12 Facts About the Maya That Aren’t About Doomsday Clocks or Human Sacrifice

Bonus fact: scholars prefer ‘Maya’ to ‘Mayan’
12 Facts About the Maya That Aren’t About Doomsday Clocks or Human Sacrifice

Most of us are completely fascinated with the Maya culture of ancient Mexico. But unfortunately for the Maya, certain factoids seem to have stuck harder than others. First off, tales of a “doomsday clock” that aren't even based in fact. Second, their penchant for human sacrifice, which, yes, is true, but probably not what they’d like to be their defining characteristic. Sure does line up with how we like to think of foreign, ancient civilizations, though!

As a nice change of pace, though, here are 12 cool facts about the Maya that involve little-to-no bloodletting…

They Had Saunas

12 Facts About the Maya That Aren’t About Doomsday Clocks or Human Sacrifice

Shutterstock

Their sweat lodges prove that humankind has understood the value of a good schvitz for at least 3,000 years now.

They Used Cacao Beans As Currency

12 Facts About the Maya That Aren’t About Doomsday Clocks or Human Sacrifice

Shutterstock

Most people know of the Maya’s links to cacao and chocolate, but lesser known is that the cacao beans were valuable enough that they were used as a form of currency.

They Were Prolific Traders

12 Facts About the Maya That Aren’t About Doomsday Clocks or Human Sacrifice

Shutterstock

The Maya were far from an insular civilization, trading goods like salt, weapons and jewels with other civilizations throughout what’s now known as Mexico and Central America.

They Had Not Only Language, But Books

12 Facts About the Maya That Aren’t About Doomsday Clocks or Human Sacrifice

Shutterstock

Though it seems to have primarily been among the Maya priests, they not only had written language but honest-to-god books. Only four survive today.

Tags:

Scroll down for the next article
Forgot Password?