The Esperanza Stone: Unterschied zwischen den Versionen

(Die Seite wurde neu angelegt: by [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Frederick_Holder Charles F Holder] (1910) Many years ago a strange stone resembling a meteorite fell into the valle yof the Y...)
 
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by [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Frederick_Holder Charles F Holder] (1910)
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by [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Frederick_Holder Charles F. Holder] '''(Fig. 5)''' (1910)
  
Many years ago a strange stone resembling a meteorite fell into the valle yof the Yaqui, Mexico, and the sensational story went from one end to the other of the country that a stone bearing human inscriptions had descended to the
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[[Bild:Esperanza stone burnham1910.jpg|thumb|400px|'''Fig. 1''' The ''Esperanza stone'' with underlined glyphs, as described by Charles F. Holder. Next to the stone is Major Frederick Burnham.]]
earth.
 
  
Hundreds visited the place, natives made a pilgrimage to it from all over Sonora, and the stone, called the Esperanza, became famous in its way, andmany of the inhabitants believe that it is a message from heaven, and demand that it be translated.
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Many years ago a strange stone resembling a meteorite fell into the valley of the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yaqui_people Yaqui], Mexico, and the sensational story went from one end to the other of the country that a stone bearing human inscriptions '''(Fig. 1)''' had descended to the earth. Hundreds visited the place, natives made a pilgrimage to it from all over [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sonora Sonora], and the stone, called the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Esperanza_Stone Esperanza], became famous in its way, and many of the inhabitants believe that it is a message from heaven, and demand that it be translated.
  
The stone was found by Major Frederick Burnham, of the British army, the famous scout of the Boer war, and not long after he invited the writer to visit it, and endeavor, if possible, to decipher its story. We left Los Angeles in April, and in a day and a half reached Nogales <ref>Editorial remark: In [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_R._Corliss William R. Corliss]´s presentation of [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Frederick_Holder Holder's] article it reads that the team reached "''Noales''", which make sense. So we have corrected this obvious mistake.</ref>. A day's trip took us down the great valley to our headquarters, the fine adobe of the Rio Yaqui Rod and Gun Club, located at Esperanza. We started out with a Yaqui driver to hunt for the stone the following day, going south or east of Esperanza. Major Burnham had no marks, yet he located it with ease, and I soon found him standing by the alleged meteorite. In all the delta, three thousand square miles of which I rode over, in various directions, I did not see a stone or rock of any kind, hence the sudden view was striking of a big black pseudo-volcanic rock standing buried to half its size in the
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The stone was found by [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frederick_Russell_Burnham Major Frederick Burnham] '''(Fig. 1)''', of the British army, the famous scout of the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Second_Boer_War Boer war], and not long after he invited the writer to visit it, and endeavor, if possible, to decipher its story. We left Los Angeles in April, and in a day and a half reached [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nogales,_Sonora Nogales] <ref>Editorial remark: In [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_R._Corliss William R. Corliss]´s presentation of [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Frederick_Holder Holder's] article it reads that the team reached "''Noales''", which doesn't make any sense. So we have corrected this obvious mistake.</ref>. A day's trip took us down the great valley to our headquarters, the fine adobe of the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frederick_Russell_Burnham Rio Yaqui] Rod and Gun Club, located at [https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Esperanza_(Sonora) Esperanza]. '''(Fig. 2)''' We started out with a [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yaqui Yaqui] '''(Fig. 3)''' driver to hunt for the stone the following day, going south or east of [https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Esperanza_(Sonora) Esperanza]. [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frederick_Russell_Burnham Major Burnham] had no marks, yet he located it with ease, and I soon found him standing by the alleged meteorite. In all the delta, three thousand square miles of which I rode over, in various directions, I did not see a stone or rock of any kind, hence the sudden view was striking of a big black pseudo-volcanic rock standing buried to half its size in the sand.
sand.
 
  
Major Burnham had his Yaquis dig out the dirt about the stone, so that it waseasy to examine it. It impressed me as an ancient find. The soil line half wayup was very distinct, and it had the mellowing tint, the rounding of the edges, that could only come in a long time. The stone was a brown igneous rock, its longest axis being about eight feet, and on the eastern face, which had an angle of about forty-five degrees, was the deep-cut inscription, and as I glanced at it, the Mayan Codex flashed into my eyes, as I recognized some of the familiar symbols of this ancient record of Yucatan which has puzzled the wise men for years. We had taken some flour paste with us, and outlined roughly the deep marks for the photographer, but omitted several of importance.
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[[Bild:Esperanza - Sonora.jpg|thumb|left|275px|'''Fig. 2''' The location of Esperanza (state of Sonora) in Mexico]]
  
The location was asingular one, being five or six miles from the Rio Yaqui and on what was doubtless the highway from south to north. In the soil thrown up by the men I found anumber of pieces of pottery, parts of broken ollas, suggesting that those who had made the inscription, cutting it deep in the stone, must have brought water inthem from the Yaqui, as the work with stone implements must have taken daysor weeks. What the inscription means is of great interest. Major Burnham, who discovered the remarkable gold ornaments in a granite ruin of a remote civilization in Rhodesia, Africa, and explored that continent and Mexico, agreed with me as to the Maya suggestiveness; and I can only submit my own deductions, with the hope that they may aid some professional ethnologist in solving the riddle.  
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[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frederick_Russell_Burnham Major Burnham] had his [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yaqui Yaquis] dig out the dirt about the stone, so that it was easy to examine it. It impressed me as an ancient find. The soil line half way up was very distinct, and it had the mellowing tint, the rounding of the edges, that could only come in a long time. The stone was a brown igneous rock, its longest axis being about eight feet, and on the eastern face, which had an angle of about forty-five degrees, was the deep-cut inscription, and as I glanced at it, the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maya_codices Mayan Codex] flashed into my eyes, as I recognized some of the familiar symbols of this ancient record of [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yucat%C3%A1n_Peninsula Yucatan] which has puzzled the wise men for years. We had taken some flour paste with us, and outlined roughly the deep marks for the photographer, but omitted several of importance.  
  
I assumed the hypothesis that as there had been a high civilization in Yucatan and Guatemala in the past, shown by the writings and antiquities of the Mayans and later Mexicans, such a people must have been dominated by the spirit of exploration to the north; and as the stone is on a natural line of march from the south to the north, I assume that this is a record or report of some ancient people, probably Mayas, telling to the world and those who might come after, that they had reached the big river which to-day bears a similar name,the Maya and the Yaqui. They doubtless chiseled on the rock a picture of one or two of their many gods, the time of arrival, and some emblem indicating who they were.
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The location was a singular one, being five or six miles from the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frederick_Russell_Burnham Rio Yaqui] and on what was doubtless the highway from south to north. In the soil thrown up by the men I found a number of pieces of pottery, parts of broken [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Olla ollas], suggesting that those who had made the inscription, cutting it deep in the stone, must have brought water in them from the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frederick_Russell_Burnham Yaqui], as the work with stone implements must have taken days or weeks. What the inscription means is of great interest. [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frederick_Russell_Burnham Major Burnham], who discovered the remarkable gold ornaments in a granite ruin of a remote civilization in [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rhodesia Rhodesia], Africa, and explored that continent and Mexico, agreed with me as to the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maya_civilization Maya] suggestiveness; and I can only submit my own deductions, with the hope that they may aid some professional ethnologist in solving the riddle.  
  
Over this delta hundreds of expeditions have passed in the last thousand years, migratory bands, the ancestors of the Pueblos and others, and in the sixteenth century began the Spanish invasion of what is now New Mexico and Arizona, the search for the so-called "seven cities."  Among the first was that of Nuno Guseman, who, while Cortez was in Spain, organized an expedition for the exploration of the countries to the north.
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[[Bild:A group of Yaqui Indians at their thatched dwelling, Mexico, ca.1910 (CHS-1529).jpg|thumb|400px|'''Fig. 3''' A group of Yaqui Indians at their thatched dwelling, Mexico, ca. 1910]]
  
In 1538, two friars reached the Gila. Many expeditions followed. All crosseda portion of the very heart of the forest of the Rio Yaqui, and among the legends and folklore of the natives of to-day are suggestions and memories of the gallant men, mounted on strange animals, bedecked in armor, who, pressing north, passed unknown the richest mines in the world in their search for gold.
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I assumed the hypothesis that as there had been a high civilization in [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yucat%C3%A1n_Peninsula Yucatan] and Guatemala in the past, shown by the writings and antiquities of the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maya_civilization Mayans] and later Mexicans, such a people must have been dominated by the spirit of exploration to the north; and as the stone is on a natural line of march from the south to the north, I assume that this is a record or report of some ancient people, probably [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maya_civilization Mayas], telling to the world and those who might come after, that they had reached the big river which to-day bears a similar name,the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maya_peoples Maya] and the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yaqui Yaqui]. They doubtless chiseled on the rock a picture of one or two of their many gods, the time of arrival, and some emblem indicating who they were.
  
Old Yaquis living in the Bacatete Mountains to-day have a legend that among the wild hordes who came up from the south were some who "cut signs on rocks, "who left a message of discovery, or arrival, a notice possibly of water in abundance, a rich land, or a consecration to the gods, a legend interesting in connection with the inscription.
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Over this delta hundreds of expeditions have passed in the last thousand years, migratory bands, the ancestors of the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Puebloan_peoples Pueblos] and others, and in the sixteenth century began the Spanish invasion of what is now [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Mexico New Mexico] and [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arizona Arizona], the search for the so-called "[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seven_Cities_of_Gold_(myth) seven cities]." Among the first was that of [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nu%C3%B1o_de_Guzm%C3%A1n Nuno Guseman], who, while [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hern%C3%A1n_Cort%C3%A9s Cortez] was in Spain, organized an expedition for the exploration of the countries to the north.
  
Assuming that the stone carvings are of Mayan origin, what is the evidence?The inscription faces the east; the strange figure on the left is perhaps one of themany gods, and is characteristic of the strange figures on the Mayan codices, orit may be a native picture. Beginning at lower left extremity of the inscription isthe tail of a snake, and the body is traced entirely across the stone, ending at theleft hand of Major Burnham, who stands by it in the photograph. The snake wasa Mayan god. Leaving this, the next figure to the right is a circle within a circle.I find this on the original Mayan manuscript known as Codex Cortesianus, published in 1882.  
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In 1538, two friars reached the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gila_River Gila]. Many expeditions followed. All crossed a portion of the very heart of the forest of the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yaqui_people Rio Yaqui], and among the legends and folklore of the natives of to-day are suggestions and memories of the gallant men, mounted on strange animals, bedecked in armor, who, pressing north, passed unknown the richest mines in the world in their search for gold.  
  
This codex is supposed to represent the Mayan gods of the fourcardinal points, and the circle within a circle is Muluk, the sixth day. The nextfigure following along to the right resembles the figure 6, and suggests Kan orsouth of the codex. Next to this is a period or dot, a common numeral on thecodex; then we come to the striking inverted scroll which I find on the Mayan codex, known as the "Dresden," copied in the United States Government Report of 1884.  
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[[Bild:Esperanza stone 1909.JPG|thumb|left|400px|'''Fig. 4''' Another photography of the Esperanza Stone. Major Burnham on left; Dr. Holder on right.]]
  
There is reason for supposing this to indicate water, to the Aztecs at least,and I find it on many beautiful Tusayan water jars in the Smithsonian collection,and repeatedly on Tusayan water bowls.Following the double scroll to the right is another figure somewhat like the 6.On the top of the stone is a cutting resembling a pair of glasses or two eyes. Thisis a Mayan codex symbol. The dots and dashes found on the Burnham rock two parallel lines near and two above may be a part of the snake, but they are shown on the Dresden Mayan codex as numerals. Thus, one dot was one, a straight line anda dot, as six, a straight line and two straight lines, as seen near the big volute, indicates ten. Just above the big inverted scroll is a diamond with a line in thecenter, a symbol I find on the Dresden Mayan codex.
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Old [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yaqui Yaquis] living in the [http://mapcarta.com/20381304 Bacatete Mountains] to-day have a legend that among the wild hordes who came up from the south were some who "cut signs on rocks, "who left a message of discovery, or arrival, a notice possibly of water in abundance, a rich land, or a consecration to the gods, a legend interesting in connection with the inscription.
  
It is impossible in this brief space to go into an elaborate investigation, but I think I have shown at least that most of the symbols are Mayan. All appear in the famous Mayan codices or calendars since the time of the discovery of Yucatan. The conclusion is that ages ago a Mayan expedition passed this way, within two miles of Esperanza, Sonora. They left a record of their travels on this rock. On the left (a common feature of Mayan codices) is a picture representing some feature of the trip. It may be an animal, the big tail suggests the armadillo, orit may be a god. The snake may be the god under whose protection they were; the double inverted cone suggested the discovery of two big rivers a striking feature of the region the Maya and the Rio Yaqui, or merely the Swastica sign.
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Assuming that the stone carvings are of [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maya_civilization Mayan] origin, what is the evidence? The inscription faces the east; the strange figure on the left is perhaps one of the many gods, and is characteristic of the strange figures on the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maya_codices Mayan codices], or it may be a native picture. Beginning at lower left extremity of the inscription is the tail of a snake, and the body is traced entirely across the stone, ending at the left hand of [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frederick_Russell_Burnham Major Burnham], who stands by it in the photograph. '''(Fig. 1)''' The snake was a [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maya_civilization Mayan] god. Leaving this, the next figure to the right is a circle within a circle. I find this on the original [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maya_civilization Mayan] manuscript known as [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Madrid_Codex_(Maya) Codex Cortesianus], published in 1882.  
  
The two lines indicate possibly distance, while the other symbols are the cardinal points relating to the year—the sixth day, Muluk—and other data considered of importance. This is what the Burnham stone may mean. What it actually does mean, remains for the scientific men of the world to decide, but Major Burnham and myself are committed to the romantic hypothesis that this is the message of a forebear of the Mayas, some ancient warrior of the long ago, some knight who fought his way to the land of the Yaquis, who brought a great rock down from the mountains and placed upon it the seal of Mayan conquest.
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This [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maya_codices codex] is supposed to represent the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maya_civilization Mayan] gods of the four cardinal points, and the circle within a circle is Muluk, the sixth day. The next figure following along to the right resembles the figure 6, and suggests Kan or south of the codex. Next to this is a period or dot, a common numeral on the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maya_codices codex]; then we come to the striking inverted scroll which I find on the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maya_codices Mayan codex], known as the "[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dresden_Codex Dresden]," copied in the United States Government Report of 1884.  
  
I submitted the photograph to the Field Museum and the Smithsonian and one or two others, and to my surprise the reply was that they could make nothing out of it. I venture to say, even as a layman, that had I the time, I could translate the inscription.
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[[Bild:Charles f holder and tuna1898.jpg|thumb|'''Fig. 5''' Charles F. Holder (left) during a fishing trip in Mexico (1898)]]
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There is reason for supposing this to indicate water, to the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aztec Aztecs] at least, and I find it on many beautiful [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tusayan,_Arizona Tusayan] water jars in the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smithsonian_Institution Smithsonian] collection, and repeatedly on [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tusayan,_Arizona Tusayan] water bowls. Following the double scroll to the right is another figure somewhat like the 6. On the top of the stone is a cutting resembling a pair of glasses or two eyes. This is a [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maya_codices Mayan codex] symbol. The dots and dashes found on the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Esperanza_Stone Burnham rock] two parallel lines near and two above may be a part of the snake, but they are shown on the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dresden_Codex Dresden Mayan codex] as numerals. Thus, one dot was one, a straight line and a dot, as six, a straight line and two straight lines, as seen near the big volute, indicates ten. Just above the big inverted scroll is a diamond with a line in thecenter, a symbol I find on the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dresden_Codex Dresden Mayan codex].
 +
 
 +
It is impossible in this brief space to go into an elaborate investigation, but I think I have shown at least that most of the symbols are [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maya_civilization Mayan]. All appear in the famous [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maya_codices Mayan codices] or calendars since the time of the discovery of [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yucat%C3%A1n_Peninsula Yucatan]. The conclusion is that ages ago a [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maya_civilization Mayan] expedition passed this way, within two miles of [https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Esperanza_(Sonora) Esperanza], [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sonora Sonora]. They left a record of their travels on this rock. On the left (a common feature of [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maya_codices Mayan codices]) is a picture representing some feature of the trip. It may be an animal, the big tail suggests the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Armadillo armadillo], or it may be a god. The snake may be the god under whose protection they were; the double inverted cone suggested the discovery of two big rivers a striking feature of the region the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maya_civilization Maya] and the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frederick_Russell_Burnham Rio Yaqui], or merely the Swastica sign.
 +
 
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The two lines indicate possibly distance, while the other symbols are the cardinal points relating to the year — the sixth day, Muluk — and other data considered of importance. This is what the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Esperanza_Stone Burnham stone] may mean. What it actually does mean, remains for the scientific men of the world to decide, but [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frederick_Russell_Burnham Major Burnham] and myself are committed to the romantic hypothesis that this is the message of a forebear of the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maya_civilization Mayas], some ancient warrior of the long ago, some knight who fought his way to the land of the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yaqui Yaquis], who brought a great rock down from the mountains and placed upon it the seal of [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maya_civilization Mayan] conquest.
 +
 
 +
I submitted the photograph to the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Field_Museum_of_Natural_History Field Museum] and the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smithsonian_Institution Smithsonian] and one or two others, and to my surprise the reply was that they could make nothing out of it. I venture to say, even as a layman, that had I the time, I could translate the inscription.
  
  
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This article by [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Frederick_Holder Charles Frederick Holder] (1851–1915) was originally published in the magazine ''[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scientific_American Scientific American]'', 103:196, September 10, 1910. Taken from: [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_R._Corliss William R. Corliss], "[https://de.scribd.com/document/93964398/Corliss-Sourcebook-M1-Strange-Artifacts Sourcebook M1 - Strange Artifacts]" (MGS-005), online at [https://de.scribd.com/ Scribd.com]. (Retrieved 02 January 2016)
 
This article by [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Frederick_Holder Charles Frederick Holder] (1851–1915) was originally published in the magazine ''[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scientific_American Scientific American]'', 103:196, September 10, 1910. Taken from: [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_R._Corliss William R. Corliss], "[https://de.scribd.com/document/93964398/Corliss-Sourcebook-M1-Strange-Artifacts Sourcebook M1 - Strange Artifacts]" (MGS-005), online at [https://de.scribd.com/ Scribd.com]. (Retrieved 02 January 2016)
  
'''Footnotes'''
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'''Footnote'''
 
<references />
 
<references />
  
 
'''Sources of illustrations:'''
 
'''Sources of illustrations:'''
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:1) '''Charles F. Holder''' / '''Ctatkinson~commonswiki''' at [https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Hauptseite Wikimedia Commons], [https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Esperanza_stone_burnham1910.jpg File:Esperanza stone burnham1910.jpg]
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:2) [https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Portada Wikipedia - La enciclopedia libre], [https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Esperanza_(Sonora) Esperanza (Sonora)]
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:3) [https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/User:F%C3%A6 Fæ] at [https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Hauptseite Wikimedia Commons], [https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:A_group_of_Yaqui_Indians_at_their_thatched_dwelling,_Mexico,_ca.1910_(CHS-1529).jpg File:A group of Yaqui Indians at their thatched dwelling, Mexico, ca.1910 (CHS-1529).jpg] at [https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Hauptseite Wikimedia Commons],
 +
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:4) '''Charles F. Holder''' / '''Ctatkinson~commonswiki''' at [https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Hauptseite Wikimedia Commons], [https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Esperanza_stone_1909.JPG File:Esperanza stone 1909.JPG]
 +
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:5) ''' Ctatkinson~commonswiki''' at [https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Hauptseite Wikimedia Commons], [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Charles_f_holder_and_tuna1898.jpg File:Charles f holder and tuna1898.jpg]

Aktuelle Version vom 23. April 2019, 17:05 Uhr

by Charles F. Holder (Fig. 5) (1910)

Fig. 1 The Esperanza stone with underlined glyphs, as described by Charles F. Holder. Next to the stone is Major Frederick Burnham.

Many years ago a strange stone resembling a meteorite fell into the valley of the Yaqui, Mexico, and the sensational story went from one end to the other of the country that a stone bearing human inscriptions (Fig. 1) had descended to the earth. Hundreds visited the place, natives made a pilgrimage to it from all over Sonora, and the stone, called the Esperanza, became famous in its way, and many of the inhabitants believe that it is a message from heaven, and demand that it be translated.

The stone was found by Major Frederick Burnham (Fig. 1), of the British army, the famous scout of the Boer war, and not long after he invited the writer to visit it, and endeavor, if possible, to decipher its story. We left Los Angeles in April, and in a day and a half reached Nogales [1]. A day's trip took us down the great valley to our headquarters, the fine adobe of the Rio Yaqui Rod and Gun Club, located at Esperanza. (Fig. 2) We started out with a Yaqui (Fig. 3) driver to hunt for the stone the following day, going south or east of Esperanza. Major Burnham had no marks, yet he located it with ease, and I soon found him standing by the alleged meteorite. In all the delta, three thousand square miles of which I rode over, in various directions, I did not see a stone or rock of any kind, hence the sudden view was striking of a big black pseudo-volcanic rock standing buried to half its size in the sand.

Fig. 2 The location of Esperanza (state of Sonora) in Mexico

Major Burnham had his Yaquis dig out the dirt about the stone, so that it was easy to examine it. It impressed me as an ancient find. The soil line half way up was very distinct, and it had the mellowing tint, the rounding of the edges, that could only come in a long time. The stone was a brown igneous rock, its longest axis being about eight feet, and on the eastern face, which had an angle of about forty-five degrees, was the deep-cut inscription, and as I glanced at it, the Mayan Codex flashed into my eyes, as I recognized some of the familiar symbols of this ancient record of Yucatan which has puzzled the wise men for years. We had taken some flour paste with us, and outlined roughly the deep marks for the photographer, but omitted several of importance.

The location was a singular one, being five or six miles from the Rio Yaqui and on what was doubtless the highway from south to north. In the soil thrown up by the men I found a number of pieces of pottery, parts of broken ollas, suggesting that those who had made the inscription, cutting it deep in the stone, must have brought water in them from the Yaqui, as the work with stone implements must have taken days or weeks. What the inscription means is of great interest. Major Burnham, who discovered the remarkable gold ornaments in a granite ruin of a remote civilization in Rhodesia, Africa, and explored that continent and Mexico, agreed with me as to the Maya suggestiveness; and I can only submit my own deductions, with the hope that they may aid some professional ethnologist in solving the riddle.

Fig. 3 A group of Yaqui Indians at their thatched dwelling, Mexico, ca. 1910

I assumed the hypothesis that as there had been a high civilization in Yucatan and Guatemala in the past, shown by the writings and antiquities of the Mayans and later Mexicans, such a people must have been dominated by the spirit of exploration to the north; and as the stone is on a natural line of march from the south to the north, I assume that this is a record or report of some ancient people, probably Mayas, telling to the world and those who might come after, that they had reached the big river which to-day bears a similar name,the Maya and the Yaqui. They doubtless chiseled on the rock a picture of one or two of their many gods, the time of arrival, and some emblem indicating who they were.

Over this delta hundreds of expeditions have passed in the last thousand years, migratory bands, the ancestors of the Pueblos and others, and in the sixteenth century began the Spanish invasion of what is now New Mexico and Arizona, the search for the so-called "seven cities." Among the first was that of Nuno Guseman, who, while Cortez was in Spain, organized an expedition for the exploration of the countries to the north.

In 1538, two friars reached the Gila. Many expeditions followed. All crossed a portion of the very heart of the forest of the Rio Yaqui, and among the legends and folklore of the natives of to-day are suggestions and memories of the gallant men, mounted on strange animals, bedecked in armor, who, pressing north, passed unknown the richest mines in the world in their search for gold.

Fig. 4 Another photography of the Esperanza Stone. Major Burnham on left; Dr. Holder on right.

Old Yaquis living in the Bacatete Mountains to-day have a legend that among the wild hordes who came up from the south were some who "cut signs on rocks, "who left a message of discovery, or arrival, a notice possibly of water in abundance, a rich land, or a consecration to the gods, a legend interesting in connection with the inscription.

Assuming that the stone carvings are of Mayan origin, what is the evidence? The inscription faces the east; the strange figure on the left is perhaps one of the many gods, and is characteristic of the strange figures on the Mayan codices, or it may be a native picture. Beginning at lower left extremity of the inscription is the tail of a snake, and the body is traced entirely across the stone, ending at the left hand of Major Burnham, who stands by it in the photograph. (Fig. 1) The snake was a Mayan god. Leaving this, the next figure to the right is a circle within a circle. I find this on the original Mayan manuscript known as Codex Cortesianus, published in 1882.

This codex is supposed to represent the Mayan gods of the four cardinal points, and the circle within a circle is Muluk, the sixth day. The next figure following along to the right resembles the figure 6, and suggests Kan or south of the codex. Next to this is a period or dot, a common numeral on the codex; then we come to the striking inverted scroll which I find on the Mayan codex, known as the "Dresden," copied in the United States Government Report of 1884.

Fig. 5 Charles F. Holder (left) during a fishing trip in Mexico (1898)

There is reason for supposing this to indicate water, to the Aztecs at least, and I find it on many beautiful Tusayan water jars in the Smithsonian collection, and repeatedly on Tusayan water bowls. Following the double scroll to the right is another figure somewhat like the 6. On the top of the stone is a cutting resembling a pair of glasses or two eyes. This is a Mayan codex symbol. The dots and dashes found on the Burnham rock two parallel lines near and two above may be a part of the snake, but they are shown on the Dresden Mayan codex as numerals. Thus, one dot was one, a straight line and a dot, as six, a straight line and two straight lines, as seen near the big volute, indicates ten. Just above the big inverted scroll is a diamond with a line in thecenter, a symbol I find on the Dresden Mayan codex.

It is impossible in this brief space to go into an elaborate investigation, but I think I have shown at least that most of the symbols are Mayan. All appear in the famous Mayan codices or calendars since the time of the discovery of Yucatan. The conclusion is that ages ago a Mayan expedition passed this way, within two miles of Esperanza, Sonora. They left a record of their travels on this rock. On the left (a common feature of Mayan codices) is a picture representing some feature of the trip. It may be an animal, the big tail suggests the armadillo, or it may be a god. The snake may be the god under whose protection they were; the double inverted cone suggested the discovery of two big rivers a striking feature of the region the Maya and the Rio Yaqui, or merely the Swastica sign.

The two lines indicate possibly distance, while the other symbols are the cardinal points relating to the year — the sixth day, Muluk — and other data considered of importance. This is what the Burnham stone may mean. What it actually does mean, remains for the scientific men of the world to decide, but Major Burnham and myself are committed to the romantic hypothesis that this is the message of a forebear of the Mayas, some ancient warrior of the long ago, some knight who fought his way to the land of the Yaquis, who brought a great rock down from the mountains and placed upon it the seal of Mayan conquest.

I submitted the photograph to the Field Museum and the Smithsonian and one or two others, and to my surprise the reply was that they could make nothing out of it. I venture to say, even as a layman, that had I the time, I could translate the inscription.


Sources, references, and remarks

This article by Charles Frederick Holder (1851–1915) was originally published in the magazine Scientific American, 103:196, September 10, 1910. Taken from: William R. Corliss, "Sourcebook M1 - Strange Artifacts" (MGS-005), online at Scribd.com. (Retrieved 02 January 2016)

Footnote

  1. Editorial remark: In William R. Corliss´s presentation of Holder's article it reads that the team reached "Noales", which doesn't make any sense. So we have corrected this obvious mistake.

Sources of illustrations:

1) Charles F. Holder / Ctatkinson~commonswiki at Wikimedia Commons, File:Esperanza stone burnham1910.jpg
2) Wikipedia - La enciclopedia libre, Esperanza (Sonora)
3) at Wikimedia Commons, File:A group of Yaqui Indians at their thatched dwelling, Mexico, ca.1910 (CHS-1529).jpg at Wikimedia Commons,
4) Charles F. Holder / Ctatkinson~commonswiki at Wikimedia Commons, File:Esperanza stone 1909.JPG
5) Ctatkinson~commonswiki at Wikimedia Commons, File:Charles f holder and tuna1898.jpg