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Arts & Culture

SECRETS OF THE DEAD: Teotihuacán's Lost Kings

The ancient Mexican city of Teotihuacán is one of the biggest ghost towns in the world. The quest for its builders is one of the most fascinating challenges of today’s archeology.
Courtesy of Story House Productions (Anika Dobringer)
The ancient Mexican city of Teotihuacán is one of the biggest ghost towns in the world. The quest for its builders is one of the most fascinating challenges of today’s archeology.

Airs Tuesday, May 24, 2016 at 9 p.m. on KPBS TV

Two thousand years ago, Teotihuacán was one of the largest cities in the world, a thriving metropolis not far from what is today Mexico City. But just a few hundred years later, it was completely abandoned, its former citizens long gone, leaving little trace of their culture. Despite many decades of research, not much is known about the long-lost Teotihuacán society. Who built this magnificent city with its giant pyramids? Why did its people seemingly vanish without a trace?

The Pyramid of the Sun in Teotihuacán stands at over 210 feet height as the third largest pyramid of the world.
Courtesy of Story House Productions (Anika Dobringer)
The Pyramid of the Sun in Teotihuacán stands at over 210 feet height as the third largest pyramid of the world.
At first sight the end chamber doesn’t unveil too much. But then Sergio Gómez discovers the crucial hint: a water line on the wall.
Courtesy of Story House Productions (Anika Dobringer)
At first sight the end chamber doesn’t unveil too much. But then Sergio Gómez discovers the crucial hint: a water line on the wall.
Sergio Gómez thinks that the statues’ gaze could have aligned to mark something or someone.
Courtesy of Story House Productions (Anika Dobringer)
Sergio Gómez thinks that the statues’ gaze could have aligned to mark something or someone.
The team finds four statues in the cross-shaped end chamber. They might represent ancestors and could have functioned as guardians.
Courtesy of Story House Productions (Anika Dobringer)
The team finds four statues in the cross-shaped end chamber. They might represent ancestors and could have functioned as guardians.

SECRETS OF THE DEAD “Teotihuacán’s Lost Kings,” premiering nationally Tuesday, May 24 at 9 p.m. on PBS, follows a team of international scientists who believe they have found the answers to these questions and more in newly discovered chambers beneath Teotihuacán, the first Mega City in the Americas.

“I have been working for 34 years in Teotihuacán and am about to uncover the mystery of the City of the Gods,” says Dr. Sergio Gómez Chávez, archeologist. In Oct. 2003, Dr. Chávez, then a junior archeologist, was walking from his quarters to start his work mapping the Pyramid of the Feathered Serpent, the smallest of three pyramids in Teotihuacán, when colleagues informed him that the rain had carved a crack in front of the temple.

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What he discovered next could change what we know about Teotihuacán and possibly explain the origin of an entire civilization. “Every archaeologist dreams of a moment like this,” says Dr. Chávez.

The initial crack in front of the temple ultimately led Chavez through a subterranean tunnel and a path that continued directly underneath the Pyramid of the Feathered Serpent which stands at the center of the city. “I came to the conclusion that the tunnel had been sealed to bury something or someone at the end of it—directly under the pyramid—I thought it could be a ruler or a king,” says Dr.Chávez.

Did Dr. Chávez, in fact, find the burial place of some ruler? Or did he find something more intriguing? What do these hidden chambers reveal about Teotihuacán culture and its mysterious people? The answers turn out to be surprising.

Past episodes and clips from this series are available for online viewing. SECRETS OF THE DEAD is on Facebook, Tumblr, and you can follow @SecretsPBS on Twitter.

CREDITS:

A production of Story House Productions Inc., and THIRTEEN Productions LLC for WNET in association with ZDF, ARTE and ZDF Enterprises GmbH. Narrator is Jay O. Sanders. Director is Jens Afflerbach. Drama scenes director is Saskia Weisheit. Writers are Andreas Gutzeit and Alexander Ziegler. Producer is Alexander Ziegler. Executive producers for Story House are Andreas Gutzeit and Jens Afflerbach. Executive producer for ZDFE is Nikolas Hülbusch. Executive in charge for WNET is Stephen Segaller. Executive producer for THIRTEEN is Steve Burns. Supervising producer for THIRTEEN is Stephanie Carter.

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