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Part 1: Mayans Part 2: Incas

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Title: Part 1: Mayans Part 2: Incas


1
Part 1 Mayans Part 2 Incas
  • Lsn 6

2
Part 1 MayansTheme The connection between
agriculture, religion, and society
  • Lsn 6

3
ID SIG
  • bloodletting rituals, cocoa, maize, Maya, Mayan
    calendar, Mayan decline, Olmec, Popol Vuh, Temple
    of the Giant Jaguar, Tikal

4
Olmecs and Mayans
5
Olmecs
  • Earliest known ceremonial centers of the ancient
    Americas appeared near modern day Veracruz around
    1200 B.C.
  • Served as the nerve center for the first complex
    society of the Americas, the Olmecs
  • Olmec was not what the people called themselves
  • It means rubber people and comes from the
    rubber trees that flourish in the region

6
Characteristics of Olmec Civilization
  • Intensive agricultural techniques
  • Area received abundant rainfall so extensive
    irrigation systems were unnecessary
  • Still the Olmecs built elaborate drainage systems
    to divert waters that might otherwise have caused
    floods
  • Specialization of labor
  • Jade craftsmen
  • Cities
  • Built around ceremonial centers at San Lorenzo,
    La Venta, and Tres Zapotes
  • A social hierarchy
  • Society was probably authoritarian
  • Common subjects provided labor and tribute to the
    elite

7
Characteristics of Olmec Civilization
  • Organized religion and education
  • Ceremonial centers, priests, temples, altars, and
    human sacrifice
  • Development of complex forms of economic exchange
  • Imported jade and obsidian and exported small
    jade, basalt, and ceramic works of art
  • Development of new technologies
  • Excellent astronomers and mathematicians who
    developed a calendar
  • Advanced development of the arts. (This can
    include writing.)
  • Created colossal human heads sculpted from basalt
    rock

8
Olmec Head at La Venta
9
Decline of the Olmec
  • Olmecs systematically destroyed their ceremonial
    centers at both San Lorenzo and La Venta and then
    deserted the sites
  • Statues were broken and buried, monuments
    defaced, and capitals burned
  • No one knows why, but some speculate reasons
    involving civil conflicts or doubts about the
    effectiveness or legitimacy of the ruling classes
  • By about 400 B.C., Olmec society had fallen on
    hard times and other societies soon eclipsed it

10
Mayans
  • Began to develop around 300 A.D. in what is now
    southern Mexico, Guatemala, Belize, Honduras, and
    El Salvador
  • Known as The People of the Jaguar

11
(No Transcript)
12
Olmec Influence on the Mayans
  • Maize
  • Ceremonial centers with temple pyramids
  • Calendar based on the Olmec one
  • Ball games
  • Rituals involving human sacrifice

13
Characteristics of a Civilization
  • Intensive agricultural techniques
  • Specialization of labor
  • Cities
  • A social hierarchy
  • Organized religion and education
  • Development of complex forms of economic exchange
  • Development of new technologies
  • Advanced development of the arts. (This can
    include writing.)

14
Agriculture
Maize
Cacao
15
Agriculture
  • Soil in Mesoamerican lowlands was thin and
    quickly lost fertility
  • Mayans built terraces to retain the silt and
    therefore greatly improved agricultural
    production
  • Raised maize, cotton, and cacao
  • Cacao was a precious commodity consumed mostly by
    nobles and even used as money

Cacao tree
16
Cities
17
Cities Tikal
  • From about 300 to 900, the Maya built more than
    eight large ceremonial centers
  • All had pyramids, palaces, and temples
  • Some of the larger ones attracted dense
    populations and evolved into genuine cities
  • The most important was Tikal
  • Small city-kingdoms served as the means of Mayan
    political organization

18
Cities Tikal
  • Tikal was the most important Mayan political
    center between the 4th and 9th Centuries
  • Reached its peak between 600 and 800 with a
    population of nearly 40,000
  • The Temple of the Jaguar dominated the skyline
    and represented Tikals control over the
    surrounding region which had a population of
    about 500,000

19
Tikal Temple of the Jaguar
  • 154 feet high
  • Served as funerary pyramid for Lord Cacao, Maya
    ruler of the late 6th and early 7th centuries

20
Social Hierarchy
A Mayan Warrior
A Mayan Priest
21
Social Hierarchy
  • King and ruling family
  • Priests
  • Hereditary nobility (from which came the merchant
    class)
  • Warriors
  • Professionals and artisans
  • Peasants
  • Slaves

22
Social Hierarchy
  • King and ruling family
  • Ruled from the city-kingdoms such as Tikal
  • Ruled by semi-divine right and believed their
    connection with the gods was maintained by ritual
    human sacrifice
  • Often had names associated with the jaguar
  • Priests
  • Maintained an elaborate calendar and transmitted
    knowledge of writing, astronomy, and mathematics

A Mayan King
23
Social Hierarchy
  • Hereditary nobility (from which came the merchant
    class)
  • Owned most of the land and cooperated with the
    kings and priests by organizing military forces
    and participating in religious rituals
  • Warriors
  • Mayan kingdoms fought constantly with each other
    and warriors won tremendous prestige by capturing
    high-ranking enemies
  • Captives were usually made slaves, humiliated,
    tortured, and ritually sacrificed

24
Social Hierarchy
  • Professionals and artisans
  • Architects and sculptors supervised construction
    of the large monuments and public buildings
  • Peasants
  • Fed the entire society
  • Slaves
  • Provided physical labor for the construction of
    cities and monuments
  • Often had been captured in battle

25
Specialization
26
Specialization
  • Astronomers
  • Mathematicians
  • Warriors
  • Architects and sculptors
  • Potters
  • Tool manufacturers
  • Textile makers

27
Religion and Education
Human Sacrifice and Bloodletting Ritual
28
Religion Importance of Agriculture
  • Mayan religion reflected the fundamental role of
    agriculture in their society
  • Popol Vuh, was the Mayan creation myth that
    taught that the gods had created human beings out
    of maize and water
  • Gods kept the world in order and maintained the
    agricultural cycle in exchange for honors and
    sacrifices

29
Religion Bloodletting Rituals
  • Mayans believed the shedding of human blood would
    prompt the gods to send rain to water the maize
  • Bloodletting involved both war captives and Mayan
    royals

Mayan queen holds a bowl filled with strips of
paper used to collect blood.
30
Religion Bloodletting
  • A popular bloodletting ritual was for a Mayan to
    pierce his own tongue and thread a thin rope
    through the hole, thus letting the blood run down
    the rope

31
Religion The Ball Game
  • Mayans inherited a ball game from the Olmecs that
    was an important part of Mayan political and
    religious festivals
  • High-ranking captives were forced to play the
    game for their very lives
  • The losers became sacrificial victims and faced
    torture and execution immediately following the
    match
  • Object of the game was to propel an 8 inch ball
    of solid baked rubber through a ring or onto a
    marker without using your hands

32
Mayan Ball Court
33
Economic Exchange
Mayan symbol for movement
34
Economic Exchange
  • Traveling merchants served not just as traders
    but also as ambassadors to neighboring lands and
    allied people
  • Traded mainly in exotic and luxury goods such as
    rare animal skins, cacao beans, and finely
    crafted works of art which rulers coveted as
    signs of special status
  • Cacao used as money

35
New Technologies
Mayan Calendar
Observatory at El Caracol
36
New Technologies
  • Excelled in astronomy and mathematics
  • Could plot planetary cycles and predict eclipses
    of the sun and moon
  • Invented the concept of zero and used a symbol to
    represent zero mathematically, which facilitated
    the manipulation of large numbers
  • By combining astronomy and mathematics,
    calculated the length of the solar year at
    365.242 days about 17 seconds shorter than the
    figure reached by modern astronomers

Mayan numerical system
37
New Technologies Calendar
  • Mayan priests developed the most elaborate
    calendar of the ancient Americas
  • Interwove two kinds of year
  • A solar year of 365 days governed the
    agricultural cycle
  • A ritual year of 260 days governed daily affairs
    by organizing time into twenty months of
    thirteen days each
  • Believed each day derived certain characteristics
    from its position on both the solar and ritual
    calendars and carefully studied the combinations
  • Lucky and unlucky days

38
Art and Writing
Mayan writing
39
Writing
  • Expanded on Olmec tradition to create the most
    flexible and sophisticated of all early American
    systems of writing
  • Contained both ideographic elements and symbols
    for syllables
  • Used to write works of history, poetry, and myth
    and keep genealogical, administrative, and
    astronomical records

40
Mayan Decline
  • By about 800, most Mayan populations had begun to
    desert their cities
  • Full scale decline followed everywhere but in the
    northern Yucatan
  • Possible causes include foreign invasion,
    internal dissension and civil war, failure of the
    water control system leading to agricultural
    disaster, ecological problems caused by
    destruction of the forests, epidemic diseases,
    and natural disasters

41
Part 2 IncasTheme Centralization and the
triumph of the human spirit
  • Lsn 6

42
ID SIG
  • Cuzco, Inca roads, quipu, terrace farming

43
Inca
44
Inca
  • By the 13th Century, the Inca had established
    domination over the regional states in Andean
    South America
  • In 1438, Pachacuti launched a series of military
    campaigns that greatly expanded Inca authority
  • Success bred success and the Inca empire expanded
  • By the late 15th Century, the Inca empire covered
    more than 2,500 miles, embracing almost all of
    modern Peru, most of Ecuador, much of Bolivia,
    and parts of Chile and Argentina

45
Characteristics of a Civilization
  • Intensive agricultural techniques
  • Specialization of labor
  • Cities
  • A social hierarchy
  • Organized religion and education
  • Development of complex forms of economic exchange
  • Development of new technologies
  • Advanced development of the arts. (This can
    include writing.)

46
Agriculture
Llamas
47
Agriculture
  • Intensive agricultural techniques
  • Inca empire spanned many types of environments
    and required terraces to make farmland out of the
    mountainous terrain
  • Chief crop was the potato
  • Herded llamas and alpacas for meat, wool, hides,
    and dung (used as fuel)
  • every civilization represents a triumph of the
    human spirit.
  • Upshur, p. 14

48
Social Hierarchy
49
Social Hierarchy
  • In order to rule the massive territory and
    populations they had conquered, the Incas
    completely restructured much of Andean society
  • Relocated populations
  • Reordered the economy
  • Constructed an extensive transportation network
  • Inculcated a state religion

50
Social Hierarchy
  • Rulers
  • Aristocrats
  • Priests
  • Bureaucrats
  • Peasant cultivators of common birth

51
Social Hierarchy
  • Chief ruler was a god-king who theoretically
    owned everything and was an absolute and
    infallible ruler
  • Dead rulers retained their prestige even after
    death
  • Remains were mummified and state deliberations
    often took place in their presence in order to
    benefit from their counsel
  • Were seen as intermediaries with the gods

52
Social Hierarchy
  • Aristocrats lived privileged lives including fine
    foods, embroidered clothes, and large ears spools
  • Spanish called them big ears

Inca ear spools
53
Social Hierarchy
  • Priests often came from royal and aristocratic
    families
  • They lived celibate and ascetic lives
  • Influenced Inca society by education and
    religious rituals
  • Large class of bureaucrats to support centralized
    government
  • Bureaucrats administered over sections of the
    population based on numerical rather than
    geographic distribution
  • Bureaucrats often were drawn from the loyal ranks
    of conquered people

54
Social Hierarchy
  • Peasants worked lands allocated to them and
    delivered substantial portions of their
    production to the bureaucrats
  • Surplus supported the ruling, aristocratic, and
    priestly classes as well as providing public
    relief in times of famine or to widows
  • Also owed compulsory labor services to the Inca
    state
  • Men provided heavy labor
  • Women provided tribute in the forms of textiles,
    pottery, and jewelry

55
Cities
56
Cities Cuzco
  • Inca capital at Cuzco served as the
    administrative, religious, and ceremonial center
    of the empire
  • May have supported 300,000 residents at the
    height of the Inca empire in the late 15th
    Century
  • Tremendous system of roads emanated from Cuzco

57
New Technologies
Major Roads of the Inca Empire
58
New Technologies Roads
  • Built an all-weather highway system of over
    16,000 miles
  • Ran through deep valleys and over mountains,
    through piles of snow, quagmires, living rock,
    along turbulent rivers in some places it ran
    smooth and paved, carefully laid out in others
    over sierras, cut through the rock, with walls
    skirting the rivers, and steps and rests through
    the snow everywhere it was clean swept and kept
    free of rubbish, with lodgings, storehouses,
    temples to the sun, and posts along the way.
    (Ciezo de Leon)

59
New Technologies Roads
  • Allowed the Inca government to maintain
    centralized control by moving military forces
    around the empire quickly, transporting food
    supplies where needed, and tying the widespread
    territories together
  • Rest stations were built a days walk apart
  • Runners were positioned at convenient intervals
    to deliver government messages

60
Economic Exchange
Inca gold
61
Economic Exchange
  • Inca society did not produce large classes of
    merchants or skilled artisans
  • Locally they bartered among themselves for
    surplus agricultural production and handcrafted
    goods
  • Long distance trade was supervised by the central
    government using the excellent Inca roads

62
Economic Exchange
  • Gold, the Incas most valuable commodity, proved
    to be their undoing when Spanish conquistadors
    destroyed much of the empire in the early 1500s
    in search of gold
  • The Spanish melted down almost all the gold so
    few works of art remain

Arrival of Francisco Pizarro in South America
63
Specialization of Labor
Inca textile fragment
64
Specialization of Labor
  • Large class of bureaucrats to support centralized
    government
  • Much fewer skilled craftsmen than other people of
    Mexica and the eastern hemisphere
  • Some potters, textile workers, and tool makers
  • Inca designated different specialties for
    captured people to meet the societys needs

65
Religion and Education
Inti Raymi, the feast of the sun
66
Religion and Education
  • Main god was Inti, god of the sun
  • In the capital of Cuzco, some 4,000 priests,
    attendants, and virgin devotees served Inti
  • Sacrificed agricultural produce or animals rather
    than humans
  • Inca religion taught that sin was a violation of
    the established or natural order
  • Believed sin could bring divine disaster for
    individuals and communities
  • Had rituals for confession and penance
  • Believed in life after death where an individual
    received rewards or punishments based on the
    quality of his earthly life

67
Art and Writing
Quipu (khipu)
68
Art and Writing
  • The Inca had no writing
  • Instead they kept records using a quipu
  • A array of small cords of various colors and
    lengths, all suspended from a thick cord
  • By tying knots in the small cords, Inca could
    record statistical information

586 on a quipu
69
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