Vessel Depicting a Sacrificial Ceremony for a Royal Accession

Description

This vessel, used to consume a chocolate drink, depicts a key event in a royal Maya accession ceremony, which shows the relationship between human sacrifice and the assumption of power. The expectant king is flanked by servants, musicians, and masked nobles, while a terrified captive—bound to a scaffold—awaits his death. It is probable that the victim was a warrior from a rival community defeated by the prospective king during a coronation war. Such sacrifices were required as proof of a new ruler’s military abilities, provided an offering to his patron gods, and served as a sign of the triumphant reign to follow.

Provenance

Robert and Marianne Huber Fine Arts (Huber Primitive Art), Dixon, Ill. and New York; sold to Art Institute, 1969.

Vessel Depicting a Sacrificial Ceremony for a Royal Accession

Maya

750–800, probably 753

Accession Number

31577

Medium

Ceramic and pigment

Dimensions

H.: 19.7 cm (7 3/4 in.)

Classification

vessel for serving drinks

Museum

The Art Institute of Chicago

Chicago, United States

Credit Line

Ada Turnbull Hertle Fund