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Mayan Flares - A brief history

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  • 25-05-2009 9:15pm
    #1
    Closed Accounts Posts: 19,183 ✭✭✭✭


    Jared from Onetribe just posted this on their site. Figured it may be interesting to a few people on here. It's a very interesting piece, I didn't link to the photos to encourage people to visit the site and well it'd be stealing their bandwidth.

    Original text can be seen here.
    Jared A. Karnes, Onetribe LLC

    I believe one of the biggest downsides to the resurgence of body modification as a social norm is the severe lack of context. Very little information about body modifying cultures is provided by vendors of goods or services to customers, and this is due in part to the unfortunately money driven mass production nature of the industry. I can count on my hands the number of piercing studios I have been to or jewelry vendors I have seen that had any visible indication of knowledge of the vastly rich cultures from which we draw our inspiration for scarification, tattooing and body piercing today. Of course there may seem to be many within “the scene” of commonly known artists, studios and vendors; however, that is but a tiny cross section of the total number of people currently engaging in practices dating to tens of thousands of years.

    “Mayan flared” is a term that has been thrown around a great deal in recent years, but many people do not realize the historical significance of this style of jewelry. We wish to speak about the origins of this style and offer clarification on what we believe the terminology to accurately suggest.

    *Note* For the sake of simplification, in this document we will refer to the entirety of the Maya ethnic group as simply “Maya” or “Mayan,” although the term itself is not indicative of the vast number of distinctly different cultures, settlements and languages which existed during the Pre-Classic and Classic Maya time periods.

    The ears had immense significance to the Maya, as they were believed to be conduits for spiritual energy, and thus ear flares had considerable value and importance in culture. Forms of obsidian, shell, ceramic and stone were worn in ear perforations. Some designs for daily wear were similar to standard solid plugs or thin tunnels of today, but the most prolific reminders of Maya body modification are the large ear flares shown in sculpture and craft.

    The traditional Mayan flared piece consists of an exceptionally larger front face than a standard double flared piece of jewelry in the same size. There is no standard ratio of saddle to face size for these pieces, and often times size was a result of the limitations of the size and shape of river pebbles or small stones of jadeite. There is, however, a particular concept which should be adhered to in the modern production and classification of these pieces: the original design was meant to resemble a flower. That is, the front face must be significantly larger than the wearable area so as to present a wide view of the face and general “trumpet” or “funnel” shape of either the face itself or the visual lines from front flare to rear edge of the piece upon side view.

    Although later pieces sometimes included precious metals, the majority of the pieces now in existence are ancient pieces made of ceramics and sacred green stones, jadeite being of the most value and highest regard. The pieces varied greatly in size and shape, and were not always worn in the ear lobe - archeological and anthropological research suggests that large flares were often attached to belts, and strands of beads as neckwear. Pieces were also kept as heirlooms and re-utilized in many ways by family members, and even later cultures, as with Maya inscriptions on Olmec artifacts. This cultural reappropriation could aid in the explanation of the excessive drilling along the surface of some flares discovered. Many made specifically for burial rites or ritual purposes were incredibly large - the famous “Pomona” flare exhibits a front face of seven inches and an internal hollow area of over three inches in diameter. This immensely large piece is also curious in that it has four groupings of glyphs etched into the face. Other pieces sometimes have etched designs or incised lines adorning the faces, and in some cases pieces are literally carved to resembled flower petals.



    Although pieces varied stylistically throughout Maya history, with some being more angled, others trumpet shaped and a few known being squared in shape, the majority retained the characteristic large front face and flower profile.



    Many pieces contained strands of beads or tufts of fiber thread which protruded from the face. Of particularly creative nature were the true “flower flares,” those pieces which exhibit a series of inner flares and protruding beads, sometimes several inches long, through which strands of natural fiber were attached to a counterweight at the rear to hold the entire assemblage together in the lobe. In traditional Maya ear spool work, the large flare symbolizes the calyx of the flower, and the protruding front bead the pistol.





    Complete sets of this nature are very rare as the fiber thread has long since degraded and pieces become separated very easily during digging, especially in the case of grave robbery or farm tillage which uproots burials and ruins containing these items. Some sets we have seen have been reassembled with beads and other parts that were most certainly not original to the set, but it is not unheard of for the Maya to recycle and reuse greenstone crafts because jadeite was an extremely valuable resource and was never wasted. As a result, the verification of originality when speaking of these sets is difficult to achieve.

    The Onetribe Adorn Museum collection contains several fine examples of traditional Maya ear flares of varying sizes, mostly of jadeite but also from other fine greenstones present in Mesoamerica.

    We have chosen select pieces and conducted a study of the shape and measurements of these pieces using a grid measurement system, the results of which are shown below. The system may seem a little confusing at first - these were never meant to be public, but I figured they would be interesting for assessing the scale of traditional pieces. Click the image below to view a directory of actual photos of pieces and measurement diagrams.



    We were curious to analyze these pieces in an effort to define what exactly constitutes a historically correct version of this style. Due to the changes in the style of jewelry over the years, jewelry we are making today is much more versatile and wearable than piece from antiquity. We have relatively standardized our flare sizes and we regulate our front flare sizes for production items. The traditional style was very front heavy with all of the embellishments, and a counterweight was necessary - something we needn’t do today because our modern production methods of grinding stone allow us greater freedom in shaping pieces and adding an accurately sized rear flare to hold the piece in. Production of these styles requires more thought and engineering than standard jewelry due to the added front side weight, and fact that the sharp angle of rise from the saddle toward the front face requires a longer wearable area to fit properly.

    You will find many beautiful examples of traditional ear flares in museums, but it is very hard to have a tactile cultural experience through glass. Onetribe is committed to the preservation and presentation of cultural information as it relates to modern body modification practices. The “Mayan flared” design is a favorite of ours here at Onetribe and we will continue to create both traditionally accurate and original modern versions of this classic style. It is our hope that this document will serve as a brief educational primer to our readers, but if nothing else, as simply a reminder of the rich history of body modifying cultures to come before us. We must respect and cherish the knowledge of those before to truly appreciate where we are now, and where we are going as we write our own history.

    References:

    Digby, Adrian. Maya Jades. Revised ed. Oxford: University Press, 1972.

    Lange, Frederick [Ed]. Precolumbian Jade. Salt Lake City: Univ. of Utah Press, 1993.

    Grube, Nikolai [Ed]. Maya: Divine Kings Of The Rain Forest. Germany: Konemann, 2006.

    This text ©2009 Onetribe LLC. You may link to this text, and you may reproduce it only in full and with copyright notices intact. Antique ear flare measurement illustrations and antique photographs (http://images.onetribe.nu/_antiquities/diagrams/) are ©2008 Onetribe LLC & Mike Moses. Plate photographs and multi-piece flare illustration obtained from the texts listed in the references, and are the property of their respective authors.

    The physical printed references used for this document and/or the actual antique pieces of jewelry documented may be viewed at the Onetribe Adorn Museum during regular business hours or by appointment. Call 804.230.4486 or visit us at 403 Stockton St. Suite 101 Richmond, VA 23224.


Comments

  • Closed Accounts Posts: 283 ✭✭popecatapetal


    I was in the national museum there over the weekend, and there are some hollow gold circular boxes, about two and a half inches in diameter, which they now think were used for the ancient Irish celts to wear in their ears! We have a tradition of it too! Yay:D


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 19,183 ✭✭✭✭Will


    Really? any articles online about it? would be very interested to know more


  • Moderators, Arts Moderators, Recreation & Hobbies Moderators Posts: 10,679 Mod ✭✭✭✭Hellrazer


    Small bit about ancient Irish piercing practices on this site.
    http://www.crystalinks.com/bodypiercing.html
    All were made of thin sheet gold, decorated with sets of concentric circles: recent rock-art discoveries in Ireland have shown that a form of scribing compass was used to produce perfect circles. Similarly distended earlobes are known from many other cultures, ranging from the pre-Hispanic Maya and Aztec, who used jade and obsidian earspools as well as gold, to contemporary Swahili women in Kenya. "Some of us may be surprised that our Bronze Age ancestors were practitioners of body-piercing," Ms Cahill says. "In order to distend the earlobe to the required size the process must be carried out over a long period by hanging weights from the perforation. It can be painful, and carries the dangers inherent in any para-surgical procedure."

    Other enigmatic gold objects may also have been fitted to various body parts, she suggests: "It is not too outrageous to propose that prehistoric people in Ireland may have pierced the rim of the ear, the septum and wings of the nose, or the mouth. Many of the ornaments may have been exclusive, based on sex, age or status: we do not know what symbolism they carried, but they embodied powerful meanings, perhaps even magic

    Im actually quite interested to see if I can find more info on ancient Irish body mods after reading that article Will.If I find any more Ill link to them here.


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,799 ✭✭✭Diceicle


    This might relate:


    January 7, 2002 - NY Times

    An Irish body-piercer has helped to solve a Bronze Age mystery. A series of enigmatic gold Ñboxesæ and Ñbobbinsæ dating back more than 3,000 years seem to have been ear-spools, worn in an enormously distended perforation through the lobe.

    "I happened to see Paddy O'Donoghoe on the Late Late Show," Mary Cahill of the National Museum in Dublin explains in Archaeology Ireland. "My immediate reaction was to shout 'He is wearing the Ballinesker boxes in his ears'. " In fact Mr O'Donoghoe, who runs a piercing parlour called Bodyshock in Dublinºs Temple Bar district, was wearing a modern gold spool in a perforation nearly 3in across.

    He joined Ms Cahill at the museum, which has one of the finest collections of prehistoric goldwork in Europe, and helped to identify several pieces as ancient ear-ornaments. One type, known as 'boxes', look very like a pillbox, with straight walls: a set from Mullingar are between 2in and 3in in diameter and an inch deep, and would have been held in the earlobe simply by the elasticity of the flesh.

    A second type has slightly concave walls, so that the lobe would have been stretched over the rim before retracting back in place to hold the earspool tightly; a third kind has a relatively small central cylinder which was passed through the ear before the much wider outer and inner discs were attached.

    All were made of thin sheet gold, decorated with sets of concentric circles: recent rock-art discoveries in Ireland have shown that a form of scribing compass was used to produce perfect circles. Similarly distended earlobes are known from many other cultures, ranging from the pre-Hispanic Maya and Aztec, who used jade and obsidian earspools as well as gold, to contemporary Swahili women in Kenya. "Some of us may be surprised that our Bronze Age ancestors were practitioners of body-piercing," Ms Cahill says. "In order to distend the earlobe to the required size the process must be carried out over a long period by hanging weights from the perforation. It can be painful, and carries the dangers inherent in any para-surgical procedure."

    Other enigmatic gold objects may also have been fitted to various body parts, she suggests: "It is not too outrageous to propose that prehistoric people in Ireland may have pierced the rim of the ear, the septum and wings of the nose, or the mouth. Many of the ornaments may have been exclusive, based on sex, age or status: we do not know what symbolism they carried, but they embodied powerful meanings, perhaps even magic."


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 19,183 ✭✭✭✭Will


    Wow, this is pretty damn cool :)
    Linkage to sources would be awesome if anyone has any?

    Think a trip to the national museum is in order tbh


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  • Moderators, Arts Moderators, Recreation & Hobbies Moderators Posts: 10,679 Mod ✭✭✭✭Hellrazer


    Will wrote: »
    Wow, this is pretty damn cool :)
    Linkage to sources would be awesome if anyone has any?

    Think a trip to the national museum is in order tbh


    Maybe a thread of its own Will.

    Can find a fair bit about tattoos but not much on piercings.


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,799 ✭✭✭Diceicle


    Particularly intriguing are the ear adornments, flat cylinders about 1cm high and anything up to about 7cm in diameter. When these were first discovered it was thought that they were boxes, but nobody knew what people might have kept in them. Then it was discovered that the ancient Irish would pierce their ears and stretch the hole in the earlobe to an enormous size. The ear adornments were held in the earlobe holes.

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/dna/h2g2/A6359844

    http://www.crystalinks.com/bodypiercing.html


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 19,183 ✭✭✭✭Will


    This song pretty much sums up how i feel right now haha



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