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The Mexica or Aztec: A Predatory State

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Title: The Mexica or Aztec: A Predatory State


1
The Mexica or Aztec A Predatory State
  • Social, Political, and Economic Organization

2
Who Were the Aztec?
  • We know they came from somewhere up northhow far
    north is anyones guess
  • Mythically, they came from Aztlan, the Land of
    the Herons, of which Aztec is a derivation
  • They were mercenaries of the Toltec centered in
    Tula, although even that is bound up in myth
  • When Tula fell, the Aztec migrated to an area of
    five lakes dominated by Lake Texcoco
  • An area dominated by Epigonal Toltecs

3
Epigonal Toltecs
  • The first were the Otomi-speaking Tepanecs, who
    founded the city of Atzcapotzalco on the western
    shores of Lake Texcoco
  • The second was Xaltocan, an Otomi-speaking state
    on the north shore of Lake Texcoco
  • The third was the Acolhua who dominated the
    eastern shore of Lake Texcoco, organized also by
    Chichimeca
  • The fourth was Colhuacán on the southwest part of
    the Valley of Mexico, at the cusp between Lakes
    Texcoco and Xochimilco.
  • The fifth was a small state Xicco.

4
Aztec Nomenclature
  • Initially, they did not settle at the site of
    Tenochtitlan
  • Their names changed from Chichimec from Aztlan
    a contemptuous term that meant Barbarian
  • To Tenochca after a patriarch by that name, who
    also gave the name to Tenochtitlán
  • To Mexica, which they adopted after attaching
    themselves to the Colhua of Colhuacan as
    mercenaries, calling themselves Colhua Mexica

5
Formation of the Aztec
  • Initially, they did not settle at the site of
    Tenochtitlán
  • After numerous wanderings they settled at a
    swampy site mythically where an eagle was perched
    on a nopal cactus devouring a snake
  • First, they served as mercenaries of
    Atzcapotzalco
  • They then switched sides, allied themselves with
    the Acolhua of Texcoco, overthrew Atzapotzalco,
    and eventually formed a triple alliance between
    themselves, the Acolhua, and a liberated part of
    Atzapotzalco called Tlacopan
  • Third, they established hegemony in 1500, 21
    years before the actual conquest.

6
Formation and Society
  • Bilateral descent does allow for flexibility.
  • To enjoy a rapid rise from a muddy village
    settled in 1345 or so to an empire less than 200
    years later, you have to be flexible.
  • 1427 saw the formation of the Triple Alliance
  • So to envision an Aztec society, the question
    arises just which society are we talking about
  • Berdan describes society at it was on the eve of
    the Conquest
  • But were they patrilineal groups in the past? We
    dont know records were often destroyed by the
    victors

7
What Were the Calpulli?
  • What is known for sure
  • There were 20 Big Houses by that name
  • They were landholding groups
  • They were organized territorially
  • They had their own councils
  • They had their own temples
  • They comprised the macehual, or commoner,
    generally peasants
  • The debate kin groups or peasant class?

8
Calpulli as Kin Groups
  • Kin groups or clans
  • Reasoning the Aztecs themselves were tribal
    groups at most 300 years before
  • What kind? Evidence is lacking?
  • Indication of a patrilineal bias among nobility
    preference for junior lines in allocating
    economic assets and political favors.

9
Calpulli as Social and Economic Classes
  • Developed into administrative subclasses
  • Could have been units organizing not only
    peasants but also craftspersons and traders
  • Example in Texcoco under Hungry Coyote
    (Nezahualcoyotl), calpulli were organized
    featherworkers and goldworkers
  • Pochteca (luxury good traders) may also have
    formed a calpulli we do know they were hereditary

10
Calpulli as Both Kin and Class
  • Conical clans in which privileges are based on
    order of birth
  • Kept wealth and privileges in the family, but
    some members were more equal than others
  • Kin trace their ancestry to a founder, real or
    fictive
  • But through such justification as precedence of
    birth, the lineal descendants (junior lines) get
    preferential treatment
  • This suggests that unilineal descent might have
    been dominant at one time

11
Calpulli and Ethnicity
  • As conquests proceeded, Tenochtitlan became more
    ethnically diverse.
  • Thus calpulli included not only kin but also
    allies from the conquered provinces
  • Flexibility of kin thus allowed fictive
    (fictional) ties as well
  • Thus, the European Catholic tradition of
    compradrazgo fit in very well with indigenous
    society.
  • Thus their flexibility is not at issue only
    their pristine characteristics.

12
Calpulli and Land Tenure
  • Land was held in common in the calpulli
  • System was based on usufruct
  • Peasants owned their plot so long as they used
    it and paid their taxes
  • Land reverted back to the commons if the peasant
    stopped using the land or pay the taxes
  • Land could be rented, but not bought or sold

13
Aztec Kin Reckoning
  • Reckoned kinship bilaterally traced relations
    through paternal and maternal side.
  • Kinship terms bilateral e.g. tlatli is an uncle,
    whether fathers or mothers brother
  • Possibly reflected the extreme instability one
    expects from a state in rapid formation
  • And one in which there are shifting alliances

14
Marriage among the Aztec
  • Marriage was endogamous by class pipiltin to
    other pipiltin, macehuallin to other macehuallin
  • There was no other rule of exogamy outside the
    immediate family
  • This meant that marriage could involve ones
    cousin cross-cousin marriage was not unknown
  • Polygyny was common among nobility and tied in
    with social class wives were put to work.

15
Marriage Alliances and Power
  • Nobility Marriage had a political function
    female from Texcoco married a male from the
    subordinate Teotihuacan to maintain a tie
  • The son of the Teotihuacan ruler would then be
    subordinate to Texcoco because of the gift of a
    wife.
  • Marriage was to mans mothers brothers
    daughterhis matrilateral cross-cousin.
  • Failure to repay in Maussian terms means the
    Teotihuacan nobility would be beggar to Texcoco
    nobility.
  • This would persist for generations.

16
Aztec Markets Common Goods
  • There were two kinds of markets
  • One dealt in ordinary goods
  • Markets usually met every five days
  • Trading outside the market was illegal and one
    could be imprisoned or the goods confiscated
  • Reason market transactions were subject to taxati

17
Aztec Markets Luxury Products
  • Texcoco had been a market town long before the
    Aztecs assumed power
  • Markets were a daily affair in Texcoco major
    markets comprising up to 50,000 buyers and
    sellers met every fifth daythey were the center
    of luxury products
  • A hereditary class of merchants called Pochteca
    were probably active long before the Aztecs
  • They occupied a precarious position
  • On the one hand, they were vital as sources of
    military intelligence to the rulers and were
    protected
  • On the other hand, their economic power were a
    threat to the rulers toward the end, they hid
    their wealth.

18
Sociopolitical Organization of the Aztecs
  • Society A Twofold Division
  • Pilli The nobles
  • Macehual The peasants
  • However, the peasants themselves were stratified
  • Macehuales who excelled in battle could
    themselves become noble
  • This requires some background in the principles
    of political anthropology

19
Social Class Overview
  • General types (Fried)
  • Egalitarian societies
  • Social systems with as many valued positions as
    person capable of filling them
  • Exceptions age, gender, special characteristics
  • Ranked societies
  • Social systems with fewer valued status positions
    than those capable of filling them
  • Stratified societies
  • Minority control of strategic resources

20
Stratified Societies
  • Access to strategic resources is unequal
  • Examples
  • Water in irrigation societies
  • Land in patrimonial (feudal) societies
  • Claims to capital assets (stocks, bonds) in
    capitalist society
  • Capital goods/services used for production
  • Money, stocks, bonds are also capital

21
Emergence of Stratification
  • Manipulative Individuals/ Families
  • Form alliances (chimpanzee-like)
  • Play one faction against another
  • Form dynasties (bonobo-like)
  • Control over Life-Sustaining Resources
  • Water systems in semi-arid regions
  • Agricultural lands
  • Mechanisms of Taxation
  • Labor
  • Tribute

22
Political Organization Basic Principles
  • Power vs Authority
  • Power compliance by coercion or force
  • Authority compliance by persuasion
  • Legitimacy Beliefs rationalizing rule
  • Examples Divine Right, Peoples Consent
  • Sanctions reinforcements of behavior
  • Positive rewards, recognition
  • Negative punishment

23
Power versus Authority
  • Extreme examples
  • Power concentration camps Auschwitz (above)
    Guantanamo (below)
  • Authority !Kung, Inuit, Yanomamo
  • Neither is absolute
  • Dictatorships need to persuade Nuremberg
    rallies, Mayday parades
  • Power is evenly distributed in nonstate cultures

24
Legitimacy as Justification for Political Order
  • Justification necessary even in authoritarian
    states
  • Monarchies the divine right to rule
  • Soviet Union Socialist transition to communist
    economy
  • Nazi Germany Racial purification delivery of
    full-employment (Nuremberg rallies, above)
  • Democratic forms consent by the governed (below,
    State of the Union)

25
One Myth Behind Mexica Power
  • War Against the Tepenacs of Atzcapotalzo
  • Nobles voted for war commoners voted for peace
  • The declaration of the nobles (Wolf, p. 137)
  • Commoners reply on agreement if the war were
    successful (Wolf, p. 137)
  • Most likely, a mythical exchange, but this served
    as one part of legitimation

26
Sociopolitical Organizations General Typology
  • Bands Small, informal groups
  • Tribes Segmentary groups integrated by some
    unifying factor
  • Chiefdoms Group organized under a chief in a
    ranked society
  • State Centralized political system with monopoly
    over legitimized force and its use.

27
States Force as Prime Mover
  • Defining Characteristics
  • A centralized political system
  • With power to coerce
  • The operating factor
  • Monopoly over the use of
  • Legitimate physical force
  • Supports the apparatus of the state
  • Bureaucracy --Army and police
  • Law and legal codes

28
States Derivative Features
  • Administrative structure
  • Public services --Tax collection
  • Resource allocation --Foreign affairs
  • Delegation of force
  • Police, all levels --Armed force
  • Law
  • Civil (dispute resolution)
  • Regulatory (trade, economy)
  • Criminal (crime and punishment)

29
Law Cross-Cultural Comparison
  • Codified law Formally defines wrong and
    specifies remedies
  • Customary law Informal sanctions or dispute
    resolution
  • Restitution or Restorative law emphasizes
    dispute resolution, damage restitution
  • Retributive law emphasizes punishment for crimes
    committed

30
Case Studies Restitution
  • Nuer Leopard-skin chief
  • Function mediate disputes leopard wrap
    identifies role
  • Cannot force or enforce an agreement
  • Authority is spiritual
  • Zapotec in Talea, Mexico
  • Function hear cases and negotiate
  • Recommend settlement
  • Enforce agreement by community

31
Case Studies Retribution
  • Criminal Law
  • Murder, Robbery, Others
  • Civil Law
  • Consumer Law and Small Courts
  • Final Say Judge or Arbitrator
  • Limitation Sheer Numbers of Cases

32
A Trisection of Society
  • Relations of Production form the basis of
    sociopolitical systems.
  • Political superstructure government, military,
    the law
  • Ideology religion, myths, even psychology
  • When the base shifts, the rest of society changes

33
Basic Political Structure of the Mexica
  • The nobility expanded its privileges as the
    empire developed
  • Privileges Right to wear insignia, special
    clothing
  • Marital privileges polygyny and the political
    and economic power it implied.
  • Had their own special courts
  • Sent children to calmecatl, or schools of
    religious and ceremonial training, prerequisite
    for entry into the bureaucracy
  • Commoners were tillers of the soil
  • Slaves, who had their own privileges

34
Aztec Society A Study of Mobility
  • Remember that the Mexica were still in a state of
    expansion when the Spaniards came
  • Unfinished business The Tlaxcalans, the
    Tarascans, the unconquered lands of southern
    Mexico
  • Internally, they were a mobile society
  • Rulers created a nobility of service as well as
    a nobility of lineage

35
Nobility of Service
  • Distinguished themselves in war or by trade
  • Term Knights or Sons of the Eagle
  • Also divided the commoners from those relative
    few
  • A source of tension with the nobility of lineage
    over bureaucratic positions
  • An aristocratic reaction curtailed their
    privileges
  • Stratification became more established on the eve
    of the Conquest

36
Religious Ideology
  • Huitzilopochtli (Hummingbird of the Left) the
    principal god
  • Presided over a world that ended in cataclysm
  • The last world ended in hurricanes, preceded by
    rain, sky falling on earth, and fire the
    present one will end in earthquakes
  • To forestall the inevitable end would entail the
    blood sacrifice of humans

37
Gods from the Predecessors
  • Quetzalcoatl The plumed serpent god who was
    banished to the east.
  • Tezcatlipoca, (smoking mirror), who displaced
    Quetzalcoatl, who demanded blood sacrificed in
    his own right, and often identified with
    Huitzilopochtli
  • Tlaloc, the rain god, He Who Makes the Plants
    Spring Up.
  • Xipe Totec, the Flayed One, whose skin symbolized
    the old vegetation with the promise of renewal
  • The pantheon became standardized after the first
    conquest over the Tepanec
  • Even so, one god might be merged with another, as
    Huitzilopochtli with Tezcatlipoca

38
Self-Concept of the Mexica
  • At the edge of cataclysm
  • Individuals were expected to combine bravery with
    moderation
  • The ideal Mexica did not drink to excess, spoke
    softly, was sexually continent.

39
The Eve of the Conquest Cracks in the Mexica
State
  • The Mexica exploited the provinces mercilessly
    for tribute and sometimes sacrificial victims
  • Except for these, the provinces were left on
    their own their own customs, languages, and
    religions were left alone.
  • This, coupled with the still-independent states,
    may have been their downfall.
  • The domination was never absolute, and the Mexica
    armies had their limitations
  • The Spaniards were able to exploit these
    weaknesses, despite initial failures.

40
Comparison with the Maya
  • The Maya were competitive city states
  • Even after the collapse, they were relatively
    independent
  • The conquest of the Aztec was largely a one-time
    event in the Valley of Mexico
  • In contrast, the Spaniards would have to conquer
    one Mayan state over a long period of attrition
  • Even after 1692, there were constant uprisings
    throughout Mexico and Guatemala well into the
    19th century.
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