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The New World

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Native Americans of North America, indigenous peoples of North America. ... by strangulation; the Spanish beheaded Tupac Amar in 1572, ending the Inca dynasty ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The New World


1
The New World
  • The Incas, Mayas and Aztecs

2
The empires before the conquest
3
Outline
  • Introduction
  • Part I. The Incas
  • Part II. The Mayas
  • Part III. The Aztecs
  • Conclusion
  • References
  • Timeline

4
Introduction
  • Native Americans of North America, indigenous
    peoples of North America. Native Americans had
    lived throughout the continent for thousands of
    years before Europeans began exploring the New
    World in the 15th century
  • The ancient ancestors of modern Native Americans
    made their way across a land bridge that once
    spanned the Bering Sea and connected northeastern
    Asia to North America
  • Scientists believe these people first migrated to
    the Americas more than 10,000 years ago, before
    the end of the last ice age
  • Estimates range from 40 million to 90 million for
    all of the Americas when Columbus arrived in 1492

5
Part I. The Incas
Today about 8 million descendants of the Incas
inhabit the lands of the former empire, speaking
the Quechuan language and following many of the
ancient Inca beliefs and customs
6
a. The Inca empire
  • Inca Empire, vast kingdom in the Andes Mountains
    of South America that was created by the Quechua,
    a Native American people, in the 15th century AD
  • The Incas built a wealthy and complex
    civilization that ruled between 5 million and 11
    million people (capital Cuzco)
  • Although the Incas lacked both a written language
    and the concept of the wheel, they accomplished
    feats of engineering that were unequaled
    elsewhere in the Americas
  • They built large stone structures without mortar
    and constructed suspension bridges and roads that
    crossed the steep mountain valleys of the Andes
  • Inca lands eventually totaled about 906,500 sq
    km The political center of the empire was in
    what is now Peru

7
b. Conquest of the Inca empire
  • The Inca civilization was at its height around
    1493, as Spaniards began arriving in the Americas
  • About 1525, struggle for power between two of
    Huayna Capacs remaining sons, Huáscar and
    Atahualpa
  • Civil war weakened the empire until Atahualpa
    captured Huáscar and ordered his execution in
    1532
  • Spanish explorer Francisco Pizarro and 180
    Spanish soldiers landed on the coast of Peru
  • Pizarro, launched a surprise attack on
    Atahualpa's followers and seized the emperor
  • In 1533 the Spaniards executed Atahualpa by
    strangulation the Spanish beheaded Tupac Amarú
    in 1572, ending the Inca dynasty

8
Part II. The Mayas
9
a. The Maya empire
  • The people known as the Maya lived in the region
    that is now eastern and southern Mexico,
    Guatemala, Belize, El Salvador, and western
    Honduras
  • The Maya culture highest development from AD 300
    to 900
  • The Maya built massive stone pyramids, temples,
    and sculpture, achievements in mathematics and
    astronomy, which were recorded in hieroglyphs
  • After 900 the Maya mysteriously declined revived
    in the north on the Yucatán Peninsula
  • In Postclassic times (AD 900 to 1521) the
    city-states of Yucatán were ruled by a hereditary
    halach uinic (also called ahau) who was also the
    highest religious authority

10
b. Conquest of the Maya empire
  • In 1527 Francisco de Montejo attempted to conquer
    Yucatán, and in 1546 his son succeeded
  • By 1524 Spanish explorer Pedro de Alvarado had
    conquered the southern highland area, which had
    also fallen into tribal warfare
  • Spanish domination of the entire Maya region was
    achieved in 1697
  • Many Maya were killed or died of European
    diseases that the Spanish brought with them
  • The Spanish forced most of the remainder to labor
    on Spanish farms or in gold and silver mines

11
Part III. The Aztecs
12
a. The Aztec empire
  • Native American state that ruled much of what is
    now Mexico from about 1428 until 1521, when the
    empire was conquered by the Spaniards
  • At the height of their power, the Aztec
    controlled a region stretching from the Valley of
    Mexico in central Mexico east to the Gulf of
    Mexico and south to Guatemala
  • Their capital, Tenochtitlán, was located on the
    site of present-day Mexico City, possibly the
    largest city in the world at the time of the
    Spanish conquest
  • The name Aztec is derived from Aztlán, the
    mythical homeland of the Mexica according to
    tradition, Aztlán was located northwest of the
    Valley of Mexico, possibly in west Mexico. The
    name Mexico is derived from Mexica

13
b. Conquest of the Aztec empire
  • In 1519 Spanish explorer Hernán Cortés and more
    than 500 Spaniards landed in eastern Mexico in
    search of land and gold
  • Advised by Malinche, his Native American
    mistress, Cortés formed an alliance with one of
    the rivals of the Aztec, the Tlaxcalans, and set
    out for Tenochtitlán
  • Aztec ruler Montezuma II allowed Cortés to enter
    the city in order to learn more about him and his
    intentions
  • Cortés seized Montezuma as a hostage and forced
    him to swear allegiance to the king of Spain
  • Montezuma was killed during a revolt the fall of
    Tenochtitlán in 1521 marked the end of the Native
    American civilization

14
Conclusion
  • The conquistadors came from areas of Spain where
    fighting was a way of life. The wars against
    Muslims in Spain had lasted for centuries
  • By taking treasure, territory, and subjects for
    their country, they won recognition from the
    king. Many explorers also felt it was their moral
    responsibility to convert people to Christianity
  • The conquerors introduced the encomienda system,
    which put Native Americans to work at forced
    labor on great agricultural estates. Thousands
    died of European diseases, and many others fled
    the land of their ancestors, causing the
    population to drop
  • Spain gained enormous wealth from the spoils of
    its conquests and from silver and gold mines in
    the newly conquered lands

15
References
  • http//encarta.msn.com/encnet/refpages/RefArticle.
    aspx?refid761560004
  • http//www.theincas.com/history/empire_map.htm
  • http//www.teacheroz.com/Meso_Latin.htm
  • http//www.infoplease.com/ce6/people/A0857587.html
  • http//encarta.msn.com/encnet/refpages/RefArticle.
    aspx?refid761593151
  • http//encarta.msn.com/encnet/refpages/RefEdList.a
    spx?refid210005483
  • http//encarta.msn.com/encnet/refpages/RefArticle.
    aspx?refid761595536

16
The Spanish empire
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