Everything about Alfred Maudslay totally explained
Alfred Percival Maudslay (March 18,
1850 - January 22,
1931) was a
British colonial diplomat,
explorer and
archaeologist. He was one of the first Europeans to study
Mayan ruins.
Maudslay was born at Lower Norwood Lodge, near
London,
England into a wealthy engineering family descended from
Henry Maudslay. He was educated at
Royal Tunbridge Wells and
Harrow School, and studied natural sciences at
Trinity Hall, Cambridge in 1868-72, where he was acquainted with
John Willis Clark, then Secretary of the
Cambridge Antiquarian Society.
After graduation Maudslay enrolled in medical school but left because of acute
bronchitis. He moved to
Trinidad, becoming private secretary to Governor
William Cairns, and transferred with Cairns to
Queensland. He subsequently moved to
Fiji to work with Sir
Arthur Gordon, its governor, and helped campaign against rebellious local tribes. Later he served as British consul in
Tonga and
Samoa. In February 1880 Maudslay resigned from the colonial service to pursue his own interests, having spent six years in the British Pacific colonies. He then joined his siblings in
Calcutta during their round-the-world trip, returned to Britain in December, and then set out for
Guatemala via
British Honduras.
In Guatemala Maudslay began the major archaeological work for which he's now best remembered. He started at the Mayan ruins of
Quirigua and
Copan where, with the help of Frank Sarg, he hired laborers to help clear and survey the remaining structures and artifacts. Sarg also introduced Maudslay to the newly found ruins in
Tikal and to a reliable guide Gorgonio Lopez. Maudslay was the first to describe the site of
Yaxchilán.
In the course of his surveys, Maudslay pioneered many of the later archaeological techniques. He hired Italian expert
Lorenzo Giuntini and technicians to make
plaster casts of the carvings, while
Gorgonio López made casts of
papier-mâché. Artist
Annie Hunter drew impressions of the casts before they were shipped to museums in England and the United States. Maudslay also took numerous detailed photographs -
dry plate photography was then a new technique - and made copies of the inscriptions.
All told, Maudslay made a total of six expeditions to Maya ruins. After 13 years of preparation, he published his findings in 1902 as a 5-volume compendium entitled
Biologia Centrali-Americana, which contained numerous excellent drawings and photographs of Maya ruins, Maudslay's commentary, and an appendix on archaic calendars by J. T. Goodman.
In
1892 Maudslay married US-born Anne Cary Morris, a granddaughter of
Gouverneur Morris. For their honeymoon, the couple sailed to Guatemala via New York and San Francisco. There the Maudslays worked for two weeks on behalf of the
Peabody Museum of
Harvard University. Their account was published in 1899 as
A Glimpse at Guatemala.
Maudslay also applied for permission to make a survey of
Monte Albán in
Oaxaca but when he finally received permission in 1902, he could no longer finance the work with his own money. The firm of
Maudslay, Sons and Field had gone bankrupt and reduced Maudslay's income. He unsuccessfully applied for funding from the
Carnegie Institution. The Maudslays moved to
San Angel near
Mexico City for two years.
In 1905 Maudslay began to translate the memoirs of
Bernal Díaz del Castillo, who had been a soldier in the troops of the
conquistadors; he completed it in 1912. In 1907 the Maudslays moved permanently back to Britain. Maudslay become a President of the
Royal Anthropological Institute 1911-12. He also chaired the 18th International Congress of Americanists in London in 1912.
Annie Maudslay died in
1926. In 1928 Maudslay married widow Alice Purdon. In the following years he finished his memoirs,
Life in the Pacific Fifty Years Ago.
Alfred Maudslay died January
1931 in
Hereford, England. He was buried in the crypt of
Hereford Cathedral next to his first wife. Materials he collected are currently stored at Harvard and the
British Museum.
Selected works
- Biologia Centrali-Americana: Contributions to the Knowledge of the Fauna and Flora of Mexico and Central America (reprint), University of Oklahoma Press, 1983. ISBN 978-0-8061-9919-1.
- Anne Cary Morris Maudslay and Alfred Percival Maudslay, A glimpse at Guatemala, and some notes on the ancient monuments of Central America, London : John Murray, 1899.
- Life in the Pacific Fifty Years Ago, London: George Routledge & Sons, 1930.
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