Tikal was one of the major cultural and population centers of the Maya civilization. The oldest monumentalarchitecture at the site dates to the 4th century BC. The best time of Tikal was during the Classic Period, from 200 AD to 900 AD. In this period, Tikal was in charge of the Maya region politically, economically, and militarily. This is because it was linked with areas throughout Mesoamerica, such as central Mexican, the center of Teotihuacan. After the end of the Late Classic Period, no new major monuments were built. Some palaces were burned and the population declined. The site was abandoned by the end of the 10th century.
The ruins are on lowland rainforest, but Tikal had no water other than what was collected from rainwater and stored underground. Archaeologists working in Tikal during the last century used the underground facilities to store water for their own use. The absence of springs, rivers, and lakes nearby is unusual for a major city. However, Tikal did well with intensiveagriculturaltechniques. These were more advanced than the slash & burn methods originally theorized by archeologists. The reliance on seasonalrainfall made Tikal open to drought. This is now thought to play a major part in the Classic Maya Collapse.
Rulers
The known rulers of Tikal, with general or specific dates attributed to them, include the following:
Late Preclassic
Yax Ehb' Xook – ca. A.D. 60, dynastic founder
Siyaj Chan K'awil Chak Ich'aak ("Stormy Sky I") – ca. 2nd century
Yax Ch’aktel Xok – ca. 200
Early Classic
Balam Ajaw ("Decorated Jaguar") – A.D. 292
K'inich Ehb' – ca. A.D. 300
Ix Une' B'alam ("Queen Jaguar") – A.D. 317
"Leyden Plate Ruler" – A.D. 320
K'inich Muwaan Jol – died A.D. 359
Chak Tok Ich'aak I ("Jaguar Paw I") – c.a. 360-378. His palace, unusually, was never built over by later rulers, and was kept in repair for centuries as an apparent revered monument. He died on the same day that Siyah K'ak' arrived in Tikal, probably executed by the Teotihuacano conquerors.
Nun Yax Ayin – A.D. 370-411. Nun Yax Ayin was a noble from Teotihuacan who was installed on Tikal's throne in 379 by Siyaj K'ak'.
Siyaj Chan K'awiil II ("Stormy Sky II") – A.D. 411-456.
K'inich Muwaan Jol II – ca. early/mid 7th century.
Late Classic
Jasaw Chan K'awiil I (a.k.a. Ruler A or Ah Cacao) – A.D. 682-734. Entombed in Temple I. His queen Lady Twelve Macaw (died A.D. 704) is entombed in Temple II. Triumphed in war with Calakmul in A.D. 711.
Yik'in Chan K'awiil (a.k.a. Ruler B) – A.D. 734-766. His wife was Shana'Kin Yaxchel Pacal "Green Jay on the Wall" of Lakamha. It is unknown exactly where is tomb lies, but strong archaeological parallels between Burial 116 (the resting place of his father) and Burial 196, located in the diminutive pyramid immediately south of Temple II and referred to as Str. 5D-73, suggest the latter may be the tomb of Yik’in Chan Kawil (Sharer 1994:169). Other possible locations, and likely candidates as mortuary shrines, include Temples IV and VI.
"Temple VI Ruler" – A.D. 766-768
Yax Nuun Ayiin II ("Chitam") – A.D. 768-790
Chitam II ("Dark Sun") – Buried ca. A.D. 810 Buried in Temple III
Tikal Digital Media ArchiveArchived 2008-04-17 at the Wayback Machine (creative commons-licensed photos, laser scans, panoramas), focused in the area around the Great Plaza and Temple IV with data from a UC Berkeley/CyArk research partnership