The Maya civilization’s "long count" calendar inscriptions…
250 CE
The Maya civilization’s "long count" calendar inscriptions inaugurate the period called Classic in about 250.
The Maya sustain regular intercourse with warriors and traders from Teotihuacán in central Mexico, the largest and most powerful state of the age.
Although evidently not conquered by the northerners, the Maya adopt some foreign deities, modes of representation, and styles of clothing.
By around 250, the Mayan people of Rio Azul, Tikal, Uaxactun, and other lowland locations begin erecting monumental architecture and stelae with historical records.
From 250, the Maya lords on the monuments and stelae, who reign as divine kings, wear the images of gods.
Much of the Maya’s religious ritual focuses on ancestors.
The so-called Classic Maya speak (based on the inscriptions as interpreted by twentieth century linguists) a language closely related to modern Chol, Yucatec, and Chorti.
Mayan mathematicians are the first to employ a symbol for zero.
Mayan arithmetic, based on the number 20, is notable for calculations involving extremely large numbers: a condition possibly stemming from the smallness and cheapness of the Mayan monetary unit, the cocoa bean.