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- subject = High School -> History
- title = Aztecs
- papers =
-
-
- Aztecs
- According to their own history, the Aztecs, who called themselves
- the Tenochca
- or Mexica, started as a small nomadic tribe originating from
- a place called Aztlan.
- Aztlan existed somewhere in the southern part of California
- or the north west of
- Mexico. At this time they were Nahuatl speaking. During
- the twelfth century they
- started a period of wandering and in the thirteenth
- century they came across
- Mexico's central valley. There they decided to settle.
- The reason for this is a
- prophecy. The prophecy said that when they saw an
- eagle sitting on a cactus with
- a snake in its mouth that was where they were
- to build their great civilization. For
- that reason they called it Tenochtitlan,
- meaning place of the cactus. Since the
- prophecy was filled upon an island
- in the middle of a small lake, called Lake
- Texcoco, land became short. They
- built Tenochtitlan in the year thirteen twenty
- five BC. They started as a
- small struggling village continually fighting with other
- Mexican city-states.
- Tenochtitlan acted as a place of refuge.
- Aztec Empire
- At first the Aztecs
- where ruled by the mightiest of the city-states in central Mexico
- known as
- Azcapotzlaco. They helped Azcapotzlaco to conquer surrounding
- territory in
- the early fourteen hundreds. By fourteen twenty-eight they had
- Azcopotzlaco
- itself with the help of neighboring allies. Tenochtitlan, by the year
- fourteen
- thirty-one, with an alliance with the neighboring city-states of Texcoco and
- Tlacopan
- had become and independent city-state itself. This triple alliance of three
- city-states
- soon controlled all of Mexico's central valley. Tenochtitlan, as the
- dominate
- city-state in this alliance, became a base for a program of military
- expansion
- and conquest. However the program was left incomplete even when the
- empire
- fell to the Spaniards. To connect the Capitol to the mainland the Aztecs
- built
- a network of canals, bridges and three stone causeways. Aztecs didn't rule
- directly
- over the lands they concord. Instead they demanded tribute such as food,
- clothing,
- woven blankets, precious stones, furs, feathers, fine woods and slaves or
- captives.
- As a result these products became available in the marketplace and
- common
- in people's homes.
- The emperor's power came from his control of the
- military, wich was
- exceedingly large. Under him was his chief deputy, who
- would communicate with
- the gods and relate the gods wishes to the Emperor.
- Below him there was a
- council of four noble princes and three honored classes
- of warriors who managed
- day to day affairs in the empire. Below them were
- four social classes, nobles,
- commoners, serfs and slaves. Nobles: the nobles
- owned private plots of land or
- shared land with other families. Commoners:
- The commoners were the largest
- group who included priests, merchants, artisans,
- and farmers who held land in
- common with the nobles. Serfs: The majority
- of the serfs farmed the nobles land.
- Slaves: The slaves were the lowest
- class of people. They were socially equal with
- the criminals and people who
- could not pay debts. Also woman and children who
- were prisoners of war worked
- as slaves for the nobles.
- Aztec culture
- For one hundred years the Aztecs
- of Tenochtitlan held the greatest amount of
- power in all of Mexico. Following
- the model of established town dwellers, who had
- been living there for over
- one thousand years, they became civilized and
- sophisticated.
- The Aztec
- civilization was made up of many loosely connected urban
- communities. Each
- local group of citizens owned a piece of land. Those groups
- of people were
- called a capulli. Each capulli consisted of a few families that
- jointly owned
- a piece of land. Since the people were generally farmers, a part of
- the annual
- crop that was harvested from the land was given to the state as a kind
- of
- tax. As the empire started to grow land for farming became tight. One of
- the
- Aztecs greatest innovations was the chinampas, witch were rafts on witch
- mud
- from the bottom of the lake, wich was extremely fertile, was piled and
- crops grew
- from that. With this innovation the Aztec empire surged to near
- three hundred
- thousand people. This resent growth made it bigger than any
- European city at that
- time. Tenochtitalan became large and many open plazas
- and market places. In
- these market places were products being sold by merchants
- that traveled all over
- mesoamerica thus resulting in rare commodities becoming
- commonplace.
- Aztec technology was dependant upon human skills rather
- than upon
- mechanical equipment. Although the wheel was known to the Aztecs
- it wasn't
- utilized. It was only used for childrens pull-along toys. No vehicles
- incorporated
- the wheel, and machines didn't use rotary motion. Iron was unknown
- to the Aztecs
- as was steel. Copper and bronze were known however, and they
- were used in
- tools. Aztec jewelers made beautiful jewelry out of gold, silver
- and other known
- alloys. Glass, glazes, gunpowder, plows and alphabetic writing,
- wich were
- common among Spaniards, didn't exist in Mexico. However lack of
- these
- seemingly precious items didn't stop the Aztecs from making art and
- architecture
- that was amazing to the Europeans. Wheat, barley, cattle, horses,
- sheep, and goats
- were absent from Mexico until they were introduced by the
- Europeans. Without
- these things the Aztecs were surprisingly efficient farmers
- who fully utilized the
- use of irrigation, terracing, and fertilization of
- the fields.
- As the Spanish invaders soon found and became appreciative
- of, Aztec
- Mexico was very rich and civilized although it's customs and technology
- differed
- greatly from that of Europe. The state controlled almost every aspect
- of the Aztecs
- life. Another thing that amazed the spaniards was the Aztecs
- complex calendar.
- It consisted of twenty named days, with symbols for each
- day, that was based on
- the motion of the sun. The Aztec calendar has been
- proven incredibly accurate by
- today's scientists, in fact it has been proven
- more accurate than our own. It was
- not uncommon for the name of an Aztec
- child to have the name of the day on
- which it was born.
- All of the
- Aztecs boys and girls were required to attend school. Schooling
- for boys
- mainly consisted of the martial arts and warfare as the main area of study
- for
- girls was homemaking and weaving. Both boys and girls could learn how to
- read,
- interpret the calendar, use machinery, make prophecies and debate. Both
- boys
- and girls were required to learn about Aztec history as well as religion.
- Aztec
- Religion
- As most of Mexico, the Aztecs worshiped many gods, each of which
- demanded
- sacrifices and offerings. The Aztecs considered themselves the chosen
- people of
- HUITZILOPOCHTLI, the sun and war god, for who they conquered all
- surrounding
- lands. Huitzilopochtli shared the main temple, a pyramid at the center
- of
- Tenochtitlan, with Tlaloc, the rain god. Who was very important to farmers
- in
- a land where they were always threatened with drought. Another god of
- importance
- was QUETZALCOATL, the feathered serpent, patron of the arts and
- crafts and
- the god of self sacrifice. In fact this god was so important that in a year
- the
- Aztecs were said to have sacrificed twenty thousand prisoners. This was
- because
- it was the custom to sacrifice every male prisoner. The woman and
- children
- prisoners were sold into slavery to live a life of service to the nobles.
- Sacrifice
- was also important because the Aztecs believed that the sun ran off blood.
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