Language The ancestral form of all Mayan languages is called
proto-Mayan. Its history, phonology, syntax, grammar, and lexicon have been studied since at least the 1960s, and 'have now been worked out in great detail.' It is thought to have been in close contact with
proto-MijeSokean, a language most often associated with the
Locona people of the
Gulf,
Isthmus, and
Soconusco regions of Mesoamerica, given that later
Mayan languages exhibit loanwords of proto-MijeSokean origin. The divergence of proto-Mayan into distinct
Mayan languages is most commonly dated to circa 2200 BC. This date, however, was obtained from
glottochronological analysis, a linguistic tool which is 'now largely abandoned, given its many difficulties and its uncorroborated founding assumptions.' More recent attempts to date the divergence have employed disparate methods, and yielded widely disparate results, ranging from circa 6600 BC to circa 209 BC.
Arts and sciences The Late Preclassic saw the adoption or diffusion of various arts and sciences across the Lowlands, including hieroglyphic script writing, vigesimal arithmetic, and Long Count calendar time-keeping. Furthermore, during this sub-period, non-hieroglyphic artistic illustrations and portrayals increasingly tended towards a characteristically distinct Maya style. These developments have been described as 'the first blossoming of what is often called civilisation.' Notably, the introduction of mathematical zero during this sub-period has been deemed 'the earliest known instance of this concept.'
Culture The Preclassic is generally characterised by increasing socioeconomic and ideological complexity in Belize and surrounding Lowlands. Details of the increase in social complexity and inequality in the Early to Middle Preclassic have proven difficult to ascertain, though broad strokes are often gleaned from architecture, burials, and material culture. For instance, the period saw the production and long-distance trade of non-functional, exotic goods, of ceramic, marine shells, greenstone, and obsidian, employed in increasingly standardised rituals, such as feasts and burials.
Mortuary Mortuary practices are thought to have become increasingly more complex, standardised, and public throughout the Preclassic.
Grave goods, often ceramic and shell artefacts, e.g. carved jute snail-shells, have been excavated in early burials, which are first documented as simple pits or cist graves below private residences, and later as public interments in round structures,
E-Groups, and platforms. At Cuello, Middle Preclassic burials dated to circa 900 BC600 BC, particularly graves of children, have been found with exotic items of ceramic, marine shell, and greenstone.
Wealthier graves first appear by the end of the Middle Preclassic, including, for instance, graves unearthed at Cahal Pech with
jade,
slate plaques, drilled animal teeth, marine shell discs, and ceramic figurines.
Infrastructural Similarly, infrastructure in settled hamlets is thought to have become more complex and public throughout the period. Early specialised structures, dated to circa 900 BC, have been excavated at Cahal Pech, Cuello, and Blackman Eddy, with the uncovered sweathouse in Cuello being the earliest known instance in the Lowlands. Further afield, ball courts and temple complexes dated to 1000400 BC have been unearthed 'at some two dozen sites in northwestern Yucatán.' It has been suggested that wealthy or elite individuals, at least in central Belize, may have appropriated iconographic motifs common in Cunil pottery 'to demonstrate special knowledge of a sacred cosmos,' and to sponsor the construction of ceremonial architecture, trade in exotic goods, and the celebration of public rituals, leading to an increasingly socioeconomically stratified society. At Blackman Eddy, the appearance of a sizeable midden with tens of thousands of freshwater shells, and finely-decorated ceramic wares, has been taken as possible evidence of
feasting.
Cuisine Maize, an established staple in Belize and the Lowlands by the onset of the Preclassic, is thought to have been boiled and treated with lime to make
nixtamal i.e. hominy. Preclassic Maya settlers, however, did not exclusively rely on farmed produce like maize, beans, and squash, as game and foraged goods have been documented across northern and central Belize, including
craboo,
hogplum,
guava,
soursop,
cassava, sweet potato,
cacao, deer, dogs,
peccary,
armadillo,
agouti, rabbits, turtles, birds, reptiles, fish, and molluscs. Generally though, Preclassic Maya cuisine in the Lowlands is thought to have focussed less on large game, compared to the Preceramic Palaeoindian diet, and more on smaller domesticated animals, i.e. dogs and turkeys, and foraged marine molluscs, e.g.
jute snails. == Government ==