Olmec Civilization

Many archaeologist tell us that the Olmec culture represents the mother culture of all Mesoamerica cultures. No one knows the exact origins of these people. This is because the Olmec culture is one of Mexico's oldest civilizations. It existed from 1400 BC to 400 BC. The Olmec occupied an area that runs parallel with the Gulf of Mexico and is approximately 200 kilometers long and 50 kilometers wide. This area is now called Veracruz. The Olmec survived by cultivated crops and hunting wild game. However, because of their proximity to the ocean they also ate an abundance of seafood. The also cultivated corn and cacao. Cacao was a highly sought after trade item. Olmec lands were very fertile, and they produced an abundance of wild fruits and vegetables.

We do not know their real name, but the Aztecs called the area where the Olmec lived “Olman.” In the Aztec language of Nahuatl the word Olmec means “land of rubber.” This was because rubber trees were abundant in that area. The Olmec produced a latex extract from which they made rubber balls, bowls, and clothing.

In 1871, the first of eleven colossal Olmec stone heads was found in Tres Zapotes, Veracruz. These heads are nine feet high and on an average weigh more than 30 tons. Originally, scientists were convinced that the Olmec had come from far away continent. They did not believe that a culture as advanced as the Olmec could have existed in Mexico. The carved heads are believed to be portraits of former Olmec leaders. These enormous heads are crowned with helmet-like caps that may have been used as protective gear during ball games. It is believed that they came from a rock quarry 130 kilometers away. We will never know how these heads were moved about, but scientists believe that they may have been moved by raft on artificially created canals or waterways.


Olmec art style includes pear-shaped heads, broad noses, baby faces, large lips, drooping mouths, and occasionally jaguar fangs. Dwarfs, hunchbacks, and others with deformities were often artistic subject matter. Nude males were also common. Olmec artifacts have been found all over Mesoamerica. Besides their artist contributions, the Olmecs wrote using hieroglyphics, and they were pioneers in both astronomy and mathematics.


There are three main Olmec sites. They are called La Venta, San Lorenzo, and Tres Zapotes. The Olmecs did not build great cities. They did however have well-planned ceremonial centers, mounds, stone alters, and rectangular city plazas. Tres Zapotes contains a cone shaped pyramid one-hundred feet high. Olmec ruins also have tombs, mosaic floors, hematite mirrors, and incredibly carved jade figures.


San Lorenzo was destroyed by invaders sometime around 900 BC. Then, some five-hundred years later La Venta would suffer the same fate. The invaders would do everything they could to wipe-out all evidence of the Olmec existence. Some scientists believe that the Olmec were a branch of the Maya culture, but we will never know for sure.

Tres Zapotes Olmec Head

La Venta Olmec Head

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