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Civilizations/Leaders
City-States
Districts
Buildings
Wonders and Projects
Units
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Great People
Technologies
Civics
Governments and Policies
Religions
Terrains and Features
Resources
Improvements and Routes
Governors
Historic Moments

Introduction

Improvements

Airstrip

Alcázar

Barricade

Batey

Camp

Château

Chemamull

City Park

Colossal Head

Corporation

Farm

Feitoria

Fishery

Fishing Boats

Fort

Golf Course

Great Wall

Hacienda

Industry

Kampung

Kurgan

Lumber Mill

Mahavihara

Mekewap

Mine

Missile Silo

Mission

Modernized Trap

Monastery

Nubian Pyramid

Offshore Oil Rig

Oil Well

Outback Station

Pairidaeza

Pasture

Plantation

Polder

Quarry

Reinforced Barricade

Rock-Hewn Church

Roman Fort

Seaside Resort

Sphinx

Stepwell

Trading Dome

Trap

Vampire Castle

Ziggurat

Routes

Batey
Description
Unlocks the Builder ability to construct a Batey.

+1 Culture. +1 Culture for every adjacent Bonus Resource and Entertainment Complex (increased to +2 Culture when Exploration is discovered). Provides Tourism after researching Flight. Cannot be built adjacent to another Batey or on Hills.
Historical Context
The Mesoamerican ball game, called in Mexico “ulama,” is ancient. While it was likely invented by the Olmec several thousand years ago, it became popular in the first millennium A.D., spreading beyond its Mesoamerican origins and into North America and the Caribbean. In its Mayan versions, it involved getting a rubber ball through a stone ring (perhaps representing the sun in its journeys through the underworld) without using one’s hands. The players were often war captives, and the losers could be sacrificed to the gods. Images of such sacrifices are clearly shown on the walls of the Maya ball courts at Chichén Itzá.

The bateyes at Caguana in Puerto Rico are no such grand affairs. Here, they are roughly rectangular, flat pitches without the stone rings that characterize Mayan courts. The rules, then, were likely different, involving throwing the ball between teams, but the link between the court and religious life remained – Caguana’s bateyes are decorated with petroglyphs (stone carvings) and are clustered around the base of a mountain that was the center of Taíno religious life in Puerto Rico.

The Taíno word “batey” has had a bad afterlife in the years since colonization. While the word originally means “ball court,” it is now widely used to refer to temporary housing for workers on sugar plantations, both enslaved peoples on historical plantations and present-day workers, many of whom are still forced into involuntary labor. It is unclear how the Taíno word for ball court has come to refer to something so different; here, “batey” refers to the original meaning of the word.
PortraitSquare
icon_civilization_unknown

Traits

Unique To
icon_civilization_unknown
Caguana
+1 Culture
Adjacency Bonus
+1 Culture from each adjacent Entertainment Complex tile.Becomes obsolete with Exploration.
+2 Culture from each adjacent Entertainment Complex tile.Requires Exploration.
+1 Culture from each adjacent Bonus Resource tile.Becomes obsolete with Exploration.
+2 Culture from each adjacent Bonus Resource tile.Requires Exploration.

Requirements

icon_terrain_plains
Plains
icon_terrain_grass
Grassland
icon_terrain_desert
Desert
icon_terrain_tundra
Tundra
icon_terrain_snow
Snow

Usage

Built By
icon_unit_builder
Builder
PortraitSquare
icon_civilization_unknown
Description
Unlocks the Builder ability to construct a Batey.

+1 Culture. +1 Culture for every adjacent Bonus Resource and Entertainment Complex (increased to +2 Culture when Exploration is discovered). Provides Tourism after researching Flight. Cannot be built adjacent to another Batey or on Hills.
Historical Context
The Mesoamerican ball game, called in Mexico “ulama,” is ancient. While it was likely invented by the Olmec several thousand years ago, it became popular in the first millennium A.D., spreading beyond its Mesoamerican origins and into North America and the Caribbean. In its Mayan versions, it involved getting a rubber ball through a stone ring (perhaps representing the sun in its journeys through the underworld) without using one’s hands. The players were often war captives, and the losers could be sacrificed to the gods. Images of such sacrifices are clearly shown on the walls of the Maya ball courts at Chichén Itzá.

The bateyes at Caguana in Puerto Rico are no such grand affairs. Here, they are roughly rectangular, flat pitches without the stone rings that characterize Mayan courts. The rules, then, were likely different, involving throwing the ball between teams, but the link between the court and religious life remained – Caguana’s bateyes are decorated with petroglyphs (stone carvings) and are clustered around the base of a mountain that was the center of Taíno religious life in Puerto Rico.

The Taíno word “batey” has had a bad afterlife in the years since colonization. While the word originally means “ball court,” it is now widely used to refer to temporary housing for workers on sugar plantations, both enslaved peoples on historical plantations and present-day workers, many of whom are still forced into involuntary labor. It is unclear how the Taíno word for ball court has come to refer to something so different; here, “batey” refers to the original meaning of the word.

Traits

Unique To
icon_civilization_unknown
Caguana
+1 Culture
Adjacency Bonus
+1 Culture from each adjacent Entertainment Complex tile.Becomes obsolete with Exploration.
+2 Culture from each adjacent Entertainment Complex tile.Requires Exploration.
+1 Culture from each adjacent Bonus Resource tile.Becomes obsolete with Exploration.
+2 Culture from each adjacent Bonus Resource tile.Requires Exploration.

Requirements

icon_terrain_plains
Plains
icon_terrain_grass
Grassland
icon_terrain_desert
Desert
icon_terrain_tundra
Tundra
icon_terrain_snow
Snow

Usage

Built By
icon_unit_builder
Builder
Language
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