Ballgame Yoke
Artist/Maker
Classic Veracruz
(Mexico)
Dateca. 600-900
Mediumstone
DimensionsOverall: 4 1/8 × 12 × 13 3/4 in. (10.5 × 30.5 × 34.9 cm)
ClassificationsVisual Works
Credit LineMuseum purchase
Terms
Object number90.0096
DescriptionBall courts have been found at archaeological sites throughout Mesoamerica beginning in Olmec times, and are a strong indicator of the dynamic and sustained cultural exchange that existed for millennia between the societies of ancient Mesoamerica. A very large number of the stone objects that have been identified as ballgame gear come from Veracruz. This yoke shows a high-status individual emerging from the mouth of a reptile. The same motif repeats on the ends of the piece. Given the mythological associations of the ballgame and its linkage to the journey of the Hero Twins into the Underworld, reptiles and other animals associated with the earth in ancient Mesoamerica are frequently depicted on ballgame paraphernalia. These stone objects may have been templates for more practical yokes made of wood or leather but it is also possible that extremely skilled athletes could have worn such massive equipment onto a field of play.On View
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