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The Aztecs

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Title: The Aztecs


1
The Aztecs
  • Ryan Alden
  • Atosa Ghasripoor
  • Brendan Hagan
  • Ken McKenna
  • Mike Piascik

2
Geography
  • Aztecs appeared first in the Valley of Mexico.
  • By 1519, the Aztecs encompassed all of Central
    Mexico from the Gulf of Mexico to the Pacific and
    as far south as Guatemala. This expansion of
    land included 38 provinces.
  • Many of the cities and villages were built in
    water and some on dry land.
  • Tenochtitlán had about 60,000 households Total
    population 250,000. Entire Aztec Empire 5
    million inhabitants.

3
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4
Map of Aztec Rule
http//www.aaanativearts.com/aztec_civilization_ma
p.gif
5
Geography
  • The Aztec Empire was approached by four great
    highways and bridges stood at intervals.
  • Stone and adobe walls surrounded the city and
    streets criss-crossed the city.
  • Many parks, public squares and marketplaces.
  • Major building Huitzilopochtli Temple. The
    temple, built as a pyramid, stood 106 feet high
    with 3 flights of steps, 120 steps each.

6
The Aztecs, or Mexica first appear in history at
the beginning of the 13th century. At first they
were nomadic people were traveled into the Valley
of Mexico to find work as mercenaries.
Eventually they decided to take a city for their
own, and in 1248 A.D. the city of Chapultapec was
taken over by Aztec Warriors. Before long
however, the previous owners of the city, the
Calhuacan, decided to retaliate. The Aztec were
driven out of the fertile area around lake
Texcoco. In 1325 A.D. after years of wandering
and living as hunter gatherers as well as
mercenaries, the Aztecs resettled in their newly
founded capitol city of Tenochtitlan (place of
the prickly pear cactus). This city is in the
same area in which Mexico City exists today.
7
As Tenochtitlan developed, so did the size of the
Aztec Empire. Smaller tribes who challenged the
Aztecs were easily defeated by the their fierce
warriors, and soon found themselves being paraded
up the slopes of sacrificial temples. Around
1440 A.D. the Aztec began to expand their
territory to the South through military conquest.
Although the size of the Empire grew, these
campaigns were mainly to obtain tribute from the
weaker cultures. Soon food, valuables, and even
humans (slaves, sacrifices) were flooding into
Tenochtitlan from tribes pleading for an end to
the fighting. From this time to the beginning of
the 16th century, the Aztec were the supreme
power in Central America. But soon they would be
robbed of their power.
8
Hernan Cortes and his greedy
Conquistadors landed in
the Gulf
Coast in 1519 A.D. Montezuma II
who had only been
in power since
1502 A.D. attempted to greet them
with
hospitality, but all that the
Spaniards saw made them
more
and more greedy. The Aztecs
soon were
forced to fight the superiorly armed Spaniards.
Many warriors were lost, but in 1520 A.D. the
Conquistadors were forced out of Tenochtitlan at
least temporarily. In 1521 A.D., with the help
of other native tribes, the Spaniards overthrew
the Aztec Empire, and built Mexico City over the
ruins of Tenochtitlan
http//library.thinkquest.org/C005121/data/spain2_
files/image002.gif
9
Montezuma II becomes the Great Speaker of the
Aztec Empire
Tenochtitlan becomes capital of Aztec Empire
Aztec Warriors take over the city of Chapultapec
Aztec Warriors drive the Conquistadors out of
Tenochtitlan
Mexico City founded on the ruins of Tenochtitlan
1248 A.D.
1345 A.D.
1502 A.D.
1520 A.D.
1522 A.D.
1200 A.D. The Aztec Arrive in the Valley of Mexico
1325 A.D. Tenochtitlan founded in lake Texcoco
1440 A.D. Aztecs expand to the South, now
receive tribute from local tribes in the
area
1519 A.D. Hernan Cortes his Conquistadors
arrive in the Gulf Coast
1521 A.D.
Spaniards, with the help of local native tribes,
overthrow the Aztec Empire
10
Aztec Society
  • There is much dispute over how many social
    classes actually existed in Aztec society, but
    its definite that there were at least three
    classes The Pilli (Nobility), Macehualli, which
    means people, were the middle class, which also
    included Tlalmaitl, or Serfs (lowest group of
    commoners), and Slaves. The relationships between
    each group differed from those in most societies.

11
Social Classes
  • The Pilli (Nobility)Were nobles by birth,
    priests, or esteemed warriors. The first noble
    class were the offspring of Acamapichti an
    admired Toltec king.These people were members of
    the hereditary nobility and occupied the top
    positions in the government, the army and the
    priesthood Priests also had great power. They had
    custody of all the temple revenue, from this they
    provided schools, hospitals and alms, which are
    money, food, or other donations given to the poor
    or needy. Warriors were not immediately part of
    the pilli. They had to earn their position. To
    enter the middle class, they had to capture a
    prisoner for sacrifice to become an iyac, and
    then capture or kill four enemies to become a
    maceualtin, part of the nobility.
  • The Macehualli and Tlalmaitl (Middle Class)The
    most numerous social group was known as the
    macehualtin these people were engaged in
    agriculture and the common trades. Although they
    were allowed to kept their produce, the land
    itself was collectively owned by the inhabitants
    of the neighborhood or calpulli. They had a
    lifetime ownership of land, and paid taxes. The
    Tlalmaitl, however, didnt have ownership of
    land, they were tenant farmers. Their lives were
    slightly less luxurious than that of the
    Macehualli.
  • The Tlacotin (Slaves) Apart from P.O.W.s, Aztec
    slavery was much different than the European
    slave system. A criminal or someone who evaded
    paying taxes could be made a slave. People could
    also sell themselves as slaves, and enjoy the
    money they had earned, usually enough for a year,
    until they had to serve their new master. Slaves
    who had children with their masters were
    immediately freed, and those who could escape
    from their masters home and run to the palace
    gates were also granted freedom.

12
GovernmentRule Through Tribute
  • War and Tribute made up much of the Aztec
    civilization.
  • Tribute kept the leaders of each city state at
    power, rule through fear.
  • The Aztec Empire covered
  • much of Mexico, and was
  • made up of 50-60 city
  • states.

http//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/2/2
2/Aztec_Empire_c_1519.png/400px-Aztec_Empire_c_151
9.png
13
Government
  • Aztecs also required tribute from captured
    civilizations, though they did not impose
    beliefs.
  • The leader, or Great Speaker regulated affairs
    with other groups of people and imposed/enforced
    the tributes.
  • Tributes were held regularly to the many gods of
    the Aztecs, these helped to keep command through
    fear of a greater power.
  • At many times, the Great Speaker
  • reported false sacrifices, to withhold
  • command over the large city states
  • through fear.

http//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/1/16/Mend
oza_HumanSacrifice.jpg
14
Economical Factors In The Ancient Aztec World
15
  • In the world of the ancient Aztecs, hunting
    and fishing was very important, especially in the
    valley of Mexico. In the Aztec world, the
    largest hunted creatures were the peccary which
    was a relative to the pig and deer. The Aztecs
    fished for anything from shellfish to large fish
    and sea mammals with nets. Hooks for fishing
    were made out of sturdy cactus thorns, shell, and
    bone.
  • The most common Aztec crop was corn. It was
    easy to farm and good to eat. After it was
    harvested, the Aztecs had several ways of dealing
    with it. One of the more common ways of
    preparing corn was to mash it with a round
    grinding stone called a mano against a flat stone
    called a metate. By grinding the corn like this
    the Aztecs made corn meal. This corn meal was
    used to make tortillas which are a very thin
    bread like food. This was the principal food of
    the lower class Aztec. The upper class Aztecs
    also ate tortillas but had other food choices to
    choose from. These foods were turkeys, duck, and
    geese. Since these animals werent raised they
    were considered reserved for the wealthy.
  • Another source of food for the Aztecs was the
    maguey plant. The sap of the maguey plant could
    be made into a beer-like beverage called pulque.
  • The Aztecs had a very unique way of planting
    their crops. Since Tenochtitlan was built around
    swamp land they used this to their advantage.
    They would make floating gardens on top the
    swamps. These floating gardens were called
    chinampas and were built on top of the swamps so
    they wouldnt have to worry about watering them
    and the crops would grow better. The first step
    in making the chinampas was to make a canal
    through the swamp so they could sort of section
    off the crops from the rest of the swamp. The
    next step was to put mud on to on big straw mats
    and then plant trees in the corners of the mats
    to hold them in place so they wouldnt float off.
    Then the Aztecs would plant their vegetable seed
    in the mud and thats how they grew their crops.

16
Trade
  • After the Aztecs settled in Tenochtitlan, a
    function called the Tlateco was formed as a trade
    center where societies gathered and traded. It
    was here that the Pochteca guild formed its
    function of obtaining luxury goods and necessary
    materials such as food and grain. The Pochteca
    guild was a group of societies outside of
    Tenochtitlan that met in the city and they traded
    with the Aztecs. Some of the luxury goods that
    were exchanged were things like beads of all
    different kinds and colors, hand-weaved rugs,
    pottery, and jewelry, and sometimes clothes. The
    other societies that came to trade had different
    resources around them because they lived in a
    different environment than the Aztecs which means
    they had different food which made trade more
    useful.

17
Belief System
  • The Aztecs were Polytheistic, meaning that they
    worshipped multiple gods.
  • Due to the importance of agriculture, many of
    their gods had an effect upon the growth of their
    crops.
  • The Aztecs believed that Human Sacrifices pleased
    the gods, so they were conducted regularly. These
    sacrifices also help to keep control in the
    government, as mentioned earlier.
  • In the Aztec society, the gods were believed to
    have created everything.
  • It is thought that the Aztecs sacrificed an
    average of 20,000 people per year to the gods,
    many of them from captured civilizations though
    they did not belief in imposing beliefs upon
    captured regions.
  • In war, a greater honor was to those who captured
    prisoners (for sacrifices) than those who killed
    in battle.

18
Technology
  • Sunstone Calendar
  • The Aztecs developed a stone that represented
    days, months, and even cosmic cycles.
  • The calendar shows the Aztecs knowledge of
    astronomy and mathematics.
  • The stone is 12 feet in diameter and
  • weighs 24 metric tons.
  • The stone also shows that the
  • Aztecs had 18 months of 20 days
  • each, for a total of 360 days.

19
Technology
  • Sunstone cont.
  • The Sunstone is arranged in layers, each having
    different cycles. Months, Days, Sun Positions,
    Sacrificial Days, and more were marked.
  • Medical
  • The Aztecs had a good understanding of herbs. The
    medicine was placed into two categories,
    Spiritual and Healing.
  • Illnesses were suspected to be the power of the
    gods, and therefore Spiritual healing was often
    prayer and animal sacrifice.

20
TechnologyFarming
  • The location of the Aztec empire required
    irrigation and other methods to sustain the
    growing population.
  • These methods included irrigation, fertilizer,
    and even building terraces on hills that were
    previously not farmable.
  • One of the most influential inventions was the
    chinampas
  • The chinampas acted as Floating Gardens.
  • The Aztecs used floating racks, with mud on top
    for harvests of wheat, corn, and other products
    to support their nation.

21
Chinampas
http//intranet.whitefriars.vic.edu.au/public/facu
lties/sose/students/James20M/History20Assignment
/chimapama.jpg
22
TechnologyMathematics
  • The Aztecs developed a system of mathematics for
    trade and records.
  • There were four different symbols used.
  • Dots, Flags, Feathers, and a Bag of Incense.
  • To indicate that the multiple glyphs forming a
    number belong to a single sign group, a line is
    drawn to connect all the glyphs. The line is then
    connected to the object it is counting.

http//www.ancientscripts.com/images/aztec_numbers
.gif
23
Writing/Language
  • Although the Aztecs lived in Mexico and were part
    of the Mexica society, the Nahuatl language is
    much different than the modern Spanish-Mexican
    language we hear today. Not even something as
    simple as de or el can be heard. Examples of
    word comparisons are as follows
  • Spanish Casa-House
  • Nahuatl Calli-House
  • Spanish Yo or mi I or Me
  • Nahuatl Nehuatl Me

24
Writing/Language
  • The Aztecs also wrote poems which would be in
    symbolical pictorial writing meaning that they
    used pictures to symbolize words. This type of
    writing was very similar to the Egyptians form of
    writing. They were simple poems, with no rhyme
    scheme, yet they told a story.

25
All the earth is a grave and nothing escapes it,
nothing is so perfect that it does not descend
to its tomb. Rivers, rivulets, fountains and
waters flow, but never return to their joyful
beginnings anxiously they hasten on the vast
realms of the rain god. As they widen their
banks, they also fashion the sad urn of their
burial. Filled are the bowels of the earth with
pestilential dust once flesh and bone, once
animate bodies of man who sat upon thrones,
decided cases, presided in council, commanded
armies, conquered provinces, possessed treasure,
destroyed temples, exulted in their pride,
majesty, fortune, praise and power. Vanished are
these glories, just as the fearful smoke vanishes
that belches forth from the infernal fires of
Popocatepetl. Nothing recalls them but the
written page.
26
  • The Aztecs were a very educated and sophisticated
    society. They even developed their own calendar

The Aztec year was 260 days that were dived into
20 periods of 13 days each, called Trecenas.
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31
Then and Now
  • Then Now

http//www.mcah.columbia.edu/dbcourses/riseofciv/l
arge/TENOCHTITLAN.jpg
32
Then
  • Back in the ancient world of the Aztecs, trade
    was very difficult at first but as the city grew
    larger, more societies moved closer and trade
    developed. They only traded objects such as
    beads, basic food like grain and some vegetables,
    rugs, pottery, and jewelry. They planted crops
    such as corn and maguey.
  • The common people lived in houses made out of
    mud and were built around patios or open courts.
    The upper class Aztecs made houses out of stone
    and painted them with sparkling red or white
    paint. The roof was made out of sturdy sticks
    that was tied down so they wouldnt blow off.
    The ancient Aztec homes usually had two separate
    rooms. One room was the main home and the other
    was the steam bath. There were no separate
    rooms, just one big one that was divided into 4
    areas. One part was for sleeping or resting,
    another part was a shrine of gods, and then the
    other part was a kitchen where food was prepared.
    The second part of the house was the steam bath
    where baths were taken. Aztecs thought that
    steam was healthy so thats why is was called a
    steam bath.
  • The Aztecs also had one huge temple where they
    worshiped their gods. Then there would be a few
    smaller temples surrounding the big one. The
    Aztecs would only celebrate one religion in their
    city so that is why they didnt have a lot of
    temples. The Aztecs also would sacrifice people
    to show their respect to the gods. For example,
    the Aztecs thought that bad weather meant that
    the gods were angry so they thought they had to
    sacrifice someone to show their respect. The
    Aztecs had many ways they would sacrifice people
    to the gods.
  • The Aztecs would use chinampas to plant their
    crops which is a floating garden/crop built with
    mud and straw held down by trees that I explained
    earlier.

33
Now
  • These days in modern day Mexico City
    (Tenochtitlan), people dont really trade anymore
    but they bargain and sell goods. In Mexico City
    there are tons of markets and stands where goods
    are sold. Things like jewelry, rugs, pottery,
    beads, and food are still sold there, along with
    tons of other objects and foods like figurines,
    games, and some foods like chips, and seasoned
    nuts.
  • Today, the majority of people in Mexico City
    live in apartment buildings because it is such a
    crowded city. The people in Mexico City with a
    lot of money would have there own house made out
    of what regular houses are today. Wood,
    concrete, steel, plastic, and other materials.
    These houses would not just have two rooms but as
    many as wanted. Some houses today have maybe 4
    bedrooms and a family room with maybe 2
    bathrooms. The big difference in how today is
    different from the ancient Aztec world is that we
    now have a currency. In Mexico, the currency
    called Pesos is used. Before people just traded
    objects.
  • Today, there are many different churches or
    other places that people go to worship whatever
    religion they celebrate. Today people have a
    choice in what religion they want to believe in.
    Back in the ancient world, one society believed
    in one religion.
  • The people in Mexico City still plant and farm
    by using the chinampas because Mexico City is
    still surrounded by swamp land. Today farmers
    plant more than just corn.

34
Works Cited
Aztec Article. World Book Online. 12 Oct.
2006 http//www.worldbookonline.com/wb/Artic
le?idar040540staztecculturesc2h9 Aztec
Empire. MSN Encarta. 15 Oct.
2006 http//encarta.msn.com/media_461517561/Aztec
_Empire.html Aztec Language. Latin American
Studies. 12 Oct. 2006 http//www.latinameri
canstudies.org/aztecs/calendar.jpg Aztec
Language. Latin American Studies. 12 Oct. 2006
http//www.latinamericanstudies.org/calendar.h
tm Aztec Language Nahuatl. Geocities. 12
Oct. 2006 http//www.geocities.com/Athens/Acad
emy/3088/nahuatl.html Aztec-Mexica civilization
map articles index PHP-Nuke. 9 Oct. 2006
http//www.aaanativearts.com/printout117.html.
The Aztecs/Mexicas. Indians.org. 12 Oct. 2006
http//www.indians.org/welker/aztec.htm The
Aztecs/Mexicas. Indians.org. 12 Oct. 2006
http//www.indians.org/welker/aztpoem.htm The
Mexicas/Aztecs. Civilizations in America. 12
Oct. 2006 http//www.wsu.edu/dee/CIVAMRCA/AZT
ECS.HTM
35
Works Cited
  • Baquedano, Elizabeth. Aztec Inca Maya. New
    York Dorling Kindersley, 1993.
  • Baquedano, Elizabeth. Eyewitness Books Aztec,
    Inca Maya. New York Alfred A. Knopf. 1993.
  • Hooker, Richard. The Mexica/Aztec. 9 Oct. 2006
    http//www.wsu.edu/dee/CIVAMRCA/AZTECS.HTM.
  • Hunt, Norman Bancroft. The Aztec. Historical
    Atlas of Ancient America. New York Thalamus
    Publishing, 2001. 142-143.
  • Lo, Lawrence. Aztecs. 14 Oct. 2006
    http//www.ancientscripts.com/aztec.html.
  • ThinkQuest Team 16325. "Empires Past Aztecs
    Farming and Agriculture." 31 August 1998.
    http//library.thinkquest.org/16325/y-farm.html
    13 Oct. 2006.
  • Traveljournals. Main Temple. 9 Oct. 2006
    http//www.traveljournals.net/pictures/51569.html.
  • Thurmond, Webley Meghan Kucher Will Esposito.
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    http//www2.truman.edu/marc/webpages/nativesp99/a
    ztecs/aztec_template.html.
  • Magree, James. Aztec beginnings. 14 Oct. 2006
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  • McKay, John P., Bennett D. Hill, John Buckler,
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