David Stuart The Four Heavens review and information book with a new history of the ancient Maya. Princeton University Press will publish this new book on the ancient Maya David Stuart, the American Professor of Mesoamerican Art and Writing and director of the Mesoamerica Center at the University of Texas at Austin, on March 3, 2026. Here you can read information about the content of the book, the author and the publication.
David Stuart The Four Heavens reviews
- “Drawing from a lifetime of insights and fresh research, Stuart vividly describes a civilization with ups and downs, migrations and resolute journeys, scuffles and grand stratagems. He invites us to meet the people who shook this top-heavy world, from sacred kings to mythic heroes to invading foreigners, and shows that collapses were adaptive responses to a landscape of great fluidity. For the Maya, history was an act of ordering and remembering. The Four Heavens tells us their thrilling story by the one person who could write it.” (Stephen Houston, coauthor of The Maya)
- “Reading this marvelous book, two long-standing mysteries were resolved for me. With the brilliant David Stuart as a guide, I didn’t just learn all that I have wanted to learn about the history of the Maya, but also how we have come to know what we know.” (Camilla Townsend, author of Fifth Sun: A New History of the Aztecs)
The Four Heavens
A New History of the Ancient Maya
- Author: David Stuart (United States)
- Book type: history of the Maya
- Publisher: Princeton University Press
- To be released: March 3, 2026
- Length: 488 pages
- Format: hardcover / ebook
- Prize: $ 35.00
- Order book from: Amazon / Bol
Blurb of the David Staurt book on the history of the Maya
The Four Heavens brings to life the cultural and visual splendor of the ancient Maya, drawing on the oldest indigenous texts of the Americas and the latest archaeological discoveries to present an entirely new history of this spectacular civilization. Renowned historian and archaeologist David Stuart, who has made groundbreaking contributions to the decipherment of Maya hieroglyphics, shows how there was no single rise and fall of the Maya but a series of births and collapses over a breathtaking span of nearly three millennia.
Maya history was seemingly lost forever when the first Europeans encountered the great ruins of ancient cities in what is today Mexico and Central America. Today, with the recent decipherment of their ancient writings, the story of the Maya can now be told from their perspective. Stuart traces the rapid emergence of permanent settlements in the rainforest, which gave rise to monumental architecture and a flourishing urbanism and ushered in the Classic period of Maya civilization beginning in the mid-second century CE. He reveals a world of majestic royal courts tightly bound together by marriages, shifting alliances, and warfare, much of it driven by the ambitions of two major dynasties, the Kanuls and Mutuls. Stuart describes how the long-standing rivalry between these two great houses shaped the fates of the surrounding kingdoms and may have set the stage for “the Great Rupture” of the nineth century, when the royal courts buckled under the weight of internal strife, social unrest, and environmental crisis, transforming Maya civilization yet again.
With stunning illustrations, including many of Stuart’s own drawings and images, The Four Heavens is a work of momentous historical sweep, one that paints an unforgettable portrait of the Maya and the richly complex social, political, and cosmological worlds in which they lived.
David Stuart is the David and Linda Schele Professor of Mesoamerican Art and Writing and director of the Mesoamerica Center at the University of Texas at Austin. His books include Palenque: Eternal City of the Maya, The Order of Days: Unlocking the Secrets of the Ancient Maya, and Spearthrower Owl: A Teotihuacan Ruler in Maya History. He is the youngest person ever to be awarded a MacArthur Fellowship.
