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TULUM INFORMATION

The
name Tulum comes from the Yucatec word for "wall". It is likely
that the city’s original name was something like Zama or "place of
the dawn", which makes sense when you see the sites’ dramatic
outlook toward the east.
Tulum, 130 km south of Cancún, considered
by many as the most beautiful of the Mayan sites, is small but exquisitely
poised on the fifteen-meter-high cliffs above the Caribbean. When the
Spanish first set eyes on the place in 1518, they considered it as large
and beautiful a city as Seville, Spain.
They were, perhaps misled by their
dreams of El dorado, by the glory of its position, and by the brightly
painted facades of the buildings. Architecturally, Tulum is no match for
these great cities. Nevertheless, thanks to the setting, it sticks in the
memory like no other.
The site (open daily from 8am-5pm), is about one km from the main road, so
make sure to get off at the turnoff to the ruins and not at the actual
village of Tulum a few kilometers farther on. You enter through a breach
in the wall which protected the city on three sides.

The fourth was
defended by the sea. This wall, some 5m (16ft) high with a walkway around
the top, may have been defensive, but more likely its prime purpose was to
distinguish the ceremonial and administrative zone (the site you see now)
from the residential enclaves, which were mostly constructed of perishable
material.
As you go through the walls, the chief structures lie directly
ahead of you, with The Castillo (The Castle) rising on its rocky
prominence above the sea.
At The Templo de los Frescos (Temple of the Frescoes), the partly restored
murals that can be seen inside the temple depict Mayan Gods and symbols of
nature's fertility; rain, corn and fish.
They originally adorned an
earlier structure and have been preserved by the construction of a gallery
around them, and still later (during the fifteenth century) by the
addition of a second temple. Characteristically, its walls slope outwards
at the top. Carved on the corners of the gallery are masks of Chac, or
perhaps of the creator, God Itzamna.
The Castillo, on the highest part of the site, commands imposing views in
every direction. Aside from its role as a temple, it may well have served
as a beacon or lighthouse.

Even without a light it would have been and
important landmark for mariners along an otherwise monotonously
featureless coastline. You climb first to a small square, in the middle of
which stood an altar, before climbibg the broad stairway to the top of the
castle itself.
To the left of this plaza stands the Templo del Dios
Descendente. The diving or descending god-depicted here above the narrow
entrance of the temple appears all over Tulum as a small, upside-down
figure.
His exact significance is not known. He may represent the setting
sun, rain, lightning, or he may be the Bee God, since honey was one of the
Mayan's most important exports.
Opposite is the Templo de Las Series
Iniciales (Temple of the Initial Series), so called because in it was
found a stela bearing a date well before the foundation of the city, and
presumably brought here from else where.
Further interesting places to
explore are strung out south along the coast. If you simply want to take
time out for a swim, you can plunge into the Caribbean straight from the
beach fronting the site.

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