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Jaguar yoke
Jaguar yoke

Jaguar yoke

Label TextThe ballgame played in Mesoamerica from around 1200 BCE until the 16th century CE was sport, pageantry, and religious ceremony all in one. Among the Maya, the ballgame re-created the exploits of the mythic Hero Twins and their dangerous encounters with the Lords of the Underworld. Worn around the waist, stone yokes like this one were ceremonial versions of the leather padding used during the game to propel the rubber ball through rings attached to the court walls. This one depicts a skeletal toad, symbol of the Underworld.
Object number50.118
Exhibition HistorySpokane, Washington, Eastern Washington State Historical Society Cheney Cowles Memorial Museum, America Del Sur, 1971. Walla Walla, Washington, Sheehan Gallery, Whitman College, Pre-Columbian Art, Nov. 1980 - Jan. 1981. Seattle, Washington, Seattle Art Museum, Art of the Ancient Americas, July 10, 1999 - May 11, 2003. Seattle, Washington, Seattle Art Museum, Cosmic Beings in Mesoamerican and Andean Art, Nov. 10, 2018 - ongoing.Published ReferencesHandbook, Seattle Art Museum: Selected Works from the Permanent Collections, Seattle, WA: Seattle Art Museum, 1951, p. 102 (b&w)
Credit LineEugene Fuller Memorial Collection
Dimensions14 1/2 x 4 5/8 in. (36.83 x 11.75 cm) L.: 15 3/4 in. Girth: 14 5/8 in.
MediumStone
Metate (mealing stone)
Costa Rican
600
Object number: 54.25
Maya
Mayan
Object number: 55.195
Stone Adze Blade
Pre-contact
Object number: SC91.67
Pipe
Object number: 81.17.1365
Photo: Paul Macapia
Object number: 51.51
Hopewellian, stone effigy pipe
ca. 100 B.C.- A.D. 200
Object number: 67.56
Ceremonial axe
Object number: 57.89
Mexican
1200 A.D. - 1500 B.C.
Object number: 57.73
Funerary ash-urn
Chinese
581-618
Object number: 33.1087
Pillow
Chinese
ca. 530
Object number: 58.39