Then and Now: El Castillo’s Unbelievable Rebirth

Published April 27, 2016
Updated August 20, 2019

This incredible photo comparison shows how archaeologists restored the abandoned Mayan temple of El Castillo in Chichen Itza to its former glory.

El Castillo In 1892

El Castillo, 1892. (See present-day photo below.)

Today, the majestic El Castillo temple looms proudly over the remains of the ancient Mayan city of Chichen Itza. But not all that long ago, it looked as if those historic remains would never live to see the 21st century at all.

In 1913, archaeologist Sylvanus Morley proposed an expedition to the Yucatan peninsula in order to unearth Chichen Itza, then in shambles. Ten years later, after being delayed by the Mexican Revolution, Morley was finally able to begin excavating this incredible site.

By the time Morley and his team arrived in the Yucatan in 1923, El Castillo had fallen into ruin, barely visible through the vegetation that had taken over its outer structure.

This was hardly surprising, given the estimates that say the structure was built between 800 and 900 AD on the foundations of earlier temples and had been abandoned since the 15th century.

With centuries of wear and tear to fight against, Morley and company began restoring El Castillo — known as the Temple of Kukulcan to the Mayans, named for their feathered serpent god.

El Castillo Chichen Itza

El Castillo in 2009.

It took almost ten more years to get inside El Castillo, where the team found inner chambers containing statues inlaid with mother-of-pearl, boxes filled with turquoise, and a jaguar made almost entirely from jade.

Since those early efforts, Mexico’s National Institute of Anthropology and History spearheads all efforts to preserve El Castillo and all of Chichen Itza’s stunning remains, which have been designated as a UNESCO World Heritage site.

However, the fact that El Castillo and Chichen Itza were restored so well may now be hurting them. According to UNESCO, the site’s now stunning remains are vulnerable because of intense tourism. An estimated 3,500 people visit Chichen Itza every day, which necessitates constant maintenance.

Unfortunately, according to UNESCO, a lack of the personnel needed to care for Chichen Itza means that “no emergency plan exists for the site and there is no long term monitoring of the state of conservation.”

But for now at least we can enjoy one of the most spectacular rebirths of all the world’s ancient monuments:

author
Elisabeth Sherman
author
Elisabeth Sherman is a writer living in Jersey City, New Jersey. She holds a Master's in writing from Columbia University, and her work has appeared in Food & Wine, The Guardian, Yahoo, BBC, HuffPost, VICE, MSN, and Vulture.
editor
Savannah Cox
editor
Savannah Cox holds a Master's in International Affairs from The New School as well as a PhD from the University of California, Berkeley, and now serves as an Assistant Professor at the University of Sheffield. Her work as a writer has also appeared on DNAinfo.
Cite This Article
Sherman, Elisabeth. "Then and Now: El Castillo’s Unbelievable Rebirth." AllThatsInteresting.com, April 27, 2016, https://allthatsinteresting.com/el-castillo-chichen-itza. Accessed April 19, 2024.