"Dainzu Archaeological Site This small archaeological site is situated on a hillside about 12 miles east of Oaxaca city. The name "Dainzú" means "hill of the organ cactus" in Zapotec, although that most certainly was not the original name. The site was occupied in very early times, but its apogee was roughly at the same time as Monte Alban (200 B.C.E. to 350 C.E.). It was excavated in 1965 by Mexican archaeologist Ignacio Bernal. This is one of Oaxaca's less visited sites, so you're likely to have the place to yourself. It is quite a nice site, however, and worth a visit for a few special features. The site has a ball court, as well as a gallery of bas-reliefs depicting ball players, so undoubtedly the game was very important to the inhabitants. Another must-see is a tomb that has a jaguar carved into the entrance; the face is carved in the lintel, and the animal's forearms are on either side."
"Dainzu Archaeological Site This small archaeological site is situated on a hillside about 12 miles east of Oaxaca city. The name "Dainzú" means "hill of the organ cactus" in Zapotec, although that most certainly was not the original name. The site was occupied in very early times, but its apogee was roughly at the same time as Monte Alban (200 B.C.E. to 350 C.E.). It was excavated in 1965 by Mexican archaeologist Ignacio Bernal. This is one of Oaxaca's less visited sites, so you're likely to have the place to yourself. It is quite a nice site, however, and worth a visit for a few special features. The site has a ball court, as well as a gallery of bas-reliefs depicting ball players, so undoubtedly the game was very important to the inhabitants. Another must-see is a tomb that has a jaguar carved into the entrance; the face is carved in the lintel, and the animal's forearms are on either side."
"Dainzu Archaeological Site This small archaeological site is situated on a hillside about 12 miles east of Oaxaca city. The name "Dainzú" means "hill of the organ cactus" in Zapotec, although that most certainly was not the original name. The site was occupied in very early times, but its apogee was roughly at the same time as Monte Alban (200 B.C.E. to 350 C.E.). It was excavated in 1965 by Mexican archaeologist Ignacio Bernal. This is one of Oaxaca's less visited sites, so you're likely to have the place to yourself. It is quite a nice site, however, and worth a visit for a few special features. The site has a ball court, as well as a gallery of bas-reliefs depicting ball players, so undoubtedly the game was very important to the inhabitants. Another must-see is a tomb that has a jaguar carved into the entrance; the face is carved in the lintel, and the animal's forearms are on either side."
A small and accessible archiological site. We had the place to ourselves and saw a farmer walk through with his herd.
Marc Saulnier
Google
We had the whole place to ourselves, there is so much history here! The views are spectacular! You can totally do YAGUL in the same day if you want to, but I recommend doing only 1 site per day. No vendors, so bring your water and snacks
diana carr
Google
The attendant at the site was very helpful. If you would like to go into 2 of the tombs he will unlock the entrance.
Mark Vasquez
Google
Small but impressive site. Worth visiting.
Lindsey
Google
It’s amazing and beautiful here. Not as known of a location I guess because we were the only people there, which was nice.
Xepheraxepher
Google
Dainzu was just awesome and we had it all to ourselves!
Dave Foraie
Google
A lovely surprise. A small ruin. We spent a pleasant hour wandering the site with no one else there.
Arcelia Quintero
Google
It’s an amazing place, it’s actually older than Monte Albán , look for Antonio Vazquez he haves us a passionate explanation about the history of the place
Josh B.
Yelp
This location is practically a forgotten site - even my cab driver wasn't quite sure where it was.
There is a sign along the main road indicating it's there, but that's about it. Being dropped off on the main road, you walk a road (I think it was "paved") for 15-20 minutes in the desert. You'll eventually arrive at a small building which may at one time have been a place to collect admission.
The ruins include several foundations, but no walls. There is a tunnel and some deeper foundations that look as though they had basement components to them.
The site has a fairly intact ball playing court which was my favourite and an impressive thing to see.
This is a great place to get away from it all and away from people. Plan to spend an hour or two here, but with only a few structures, the site won't offer you as much to see as some of the others in the area.
If you want to see a video of the location, you can check it out here https://youtu.be/jSy078qb2WI