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Michael D. Coe (1929–2019)

Author of The Maya

44+ Works 4,031 Members 46 Reviews 1 Favorited

About the Author

Michael D. Coe is Professor Emeritus of Anthropology and Curator Emeritus in the Peabody Museum of Natural History at Yale University. His many other books include The Maya, Mexico, and The True History of Chocolate (with Sophie D. Coe), all published by Thames Hudson.

Includes the names: M.D. Coe, Michael D. Coe, Michael D. et al. Coe

Also includes: Michael Coe (1)

Image credit: Michael D. Coe with Monument 34 of San Lorenzo

Works by Michael D. Coe

The Maya (1966) 1,107 copies, 12 reviews
Breaking the Maya Code (1992) 756 copies, 9 reviews
The True History of Chocolate (1996) 681 copies, 10 reviews
Mexico: Ancient Peoples and Places (1982) 547 copies, 4 reviews
Swords and Hilt Weapons (1989) 230 copies, 1 review
Reading the Maya Glyphs (2001) 217 copies, 1 review
Angkor and the Khmer Civilization (2003) 101 copies, 1 review
America's First Civilization (2017) 71 copies, 2 reviews
Art of the Maya Scribe (1997) 58 copies, 2 reviews
In the Land of the Olmec (1980) 18 copies
Mexico 1 copy
Ameryka prekolumbijska (1997) 1 copy
Mayalar 1 copy

Associated Works

Tagged

Americas (21) ancient history (40) anthropology (116) archaeology (229) art (29) Aztecs (44) Central America (71) chocolate (64) culture (19) decipherment (22) food (59) food history (34) history (420) I-5 (19) language (68) Latin America (35) linguistics (64) Maya (313) Mayan (36) Mesoamerica (135) Mexican History (23) Mexico (175) non-fiction (221) Olmec (26) Pre-Columbian (40) reference (26) swords (33) to-read (160) weapons (26) wishlist (19)

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Reviews

49 reviews
What a wonderful history! I jokingly (maybe not so jokingly) like to say there are three food groups: cheese, chocolate, … and the other stuff. And I have a beverage maxim: there are only coffee, beer, wine - that order changes depending on my mood, and what country I am in - water, and everything else. Last week I was scavenging the books tucked away in several Chattanooga antique shops and I came across a book on coffee (signed - new to me - by the dedicatee) and this one. I found this show more first, so it gets the first read.

Extensively researched and cited, the history is rewarding and the storytelling equally so. I was so engrossed that I atypically made few notes. I now have some more jumping off points and references to find! And even though they provided some original source recipes, I think I’ll be duckduckgoing for more accessible recipes to make authentic Mesoamerican chocolate drinks.

If you are the least interested in cacao/chocolate (be advised that as the authors note, “during nine tenths of its long history, chocolate was drunk, not eaten”), this is as I said at the start, a wonderful book. Now… to the coffee counterpart…
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written by a husband and wife whose last name is Coe. yes, Coe-Coe wrote this history about cocoa. the story of this book is bittersweet because the wife, who was the original author, died before she could complete it and her husband took over and finished it.

fantastic history. history the way it should be done always with lots of facts couched in self-aware acknowledgment of where those facts came from mixed with a wry sense of humor. too often, historians tend to write dryly from some show more sense of upright moral indignation against humor or light-heartedness. maybe the female Coe’s demise allowed the male Coe to get away with a little more than usual due to the heart-wrenching nature of finishing this work? i hope not. and this does not imply that the scholarship is anything less than impeccable or respectable. however, i think many historians think exactly that.

the history of chocolate is laid bare and taken much farther back than the Aztecs to the Olmecs who Coe thinks were cultivating it as early as 1500BCE. the significance, preparation (including recipes), and economy of the substance are all interlaced with brief overviews of the history of said society or region. really well-done narrative and prose with just the right proportion of broad context and microhistory to add spice.
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This is certainly not a book for casual reading for it is the story of the several people behind the ultimate decipherment of Mayan writing. Detailed and chronological, the author tells of the collegiality and animosity among the deciphers who singularly and separately gathered the myriad knowledge needed to break the Mayan code. The author has great admiration for the Mayan for they were the first to create a written language in North America.

The author is quite clear that all ancient show more writing systems rely on a complex combination of phonetic and semantic signs while there are three great classes of writing systems: logographic, syllabic, alphabetic. The pillars for decipherment are:
1. The database must be large enough, with many texts of adequate length.
2. The language must be known, or at least a reconstructed, ancestral version, in vocabulary, grammar, and syntax; at the very minimum, the linguistic family to which the language of the script belongs should be known.
3. There should be a bilingual inscription of some sort, one member of which is a known writing system.
4. The cultural context of the script should be known, above all traditions and histories giving place names, royal name and title, and so forth.
5. For logographic scripts, there should be pictorial reference, either pictures that accompany the text, or pictorially derived logographic signs.
Both Mayan and its grammar are unlike any other language Westerners learned for there was no Rosetta Stone, no point #3 to light the way to decipherment.

The author does not whitewash Mayan history; “Notwithstanding the pious claims of a past generation of archaeologists, blood and gore were the rule not the exception among the city states of the lowlands…. favourite themes of Classic Maya reliefs are the stripping, binding, trampling, torture, and decapitation of captives.”

I was hoping the book would be along the lines of The Writing of the Gods: The Race to Decode the Rosetta Stone by Edward Dolnick with more pictures of word and sentence composition but on the whole, the book was a fine read.
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What a fascinating book. Michael Coe is a recognised expert on archeology in mesoamerica and this expertise shines through in this book. It's quite short but has a wealth of information and is partly biographic in that it describes a lot of the author's own field work and discoveries.He makes a good case for the Olmecs being the first civilisation in the Americas and has some interesting observations about what a civilisation actually is. scholars "are also in accord that a civilization is a show more class society organized as a state, that is, with a power superordinate over the diverse tribal, ethnic, and class elements that are found within its borders. ......There were not only classes but many ethnic groups subsumed by the sovereign might of the great Olmec centers, extending from coast to coast and down into lower Central America. No chiefdom could have accomplished this. Thus, there was an Olmec state, and the Olmec were civilized".
I find these distinctions interesting when contrasted with the oft heard descriptions thrown about in Australia recently that the aboriginals have 60,000 years of civilisation behind them. But they would certainly not qualify as a civilisation in Coe's terms.Having lived in Mexico, I was, of course, aware of the giant Olmec heads and I'd seen at least one at the Museum of Anthropology in Mexico City but I really knew very little about the Olmec Civilization and Coe teases out the known history extremely well. They date back about 3000 years....well before the Mayans and had extended their reach from near Veracruz across the spine of Mexico to Guerro. In Coe's words: "Why did the Olmec cross the Isthmus and establish posts down the Pacific Coast of Chiapas and Central America? I am again speculating, but the answer I would again give is: jade. Some of the loveliest jades known for the Pre-Columbian New World have come from richly stocked graves in the Nicoya Peninsula of northwestern Costa Rica.
In all of this expansion, the Olmec took more along with them than just their art style and commerce: They disseminated civilization itself, unknown before they appeared. Mesoamerica as we know it was really their creation. Where they did not go, or where their influence was unfelt, civilized life never took hold, not even in the two and a half millennia that elapsed between then and the Spanish conquest".
Certainly some significant mysteries remain....a lot of the great cultures that Coe uncovers had been defaced and then buried. (obviously requiring a lot of work to bury). Coe's explanation: "The amount of pent-up hatred and fury represented by this enormous act of destruction must have been awesome, indeed. These monuments are large, and basalt is a hard stone. Wherever possible, heads were smashed from bodies, “altars” were smashed to pieces, and strange, dimpled depressions and slots were cut into Colossal Heads. There are no signs that wedges or the fire-and-water treatment were used to break up the larger stones: I suspect that they built huge tripods over monuments, hoisted other monuments over these, and let them drop from great heights. Why was this done? Because the Olmec monuments must have stood for the class of leaders that held the tributary, populace in such a firm grip, forcing from them incredible expenditures of labor. These stones must have been the symbols of all that had held them in thrall, and they destroyed these symbols with fervor. But the Olmec must also have feared their power after the act, for by burying them with such care, they removed the hated objects from their sight without incurring their posthumous wrath". Well he may be right but it seems to me that without corroborating evidence that this is just speculation.
I was also quite fascinated by his suggestion that he learned a lot by studying the contemporary people and their habits. He reasons along the following lines: "The really prime land, however, is, like the savannas, the gift of the floods: the natural levees along the rivers that are covered with a deep layer of rich silt after the waters recede. Although only a dry-season crop can be brought in, the corn yield is fantastic, as high as 3,200 pounds per acre as compared with 1,780 pounds for the hillier lands. The upper limit of population must have been about 5,000 people. It took seventeen men to lift and transport the half-ton Monument 17 at San Lorenzo a mere two miles to the schoolhouse in Tenochtitlán. My guess is that at least 2,000 able-bodied men would have been involved in the operation, [bringing the huge stone heads from their source} representing the effective labor of a population of 8,000 to 10,000 persons. There are now sixty of these monuments known for San Lorenzo Tenochtitlán
The only possible conclusion is that the political power of each center was exerted many dozens of miles away from it, and that the force and authority of the Olmec were felt far beyond the heartland itself. Three thousand years ago, there just could not have been enough able-bodied men in the immediate area to have carried out all the physical labor required.
These speak to us of secular, rather than religious, leadership, with power in the hands of a hereditary lineage or dynasty. This conforms with what we know about all other Mesoamerican societies for which we have evidence. In these, the priesthood, while admittedly important, played second fiddle to the civil rulers".
I have a strong recollection of attending a reception in Mexico City in early 1974 where the work of a German artist was being displayed and it was the most beautiful reproduction of mayan glyphs and stela inscriptions and I have the vague recollection that she was working with Michael Coe...but alas, it is so long ago and memories are unreliable.
But Coe has put together quite a delightful publication about the Olmec and their obvious massive contribution to civilisation in central America. As he observes: What had once been the Olmec civilization eventually transformed itself into the Maya civilization. .......But a great deal of the brilliant Classic Maya civilization of CE 300-900 is unparalleled elsewhere in Mesoamerica. .......But what makes the Maya even more outstanding was that they alone among all the native peoples of the New World were fully literate; that is, they had a script sufficiently developed so they could write down anything in their language, which has been substantially deciphered.
The Classic Maya civilization fell to ruin around CE 900. Archeologists still have no firm answers as to why and how this happened, but there is ample evidence that a Toltec or Toltec-influenced people were pushing into the central Maya area from the Gulf Coast of Mexico and invading the remaining Maya centers at this time. Perhaps they were but a symptom",
Happy to give five stars to this book but it would have been greatly improved with illustrations.
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