The Mayan Indians. This advanced culture which produced the most accurate calendar, the Mayan calendar, built architecturally exquisite pyramids and stone palaces, created their own writing system, and were extraordinary astronomers and mathematicians. The Yucatan Peninsula, the origin of the modern hammock and the only authentic place in the world where the product is produced using the oldest know manufacturing technique: thread tying upon wood lattices. Yucatan, the birthplace of the hammock, is known amongst theier Gods as: K'AAN.These innovative people designed the web-like hammock which we know today as still in use and considered to be the most ingenious and comfortable of all hammocks. Of the modern hammock, the Mayan seemed to have received their technology of Egyptian resources.  We know that  
the Athenian statesman Alcibiades (c. 450–404 BC), a student of the Greek philosopher Socrates was verse on the use and making of hammocks. The earliest Mayan hammocks were woven from the bark of the Hamak tree. The Sisal plant {similar in looks to an Aloe Vera plant} later replaced the bark as the material of choice for the hammock because it was more abundant, and its fibers could be softened by rubbing them against the thigh. The use of cotton in these original hammocks is a relatively new material adopted only in the last 50 - 60 years!

Because of the extensive trade routes which were established between the Indian nations of Central and South America, the hammock naturally found its way into the heart and home of millions of natives. Hammocks were soon being made from indigenous fabrics and materials which resulted in a multitude of styles, which have evolved to the classic cloth/fabric hammock, typical of Brazil, and cord and rope hammocks similar to today's styles.

Shortly after Columbus dropped anchor in the "New World" hoping to find shiploads of gems, spices and fine silks he found, instead, a load of natives of the Bahamas lounging in hammocks for their afternoon siesta and demonstrating their genetically superior disdain for time! Columbus decided to take a load of hammocks back to Europe with him, along with the few gold trinkets he was given {which would ultimately create the first gold rush in the new world and be the beginning of the end of many great nations}, probably to substitute for the lack of other "Eastern treasures". Soon, many European sailors, particularly the British and the French, found the hammocks very useful and practical for sleeping at sea.

-- adopted from David Fairley's EcoMall, A Place to Save the Earth

Yucataan is conscious of its social responsibilites. A characteristic of such is the support it gives to many small native Mayan communities in the countryside of the Yucatan Peninsula of Mexico.
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Mayan K'AAN: A History of the Hammock