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El Maipés Necropolis

Coordinates: 28°05′51.6840″N 15°41′44.1096″W / 28.097690000°N 15.695586000°W / 28.097690000; -15.695586000
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El Maipes necropolis, Agaete
Native name
Necrópolis del Maipés de Agaete or Necrópolis de Maipés de Arriba (Spanish)
Typetumuli
EtymologyMal país
LocationAgaete, Grand Canary, Canary Islands, Macaronesia, off the west coast of Africa
Nearest cityAgaete
Coordinates28°05′51.6840″N 15°41′44.1096″W / 28.097690000°N 15.695586000°W / 28.097690000; -15.695586000
Websitewww.maipesdeagaete.com
CriteriaArtistic-Historic Heritage
Designated1973
Archaeological site1992
El Maipés Necropolis is located in Canary Islands
El Maipés Necropolis
Location of El Maipés necropolis on Gran Canaria island

The El Maipés necropolis (Spanish: necropolis del Maipés ) is an ancient burial site near Agaete on the Spanish island of Grand Canary, province of Las Palmas in the Canary Islands of the west coast of Africa.

Second-largest necropolis of the Canaries[1] after that of Arteara, the site is listed Spanish Heritage as a Property of cultural interest in the category "archaeological zone". Its particular geology, and subsequently its vegetation are also of notable interest.[2]

Location and access

The little town of Agaete is on the north-west coast of Grand Canary island, at the end of the GC-2 road that links Agaete to Las Palmas, the archipelago's co-capital 32 km to the east of Agaete. The Maipes necropolis is found in the south-east of Agaete, 200 ft west of the football ground.[3]

It is about 10 mns' walk away from the centre of Agaete. If driving, follow the signs to El Valle and the archaeological park.[4]

Toponymy

The name Maipés comes from the word malpais or mal pais, which means "bad land".[5] This is due to the flow of volcanic lava that covered the bottom of the Maipés ravine about 3,000 years ago.[4]

Description

The Maipes necropolis is one of the most spectacular burial sites on the island. It covers more than one square km[6] with around 600[7] or 700[6] or more[4][8] small tumuli, dating from the 8th to 10th centuries. Some of the tumuli are more than 1,300 years old, which gives them the same range of age as those in the Arteara necropolis.[9]

The tumuli sit on volcanic ground, more precisely on an old lava flow[9] that came out of the nearby volcanoes Jabelobo, Berrazales and Fagajesto.[10]

The eruption brought forth an 11 km-wide[4] flow of lava that followed the valley and reached the sea at Puerto de las Nieves.[7] Later, the cemetery was established on a stretch of lava covering 25 ha (some 62 acres).[11] After the Spanish conquest of the islands, some of that lava was covered with soil to allow for some farming.[4]

The tumuli are also built of volcanic rocks.[12] Most of them are built on elliptic or round plans[9] with a truncated cone outline. Some of them reach 8 m diameter and 3 m in height.[6] Inside each tumulus is a pit with its sides marked by stone slabs, in which the deceased bodies were placed.[9] Some coffins have also been found inside some tumuli.[13]

The size and building refinement vary noticeably among the tumuli, indicating the social ranks of their occupiers.[9] The particularity of some of these small tumuli are the stones that crown them, which are of different colours and texture than the surrounding volcanic material.[7][11] The most common ones are a simple ring of volcanic stones, the more sophisticated ones are topped with turret-type stonework and were probably used to bury nobility.[4]

Most of the tumuli are occupied by a single individual ; some shelter two individuals.[9] Some children have also been buried in the cemetery.[7]

Part of the cemetery space has been surrounded with a dry-stone wall. Some tumuli were built beyond that wall;[9] 8 corpses were found there. Historians think that these people were either Canarians deemed unworthy of burial in the proper ground, or foreigners having landed on the island before the Spanish conquest.[4]

Traces left by a tsunami

The site bears traces of one of the rare tsunami to be documented in the Canaries. It was created by a volcanic emission in the municipality of Güímar in Tenerife.[11] These traces consist of white stains of marine deposits left behind by the tsunami waves beating on the steep sides of the valley.[2][7]

Conservation issues

On July 5, 1973 the necropolis was declared Historic Heritage in the category "Artistic-Historic" (official declaration in B.O.E.[note 1] N° 181, July 30, 1973). In 1992, following a modification of the law on Spanish Historic Heritage properties on June 25, 1985, the site became a Property of cultural interest in the category "archaeological zone"[6] under the code RI-55-0000082.[14] As such it is part of the Network of archaeological parks of Grand Canary.

Some restoration works started in 2008, including discovery paths with information panels, installations allowing for wheelchair access to part of the site[15] and an information centre (Centro de Interpretación). The refurbished site was opened on April 16, 2013.[16] It is now opened all year-round.[17]

Other archaeological parks in Grand Canary

The Network of Archaeological parks of Grand Canary open to the public also includes the Four Doors cave site in Telde, the caves of Valeron (cenobio de Valeron) in Santa Maria de Guia, the Arteara necropolis in Fataga, the Cats' ravine (cañada de los Gatos) on Mogán beach near Puerto de Mogan, Bentayga Rock [es] (roque Bentayga) in Tejeda, and the Painted cave (cueva Pintada) museum and archaeological park in Galdar.

Similar structures

Notes

  1. ^ B.O.E.: Boletín Oficial de España.

References

  1. ^ (in Spanish) Maipés de Arriba,la segunda necrópolis más importante de las Islas.
  2. ^ a b (in Spanish) Geológica de un tsunami que alcanzó Gran Canaria ("Geology of a tsunami that reached Grand Canary"). Article in gomeratoday.com.
  3. ^ El Maipés necropolis on googlemaps.com.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g Matthew Hirtes. Necrópolis de Maipés, the buried treasure of Agaete's badlands.
  5. ^ Troll, Valentin R.; Rodriguez‐Gonzalez, Alejandro; Deegan, Frances M.; Perez‐Torrado, Francisco José; Carracedo, Juan Carlos; Thomaidis, Konstantinos; Geiger, Harri; Meade, Fiona C. (2019). "Sacred ground; the Maipés necropolis of north-west Gran Canaria". Geology Today. 35 (2): 55–62. doi:10.1111/gto.12262. ISSN 1365-2451. S2CID 134369618.
  6. ^ a b c d (in Spanish) Parque Arqueológico Maipés de Agaete on grancanaria.com.
  7. ^ a b c d e (in Spanish) Necropolis del Maipes de Arriba on atlasruraldegrancanaria.com.
  8. ^ (in Spanish) El Cabildo de Gran Canaria restaura la Necrópolis de Maipés ("Grand canary Council restore the necropolis of Maipes"). June 06, 2009.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g (in Spanish) Necrópolis del Maipés - Ficha de yacimiento on dataciones.grancanariapatrimonio.com.
  10. ^ (in Spanish) Necrópolis de Maipés on mipequeñosalvaje.chr5.com. June 28, 2011.
  11. ^ a b c (in Spanish) M. Ramos. La huella del tsunami de Gran Canaria, en el Maipés de Agaete ("The mark of the tsunami of Grand Canary, in el Maipés de Agaete"). In abc.es, April 28, 2013.
  12. ^ Troll, Valentin R.; Rodriguez‐Gonzalez, Alejandro; Deegan, Frances M.; Perez‐Torrado, Francisco José; Carracedo, Juan Carlos; Thomaidis, Konstantinos; Geiger, Harri; Meade, Fiona C. (2019). "Sacred ground; the Maipés necropolis of north-west Gran Canaria". Geology Today. 35 (2): 55–62. doi:10.1111/gto.12262. ISSN 1365-2451. S2CID 134369618.
  13. ^ Mederos Martin & al. 2002, p. 32.
  14. ^ (in Spanish) BOC (Boletín Oficial de Canarias) N° 118, August 21, 1992, page 1272.
  15. ^ (in Spanish) El Cabildo de Gran Canaria restaura la Necrópolis de Maipés. Article on rtvc.es, 06/06/2009.
  16. ^ (in Spanish) ‛’El yacimiento “El Maipés” abre sus puertas’’ ("The Maipes site opens its doors"). Article in redhistoria.com, April 20, 2013.
  17. ^ (in Spanish) Necrópolis de Maipés on gastasuela.blogspot.fr.
  18. ^ (in Spanish) Necrópolis de Maspalomas on eldiario.es.

Bibliography