Capital and provincial settlements of Dzuluinicob towards the 16th cent. / in present-day Belize / some locations uncertain / 2022 map following map 2 in Jones 1989 / via Commons[c]
Status
Dissolved
Capital
Tipu[a]
Common languages
Yucatec Maya[b]
Religion
Maya polytheism
Government
Confederation of towns with aristocratic features
Historical era
Postclassic to Spanish conquest
• Classic collapse
10th cent.
• Established
11th cent.
• Fall of Chichen Itza
13th cent.
• Fall of Mayapan
1461
• Spanish conquest
1544
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Cahal Pech
Caracol
Lamanai
Xunantunich
Viceroyalty of New Spain
Today part of
Belize
a.^ Per Jones 1989, p. 98, Graham 2011, p. 55. b.^ Per Jones 1989, p. 98, Morris et al. 2010, pp. 90–91. c.^ See sec. 'Legacy' subsec. 'Scholarly' in this article for debate regarding inclusion or exclusion of various provincial settlements (eg Lamanai).
Dzuluinicob, or the Province of Dzuluinicob or Ts'ulwinikob, (/zjuːl.ˈwiː.nɪ.kɔːb/zool-WEE-nih-cawb; Yucatec Maya:u kuchkabal Ts'ulwinikob; Mayan pronunciation:[ukutʃ.ka.ˈbalt͡sʼul.ˌwiː.niː.ˈkoɓ]) was a Postclassic Maya state in the Yucatán Peninsula of the Maya Lowlands.[note 1] Cite error: There are <ref group=note> tags on this page, but the references will not show without a {{reflist|group=note}} template (see the help page).
Dzuluinicob, or the Province of Dzuluinicob or Ts'ulwinikob, (/zjuːl.ˈwiː.nɪ.kɔːb/ zool-WEE-nih-cawb; Yucatec Maya: u kuchkabal Ts'ulwinikob; Mayan pronunciation:...
though it is presumed to have been subordinate to or formed part of the Dzuluinicob Province or the Mopan Territory. The Territory is thought to have stretched...
territories: Chetumal province, which encompassed the area around Corozal Bay Dzuluinicob province, which encompassed the area between the lower New River and...
Bacalar ended Spanish control over the Maya provinces of Chetumal and Dzuluinicob. Bacalar was not refounded until 1729. Between 1638 and 1695, the Maya...
The police station sits atop a buried Mayan Pyramid - it was known as Dzuluinicob, or “land of foreigners." in the Pre-Columbian era. Statue of Yucatec...
Muzul Territory. This would situate the Territory directly south of Dzuluinicob, southeast of the Peten Itza Kingdom, east of Lacandon territory, and...
the region, leading to a 57-year revival of the Postclassic state of Dzuluinicob, of which Tipu had been capital. K'atun 1 ahaw, the sixth k'atun of the...
Fuensalida's journeys in 1618 and 1641. He [Fuensalida] calls New River "Río de Dzuluinicob" (literally, "river of the foreign men"), which, he says, meant "river...
period in Mesoamerica. By the 16th century, the region formed part of Dzuluinicob, a Postclassic Mayan state. Sixteenth century residents of the area first...