Tehuacalco
Tehuacalco is an archeological site located near the city of Chilpancingo in the Mexican state of Guerrero. Tehuacalco was the first archeological site associated with the Yope people to be excavated, in the 2000s.
Tehuacalco was occupied as a ceremonial site from 400 CE to 1100 CE.
Tehuacalco is located on a hill surrounded by mountains. The environment of this area is a tropical deciduous forest, where the trees lose most of their leaves during the dry season in autumn and winter.
Four mountains represented the cardinal directions, and one was used to represent solar events (equinoxes and solstices) when the sun rose behind it. The Tehuacalco site was opened to the public in 2008.
Origin of the Name
The word “Tehuacalco” comes from the Nahuatl “tehuacalli” which refers to holes bored into stones to be used for ritual purposes. It can be interpreted as the “place of the stone box,” “House of priests” or “house of the sacred water”.
History & Timeline
While mostly Tehuacalco is associated with the Yopes, it is not completely certain. There may have been Yopime or even Tlapaneca settlements here as well.
Occupation of the site began around 400 CE with its height between 650 and 110 0CE. At this time, the population center covered about eighty hectares and the ceremonial center covered twelve.
Most of the structures were built when the Toltecs were at the height of their influence.
The Yopes of Tehuacalco were sedentary farmers with different social classes with classes of rulers and priests on top, followed by warriors, merchants, and artisans. The diet consists of meat from hunting and corn.
The Yopes thought of the mountains as repositories of water and seeds. These mountains were worshipped as a way to ensure good harvests.
The sun was thought to be devoured by a monster at the end of the day and had to fight in the underworld to arise the next morning. It was considered obligatory to “feed” the sun to help it return.
The area around the site was named Yopitzingo in Nahuatl, and it was one of the few areas that the Aztecs could not conquer in the late Post Classic period even though by then the Yopes had become semi-nomadic practicing intermittent agriculture.
However, after the Spanish Conquest, the Yope were decimated by European diseases. They did not submit completely to Spanish rule and had one major rebellion. However, this was crushed with the Spanish scattered the remaining Yopes to other settlements.
Tehuacalco is the first site related to the Yope to be extensively explored, which was done in the 2000s.
Nineteen structures have been discovered so far, mostly by fieldwork performed in 2006 and 2007.
Afterward, forty million pesos were spent to ready the site for tourism and it was opened to the public in 2008.
The archaeological zone
The site is located on a hill surrounded by taller mountains. Four of these mountains, Compuerta, Capulín, Tierra Colorada, and Gavilpan, mark the cardinal directions. The site hill was considered to be a “fifth” direction, where power was concentrated.
The site has four aspects, areas with rock etchings, the surrounding mountain terrain, pyramidal structures, and caves in the hills with offerings.
The rock etchings include the Piedra de Los Pies Pintados, with markings of feet, and Monument W which has circular patterns used to count lunar cycles.
Fifty-seven caves on the sides of Compuerta have been explored with findings of offerings such as braziers and incense burners. These caves were related to the worship of the sun.
The site possesses various characteristics related to archaeoastronomy. The site is oriented towards the Compuerta Mountain. This mountain and smaller peaks on each side were used to mark equinoxes and solstices, as the sun rose from behind them.
The site was a ceremonial center with a plaza surrounded by various pyramid bases and other structures.
The site has a distinct construction style, which consists of boulders with spaces between them filled in with layers of flat rock and red clay. This allows the structures to withstand earthquakes.
Of the discovered structures, eight are considered major complexes with the rest minor. The most important of these is four large pyramidal structures and a Mesoamerican ball court.
Some of the pyramid bases are in unusually good condition.
The four main structures are Encinera or Main Temple, the Palace, the Templo del Espejo de Agua, and Platform W. The Palace, also denominated as Building Five, is the largest on the site, with a base that measures eighty meters on each side. It has sunken patios and various courts.
The La Encinera is twenty meters tall and was the site for various rituals performed by priests and rulers.
The ball court measures 37.8 meters long.
Platform W had residences for the elite with internal patios and drainage systems.
However, the most sacred part of the site is a hill dedicated as a sanctuary for the worship of water and rain.
Some of the minor structures include the Templo Verde, the Templo Rojo, and La Anona. The last two form the Solar Group.
There is a welcome center with explanations about the site in Spanish, but the explanatory signs on the site are in Spanish and English.
How to get to Tehuacalco archaeological site
From Chipancingo
- By bus from Chipancingo to Tierra Colorada, 50 minutes (twice a day)
- By taxi from Tierra Colorada to Tehuacalco archaeological site, 7-10 minutes
Or directly in a taxi from Chipancingo (around 40 minutes)
From Acapulco
- By bus from Acapulco to Chilpancingo, 2 hours (buses run every 2 hours)
- By bus from Chipancingo to Tierra Colorada, 50 minutes (twice a day)
- By taxi from Tierra Colorada to Tehuacalco archaeological site, 7-10 minutes
Or directly in a taxi from Acapulco (around 50 minutes)
Let us know if this article was useful for you