings

- By Eleanor Hayward

ITS remains have lain hidden in an ancient city in the Mexican jungle for at least 1,000 years.

But now archaeolog­ists have discovered a Mayan palace and are studying it for clues about the vanished civilisati­on.

The remains of the structure – 180ft (55m) long, 50ft (15m) wide and 20ft (6m) high – were found during restoratio­n work at Kuluba near the tourist resort of Cancun in eastern Mexico.

The Mexican National Institute of Anthropolo­gy and History said the palace was inhabited for two long periods between 600 and 1050 AD, at the peak of Mayan civilisati­on.

It was discovered in the east of the Kuluba archaeolog­ical zone, a key ancient site in Mexico’s Yucatan state.

The Mayans ruled large swathes of what is now southern Mexico, Guatemala, Belize and Honduras between 250 and 900 AD but the civilisati­on came to a crushing end with Spanish colonisati­on. As well as the former palace, archaeolog­ists are exploring four structures in Kuluba’s central square – an altar, remnants of two residentia­l buildings and a round structure thought to be an oven. They hope to open the site to the

Ancient: Part of the palace public soon and conservati­onists are considerin­g reforestin­g parts of Kuluba to protect the historical site from wind and sun damage.

Archaeolog­ist Alfredo Barrera said: ‘This work is the beginning. We’ve barely began uncovering one of the most voluminous structures on the site.’

The Mayans – indigenous people of Mexico and Central America – built many cities that ruled over surroundin­g areas.

Each city was home to a local king and to large pyramids that served as temples to their gods.

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 ??  ?? Discovery: An archaeolog­ist at work in the city of Kuluba
Discovery: An archaeolog­ist at work in the city of Kuluba

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