Title: The Aztecs
 1The Aztecs 
 2The Aztecs
- A tribe of hunters and farmers who migrated to 
 the shores of Lake Texcoco in the 1200s.
- Founded Tenochtitlan in 1325. 
- Empire borders stretched from the Gulf of Mexico 
 to the Pacific Ocean and as far south as
 Guatemala.
- Became a powerful tribe that was skilled in the 
 art of war.
3Tenochtitlan
- Capital city of the Aztec empire. 
- Most modern city of the time. 
- Empire grew to more than 5 million at its peak. 
- Built on an island, in Lake Texcoco, that had 
 been enlarged until it was two square miles.
- Had a population of half a million people.
- The city was connected to the mainland by three 
 causeways/bridges.
- Divided into four districts. 
- Modern day Mexico City is built over the ruins of 
 Tenochtitlan.
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 5Aztec Warfare
- Aztecs conquered surrounding tribes and forced 
 them to pay large tributes.
- Tribute  Taxes 
- Conquering other tribes allowed the Aztecs to 
 gain wealth and slaves for sacrifice.
- The conquered peoples were not happy and were 
 easily convinced to revolt against the Aztecs.
6Aztec Government
- As the civilization grew, they formed city-states 
 that were governed by an emperor.
- A council of nobles always chose the emperor from 
 members of the royal family.
- The most important emperor was Montezuma.
7Montezuma
- Became emperor in 1502. 
- Built many temples, water conduits, and 
 hospitals.
- Expanded the empire as far south as Honduras. 
- Even though the other conquered tribes disliked 
 him, he was thought of as a great ruler by the
 Aztecs.
- Brought the Spaniards to Tenochtitlan.
8Religion
- Polytheistic  many gods 
- Each village and each occupation had its own 
 patron god.
- Worshipped over 60 gods and goddesses  some 
 helpful, some harmful.
- To win favor from the helpful gods, the Aztecs 
 made offerings to them.
- Sometime these offerings were human sacrifices. 
- Pyramids were used as Temples. 
- Sacrifices were made on an altar at the top of 
 the pyramid.
- Blood would run down the steps. 
- Most sacrificial victims were prisoners of war. 
9Quetzalcoatl  God of learning and the 
priesthood, also god of arts and crafts
Tlaloc  Rain god, most important to farmers
Huitzilopochtli  Sun god an god of war, chief 
god of the town of Tenochtitlan
Homoyoca  Ancient Sun god 
 10Advanced Civilization 
- Aztecs had . . . 
- Mathematical system to maintain their empire 
- Calendar systems to organize their empire 
- Farming system was very efficient 
- Developed irrigation systems to help their crops 
 grow during dry periods.
11Aztec Calendar
- Used two types of calendars. 
- Lunar  based on the moon 
- Solar  based on the sun 
- The lunar calendar had 260 days 
- Divided into 13 months, each month having 20 
 days.
- The Lunar calendar was considered magical and 
 used to decide which days would be used for
 religious ceremonies and rituals.
12Aztec Calendar
- The solar calendar had 365 days 
- Divided into 18 months, each month having 20 
 days.
- This calendar helped them determine planting and 
 harvesting times.
- The extra five days were nothing days added to 
 the end of each year and were considered unlucky.
- No activities were performed during the nothing 
 days.
- At the end of the 5 days the Aztecs gave a 
 sacrificial victim to the gods.
13Aztec Calendar Stone  Discovered in 1790 
  12 feet in diameter and weighs 20 tons
Solar Calendar
Lunar Calendar 
 14Aztec Calendar The image of the Sun god Tonatiuh 
is carved in the center of the Aztec calendar 
stone. Other carvings represent the Aztec days 
and religious symbols. Each month was 
represented by a dot. The individual days were 
given a specific name and symbol. 
 15Art
- Art used religious subjects and themes. 
- The best remaining examples of Aztec art are 
 architecture and sculpture.
- Used stone, wood, jade, turquoise, metal, 
 emerald, and volcanic glass.
- Most Aztec gold treasures no longer exist as they 
 were taken and melted down to reuse the gold.
- Many buildings and pieces of artwork were 
 destroyed by the Spanish.
- Aztecs also made pottery and woven cloth. 
16Aztec Sports
- Tlachtli is a ball game that was played during 
 religious ceremonies.
- Court Requirements 
- Played on a court. In the shape of a capital I. 
- A vertical stone ring was in the middle of the 
 side walls.
- The object of the game was to put the ball 
 through the ring.
- They used a hard, rubber ball. This ball could 
 only be moved by the players hips, knees, legs,
 and elbows.
- This game was used to determine who was to be 
 sacrificed next.
- THE WINNERS!!!! 
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 18Agriculture
- Slash and burn method. 
- Terraces and Canals 
- Chinampas were small islands formed in lake and 
 swamp area.
- Made by digging mud at the bottom of the lake or 
 swamp and piling it into little mounds.
- Sometimes called floating gardens, even though 
 they did not really float.
- Common foods 
- Corn (Maize), beans, squash 
- Sweet potatoes, tomatoes, papayas, 
- Rubber, cotton and cacao beans 
19Language
- Had no alphabet. 
- Wrote in glyphs (pictures). 
- Paper was made from the bark of the wild fig 
 tree.
- The bark was soaked and beaten into sheets. 
- These sheets were coated with a varnish and stuck 
 together.
- They were then folded like an accordion (codex). 
- Spoke Nahuatl. 
- Some Aztec words 
- Acapulco, Mexico, avocado, chocolate, and tomato.
20The END of the Aztecs
- 1519 
- Spanish conquistador Hernan Cortes lands on 
 eastern coast of Mexico looking for gold
- Conquistador  Spanish explorer or soldier 
- Had 11 ships, 500 soldiers, 1000 sailors and 16 
 horses
- In order to prevent his men from leaving, he 
 burned his ships.
- Success or death.
- Cortes trained his men and nearby natives that 
 disliked the Aztecs.
- By the time he reached Tenochtitlan, he had 1500 
 fighters . . . 1000 were natives.
21Cortes  the Aztecs
- The Aztecs saw Cortes and his men, and believed 
 that he was an Aztec god, Quetzalcoatl, who had
 returned to earth.
- He was taken back to Montezuma (emperor) and 
 Tenochtitlan, where he saw what he called the
 city of gold.
- Cortes was given gold in the hopes that he would 
 take the gifts and leave.
- After two years of struggle, Cortes and the 
 Spanish were able to defeat the Aztecs in 1521.
- During this time, Montezuma was a prisoner in his 
 own palace.
- Cortes hoped he could rule the Aztecs if he kept 
 their leader hostage.
- 240,000 Aztecs were killed, and the city was 
 destroyed.
22How were the Spanish able to conquer the Aztecs 
so easily?
- Guns 
- Cannons 
- Horses 
- Thought the men and their horses were one 
 creature.
- European diseases 
- Smallpox 
- 1520  thousands died 
- The Aztec enemies helped the Spanish
23Life after the Aztecs
- Major consequence of the Spanish conflict with 
 the Aztecs . . .
- Creation of a new Spanish empire by the end of 
 the 1500s.
- Stretched from the southern tip of California to 
 the tip of South America.
- Thousands of colonists moved from Spain to settle 
 in the New World.
- Influenced religion, customs and trade.