Link to enlarge Masculine head from Palenque Chiapas after Michel Zabé WHO'S WHO IN THE CLASSIC MAYA WORLD
Peter Mathews
Kan B'alam I    An early king of Palenque (born AD 524, ruled AD 572-583)PAL 007

References

Bassie-Sweet, Karen
  1991From the Mouth of the Dark Cave.
Norman: University of Oklahoma Press.
  
  1996At the Edge of the World.
Norman: University of Oklahoma Press.
  
Berlin, Heinrich
  1959Glifos nominales en el sarcófago de Palenque.
Humanidades 2(10): 1-8.
Guatemala City: Universidad de San Carlos.
  
  1965The inscription of the Temple of the Cross at Palenque.
American Antiquity 30(3): 330-342.
  
  1977Signos y Significados en las Inscripciones Mayas.
Guatemala City: Instituto Nacional del Patrimonio Cultural de Guatemala.
  
Bernal Romero, Guillermo
  2000Palenque (Tok Tan o Baak): secuencia dinástica.
Arqueología Mexicana 45: 26-27.
  
de la Garza, Mercedes
  1992Palenque.
Mexico City: Gobierno del Estado de Chiapas.
  
Drew, David
  1999The Lost Chronicles of the Maya Kings.
London: Weidenfeld and Nicholson.
  
Greene Robertson, Merle
  1983The Sculpture of Palenque. Volume I. The Temple of the Inscriptions.
Princeton: Princeton University Press.
  
Greene Robertson, Merle, Marjorie S. Rosenblum Scandizzo, and John R. Scandizzo
  1976Physical deformities in the ruling lineage of Palenque, and its dynastic implications.
In: The Art, Iconography and Dynastic History of Palenque, Part III (The Proceedings of the Segunda Mesa Redonda de Palenque). (Merle Greene Robertson, editor): 59-86.
Pebble Beach, California: The Robert Louis Stevenson School.
  
Grube, Nikolai, Simon Martin, and Marc Zender
  2002Palenque and its Neighbors.
In: Notebook for the XXVIth Maya Hieroglyphic Forum at Texas, March, 2002.: II-1 - II-66.
Austin: Maya Workshop Foundation, University of Texas at Austin.
  
Guenter, Stanley Paul
  2003The tomb of K'inich Janaab' Pakal: the East Tablet of the Temple of the Inscriptions
Unpublished Manuscript.
  
Kelley, David H.
  1976Deciphering the Maya Script.
Austin: University of Texas Press.
  
  1985The lords of Palenque and the Lords of Heaven.
In: Fifth Palenque Round Table, 1983. (Virginia M. Fields, ed.): 235-239.
San Francisco: Pre-Columbian Art Research Institute.
  
Lounsbury, Floyd G.
  1974The inscription of the Sarcophagus Lid at Palenque.
In: Primera Mesa Redonda de Palenque, Part II. (Merle Greene Robertson, ed.): 5-19.
Pebble Beach, California: The Robert Louis Stevenson School.
  
Mathews, Peter
  1991Maya Hieroglyphic Weekend, October 26-27, 1991.
Cleveland: Cleveland State University.
  
Schele, Linda
  1978Notebook for the Maya Hieroglyphic Writing Workshop at Texas, March 10-11, 1978.
Austin: Institute of Latin American Studies, University of Texas at Austin.
  
  1981Notebook for the Maya Hieroglyphic Writing Workshop at Texas, March 28-29, 1981.
Austin: Institute of Latin American Studies, University of Texas at Austin.
  
  1984Notebook for the Maya Hieroglyphic Writing Workshop at Texas, March 10-11, 1984.
Austin: Institute of Latin American Studies, University of Texas at Austin.
  
  1986aArchitectural development and political history at Palenque.
In: City-States of the Maya: Art and Architecture. (Elizabeth P. Benson, ed.): 110-137.
Denver: Rocky Mountain Institute for Pre-Columbian Studies.
  
  1986bNotebook for the Maya Hieroglyphic Writing Workshop at Texas, March 22-23, 1986.
Austin: Institute of Latin American Studies, University of Texas at Austin.
  
  1987Notebook for the Maya Hieroglyphic Writing Workshop at Texas, March 14-15, 1987.
Austin: Institute of Latin American Studies, University of Texas at Austin.
  
Schele, Linda, and David Freidel
  1990A Forest of Kings.
New York: William Morrow and Company, Inc.
  
Schele, Linda, and Peter Mathews
  1993The Dynastic History of Palenque.
In: Notebook for the XVIIth Maya Hieroglyphic Forum at Texas, March 13-14, 1993.: 90-165.
Austin: Department of Art and Art History, and the Institute of Latin American Studies, University of Texas.
  
  1998The Code of Kings.
New York: Scribner.
  

Previous Page |  Introductory Page

Return to top of page