Ohio History Journal

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PYRAMIDS AND BURIED CITIES IN THE LAND

PYRAMIDS AND BURIED CITIES IN THE LAND

OF THE MONTEZUMAS.1

BURIED deep in the wildernesses of Mexico and Central

America, innumerable ruined cities await in silence the

coming of the explorer-deserted temples and crumbling

pyramids, builded so-far back in the twilight of time that

not a tradition remains of their founders. In Yucatan

alone no less than sixty-seven prehistoric cities have been

discovered, despite the fact that this wildest territory of

Mexico presents almost insurmountable obstacles to the

traveler, in the way of warlike savages and trackless

deserts whose hot sands out-rival Sahara. Even the all-

conquering Spaniards never succeeded in making much

impression upon. the Mayas of Yucatan, and to this day

there are aboriginal tribes in the interior still flourishing

as before the conquest, but so powerful and bloodthirsty

are they that no venturesome European has returned from

their domain to tell the story.

The first to throw any light upon the ruins of Mexico

was Baron Alexander von Humboldt. He went to that

wonderful country when full of the enthusiasm of youth,

and to him we are indebted for information concerning

the buried city called San Juan Teotihuacan, with its

pyramids and "path of the dead"; of Oxichalco, the

mountain hewed down with terraces, and named "The

Hill of Flowers"; and of the great pyramids of Cholula

and Papantla. But of a hundred prehistoric cities and

pyramids beyond the valley of Mexico-hidden in path-

less forests and untrodden deserts, ruined, desolate and

nameless - Humboldt never heard.

Now that the dangers and difficulties of travel in that

1Abstract of a paper read for the author by Secretary Graham at the first

annual meeting of the Ohio Archaeological and Historical Society, Feb.

ruary 19th, 1886.

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