Jacob Welch

Jacob Welch

PhD Student

Jacob Welch conducts archaeological research in Yucatán, México, along an ancient causeway system connecting the ruins and modern towns of Ucí and Cansahcab. His dissertation project studies the construction two monumental residences (i.e., palaces) at Ucí and Ucanha, and how their building histories relate to changing (1) building practices, (2) labor organization, and (3) socio-political relationships. His project specifically studies how the construction of two elite residences, as a product of non-elite laboring bodies, offers one approach to study the relationships between elites, non-elites, and the personal ties that bind them.

Selected Publications:

Hutson, S. R., Welch, J.A. (2016). Neighborhoods at Chunchucmil. In The Ancient Urban Maya: Neighborhoods, Inequality, and Built Form, pp. 97-138. University Press of Florida, Gainesville

Hutson, S.R., Welch, J.A. (2014). Sacred Landscapes and Building Practices at Uci, Kancab, and Ucanha, Yucatan, Mexico. Ancient Mesoamerica 25(2): 421 – 439.

Contact Info

jacob.welch@yale.edu

Subfield: 

Archaeology

Adviser(s): 

Oswaldo Chinchilla Mazariegos

Degree(s): 

B.A., 2014, University of Kentucky, Anthropology

Welch’s Website