A 2012 article by Bessie-Sweet et al. argues that one of these objects served a separate purpose from one called the sak huun. For 10 points each:
[10h] Name these objects, which an inscription shows being used by Sak K’uk’ and her son. A piece of bark-paper was often the most symbolically important part of these objects, which could be adorned with hu’unal.
ANSWER: headdress [accept headband, crown, or “drum major” headdress]
[10m] Lady Sak K’uk’ was regent of this city when she bestowed the “drum major” headdress to her son, Pakal the Great, which had previously been governed by her mother, or possibly grandmother, Yohl Ik’nal.
ANSWER: Palenque [or Lakamha or Baak]
[10e] Some of these objects at the site of Cobá show that female rulers were military leaders just as men were. These large stone pillars, also common in Rome, Aksum, and China, were carved with calendrical dates and the deeds of kings.
ANSWER: stelae [or stelas or stele]
<Alex Fregeau, Other History>