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Dzuluinicob information


Province of Dzuluinicob
u kuchkabal Ts'ulwinikob (Yucatec Maya)
11th cent.–1544
The Caracol Glyph
The Caracol Glyph
Yucatan-Peninsula-1822 Map
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]
StatusDissolved
CapitalTipu[a]
Common languagesYucatec Maya[b]
Religion
Maya polytheism
GovernmentConfederation of towns with aristocratic features
Historical eraPostclassic 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
Dzuluinicob Cahal Pech
Image missing Caracol
Image missing Lamanai
Image missing Xunantunich
Viceroyalty of New Spain Dzuluinicob
Today part ofBelize
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, (/zjl.ˈw.nɪ.kɔːb/ zool-WEE-nih-cawb; Yucatec Maya: u kuchkabal Ts'ulwinikob; Mayan pronunciation: [u kutʃ.ka.ˈbal t͡sʼul.ˌwiː.niː.ˈkoɓ]) was a Postclassic Maya state in the Yucatán Peninsula of the Maya Lowlands.[note 1]
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