Maya royal headband (sak huun)

E160467

The Maya royal headband (sak huun) was a prestigious headdress worn by Maya rulers, symbolizing divine authority and often associated with the lightning and royal lineage deity Kʼawiil.

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
Maya royal headband (sak huun) canonical 1

How this entity was disambiguated

Statements (46)

Predicate Object
instanceOf Maya royal regalia
headdress
accessRestrictedTo high-ranking nobles
royal family
associatedWithConcept kingship
royal lineage
associatedWithDeity Kʼawiil
category royal insignia
sacred regalia
culture Maya civilization
depictedIn Maya murals
Maya painted ceramics
Maya stelae
etymologyComponent huun (paper, barkcloth, headband)
sak (white, pure, sacred)
function ritual insignia
visual marker of rulership
hasMayaName sak huun
iconographicElement cloth band
emblematic front ornament
feather elements
knot at the forehead
languageOfName Classical Maya language
surface form: Classic Maya language
linkedDeityAspect Kʼawiil as patron of royal lineage
linkedTo dynastic legitimacy
lightning symbolism
warfare power
material feathers
jade ornaments
shell ornaments
textiles
relatedToObject Maya codices
surface form: Maya paper (huun)
religiousRole embodies Kʼawiil’s power
embodies connection to gods
roleInArt central attribute of rulers
identifier of specific kings
status prestigious
symbolizes divine authority
timePeriod Classic period in Mesoamerica
surface form: Classic Maya period

Postclassic period of Mesoamerica
surface form: Postclassic Maya period
usedInRegion Mesoamerica
wornBy Maya rulers
Kʼawiil
surface form: ajaw (Maya king)
wornDuring public performances of power
royal accession rituals
state ceremonies

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Kʼawiil linkedTo Maya royal headband (sak huun)