Part 1: John Lloyd
Stephens and Frederick Catherwood
John Lloyd Stephens |
On a dark night in October, 1839, a wealthy attorney from
New York and an architect from England, set sail on an adventure that they
could not have imagined. The attorney,
John Lloyd Stephens, had made his wealth as an author profiting from a trip to
Europe for “health reasons”. He had
acquired a “persistent streptococci throat” while politicking for Andrew
Jackson. His doctor recommended a trip
to Europe. While in Europe, he sent
articles on “incidents of travel’ back to his friend at the American Monthly
magazine which were quite successful.
The influx of immigrants to America flooded all means of transport back
home, so Stephens extended his travels to Egypt, Arabia, the Holy Lands, Petra,
Turkey, Russia, Poland and eventually England.
While visiting Jerusalem, he met Frederick Catherwood, an English
architect trying to make a living drawing the ruins of Rome and sketching the
architecture of the Holy Lands. Stephens
purchased a map of the Holy Lands drawn by Catherwood and was so impressed by
it that he later looked up Catherwood in England. They became great friends.
Frederick Catherwood self-portrait |
Back in New York, Stephens compiled his notes and “Incidents
of Travel in Egypt, Arabia Petraea, and the Holy Land” was published in
1837. It was wildly successful and was
followed up by “Incidents of Travel in Greece, Turkey, Russia, and Poland”
setting up Stephens financially.
Rumors of great cities in Central America were floating
about and Stephens enlisted his friend Catherwood, who had relocated to New
York, to join him for a trip to Central America. Stephens described his friend as, “… an
experienced traveler and personal friend, who had passed more than ten years of
his life in diligently studying the antiquities of the Old World; and whom, as
one familiar with the remains of ancient architectural greatness …”
At that time, only three archaeological sites were known in
Central America – Copan, Palenque, and Uxmal.
No one connected the cities with any known culture and the name “Maya”
was scarcely known. According to Victor
Wolfgang von Hagen, who wrote an introduction for a re-printing of Stephen’s
book, “Incidents of Travel in Yucatan”, “The acceptance of an indigenous
‘civilization’ demanded of an American living in 1839 a complete reorientation;
to him an ‘Indian’ was one of those barbaric, half-naked tipi dwellers, a rude
subhuman people who hunted with animal stealth.”
Before leaving, his old friend and now president of the
United States, Andrew Jackson, appointed Stephens Ambassador to Central
America. He accepted the post hoping it
would aid him in his search for “lost civilizations”. Again from von Hagen, “Landing within the
political and social chaos which was Central America, they found that it was
far easier to find lost cities than to locate lost governments."
So, in October, 1839, John Lloyd Stephens and Frederick
Catherwood set sail for Belize on a momentous journey that would expose, for
the first time, the wonders of the lost Mayan civilization to America.
Stelae in Copan by Frederick Catherwood |
As the pictures at left/right and below show, Frederick Catherwood's drawings were amazingly accurate and provide a true feel for what they discovered in their visits to Central America. The statues are the stelae found at Copan. Below a picture of Uxmal compared with Catherwood's.
Uxmal, by Frederick Catherwood
Have you travelled to see the Mayan ruins? I would like to hear your story. If you are willing to share your story, please submit it by clicking here. Throughout this series, I will be posting stories from readers and comparing their descriptions of what it is like now to what Stephens and Catherwood experienced in 1839
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Someone Sometimes with visits your blog regularly and recommended it in my experience to read as well. The way of writing is excellent and also the content is top-notch. Thanks for that insight you provide the readers!
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Thank you for your kind words and for reading Native American Antiquity.
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