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Meso-Americans, Aztecs, Incas &
       Mayans, oh my!
The Beginning
• N & S America connected by a land bridge (Beringia)
• Cross at end of Ice age (40,000-10,000 bc), following
  animals (probably on foot, some in boats)
• Bridge disappears 12,0000-10000 bc due to melting
  glaciers and rising waters
• 7000 BC. Begin farming, raise plants in Central
  Mexico
• 5000 BC raise maize, squash, gourds, chilies, beans,
  avocados
• Create more advanced farming methods
• Experience pop growth, permanent settlements,
  specialized skills in arts & crafts
Meso-America
Meso-American Geography
• From C
  Mexico, Belize, Guatemala, El
  Salvador, Honduras, Nicaragua &
  Costa Rica.
• Hot humid w/ swamps & jungles.
• Giant trees form
 canopies, little
 sunlight on floor,
 100 inches of rain
 per yr w/ severe
 flooding
• Salt & tar deposits, clay for
  pottery, wood & rubber from
  rainforest
• Hills provide stone, rivers for
  transport, flooding for
  farming
Olmecs
• Olmecs emerge around 1200 BC
  along Gulf coast of Mexico
• San Lorenzo, built 1150 BC, oldest
  site. It has earthen mounds,
  courtyards & pyramids, w/ giant
  stone heads weighing up to 44 tons!
• La Venta-900 BC: 100 ft high
  mound of earth, mud & clay.
• Religious center? Worship jaguar
  spirits (rain, fertility, & earth)
• Create a large trade network (N to
  Mexico City, S
 to Honduras).
• SL collapses
 900 BC & LV
  in 400 BC
Zapotecs!
Zapotecs
• SW Mexico: Rugged mtns, in area
  where 3 valleys meet to form
  Oaxaca Valley.
• Fertile soil, lots of rainfall, mild
  climate
• villages scattered
  thru valley
• 1000 BC: San Jose Mogote dev as
  power center. Platforms, temples &
  huge sculptures individual homes had
  hearths & stone mortars, used
  pottery, food stored in pits
  outside home, w/ burials nearby,
  trade w/ Olmecs
• 500 BC. Build Monte Alba, 1st
  urban center in Americas
  (25,000 people)
• Giant plaza paved w/
   stones, stone pyramids,
   temples & palaces
• Observatory, had a
 calendar & writing systems
• Disappear 700 AD?
• Olmec contributions: art
  styles, jaguar motif, ritual
  ball games, & ruling class
• Zapotecs:
 hieroglyph
 writing system,
 calendar based
 sun, urban
centers
Nazca
• Andes Mtns stretch for 4500
  miles, 20,000 feet. Steep & rocky.
  Hot, dry days, & cold nights
• Narrow coastal plain runs btw Andes
  & Pacific.
• Atacama Desert has little rain, a
  few rivers
• 3600-2500 BC: villages est
• 200-600 AD settle on coast of
  Peru.
• Develop irrigation
  systems,
  underground canals
• Beautiful pottery
Nazca Lines
• 1000 drawings of plants,
  animals humans, etched
  on plains
• Only seen from air. Why?
     *Drawn for sky or mtn gods?
     *Map out underground water
      sources?
• (survive due to 20 minutes of rain per year!)
• Don’t write!
• The Pampa is covered w/ a layer of dark colored stones that have
  been baked into a lighter colored and relatively soft sediment. To
  make their lines and drawings, the Nazcans simply cleared away
  the darker top layer to reveal the lighter sediment leaving the
  cleared stones along the edges of the lines which helped to
  increase their contrast.
• Wooden stakes have been found marking out the lines and these
  suggest that the Nazcans drew their long and very straight lines
  using the following simple method: two stakes are placed a long
  way apart with a rope stretched taut between them along which
  the first part of the line is drawn. A third stake is then placed a
  similar distance away from the second so that it is visually in line
  with the the first two. The rope is then stretched between these
  two stakes and the line is continued along it. This can then be
  repeated for as long as the line needs to be.
Moche
1.100-700 AD on N coast of Peru
2. Used rivers to build irrigation
 systems to plant many crops: corn,
 beans, potatoes, squash, peanuts
3. Lots of gold
4.Great ceramic artists,
 showing daily life, soldiers,
 instruments, weaving
5. What happened to them?
Mayas
• S. Mexico to N. Cen America
• Lowlands: dry scrub forest on
  Yucatan Peninsula, dense jungle
  in S.E Mexico &
   N. Guatamala.
• Highlands: Cool,
 cloud covered
 mtns, from S Mexico
 to El Salvador
MAYANS! Don’t write!
• 250 AD, influenced by Olmecs
• 250 AD-900AD aka Classical period
• Built Tikal, Copan, Palenque, Tulum
  & Chichen Itza
• All independent city states ruled by
  god king. Centers for religion &
  trade
• Each city had giant pyramids,
  temples, palaces, stone carvings, &
  ball courts (playing game kept up
  sun/moon & rain
  cycles)
• 1000s live around
   city center
Don’t write!      The game was a combo of volleyball, basketball, &
 soccer. The ball was not allowed to touch the ground & bounced
 off the walls of the court and the players themselves. The ball was
 allowed to bounce off the player's elbows, hips, knees, or
 head, but using their hands was an illegal move. the goal in which
 you scored your points was very small. Points were scored by
 directing the ball through a stone circle hoop. It is also believed
 you scored points by hitting particular posts & markers situated
 along the ball court. Players came dressed in elaborate costumes
 & the ball was made of heavy rubber (about 9 lbs)
Agriculture & trade
• City-States linked thru trade
• Exchange
  salt, flint,feathers,shells, honey, cr
  aft goods (cotton textiles, jade
  ornaments)
• Cacao used as money
• Raised maize, beans, squash
  (use slash & burn farming, hills
  side terraces & raised beds
  above swamps)
Mayan Social Hierarchy
            King

Nobles : (priests warriors)

Merchants, skilled artisans

          peasants
Mayan Religion
• Polytheistic: worship corn, death,
  rain, & war gods, some evil or
  good or both (up to 160!)
• Gods associated w/ 4 directions &
  colors :
         White- n        Blue- w
         Yellow-s       Red- e
               Green center
Mayan Gods & Goddesses
• Chac      Kukulcan     Ix Chel
• Pray, offer food, flowers,pierce
  skin, cut bodies to offer blood
• Human sacrifice of prisoners
  into cenotes (deep water filled
  pit)
The Mayan Calendar (Don’t write!)
• Each day was a living god. Time was a burden carried on
   back of the god. At end of each day, month or year,
   another god picked it up
• The day was lucky or unlucky based on nature of god. A
   calendar was needed to track days to predict it.
• One calendar had a 260 day yr, 13
  20 month days
• Another had 365 day yr, w/ 18 20
   month days & they meshed together
   like cogs
• Developed based on observation of
  sun, planets, & moon
http://www.livescience.com/16606-failed-
doomsday-predictions-apocalypse.html
Mayan Mathematics!!!
*Concept of 0, base system of 20 (see shell dots)
• 365 day calendar
Language
• Most advanced in Americas
• 800 glyphs- symbols, words &
  syllables, carved in stone or in
  CODEX, (bark paper books) (3 left)
• Popul Voh- story of creation. They
  also recorded
 history & events.
• Don’t write!!!
• 800s: abandon cities, Toltec's take
  over, destroy.
• Warfare btw
  city-states
• Damage to
  environment
  from S & B
  farming may
  have hurt the
  empire
TOLTECS AND MORE!
• Valley of Mexico- mtn basin 7500 feet
  above sea level, w/ large shallow lakes
  at center. Fertile soil, lots of resources
• Teotihuacan- founded 100 AD by? –
  Had 150,000 - 200,000 people
• Multi-ethnic city w/ a central
  ave, w/ 20 pyramids for gods, 200
  ft tall Pyramid of the Sun
• Center of trade
  network w/
  (trade obsidian)
• Art & religion
  influence areas
• no conquering.
• Falls 750 AD
  due to:
  Invasion?
  Drought?
  Conflict?
TOLTECS
• 900 AD: Toltecs founded Tula. Built
  pyramids & temples.
• Very warlike, worship
  war gods, give blood
  sacrifice, conquest
• Topiltzin tries to change religion
  & get rid of sacrifice.
• Ask people to worship
  Quetzalcoatl, (feathered
  serpent) but people rebel.
• He & followers forced out to
  Yucatan peninsula (influence the
  Mayas)
• Decline & gone by 1200
• DON’T WRITE!!! Topiltzin & Quetzalcoatl
  become legend. After their exile, they traveled
  east on raft of snakes, crossing the sea, to one
  day return, bringing peace. (Light skinned w/
  beard, will cause a problem later) Quetz was tied to
  the year Ce Acatl (One Reed), which correlates to the
  year 1519, an important date!!!!)
AZTECS
Aztecs
• 1200 AD: poor nomads from
  deserts of N Mexico wander & work
  as soldiers for hire from surviving
  Toltec cities
• Huitzilopochtli, god of war, sacrifice &
  sun tells Aztecs to found a city (look for eagle
  on a cactus on a lake with a snake in its mouth)

• Find Lake Texacoco & build Tenochtitlan
• 1428: Tecoco & Tlacoan form
  alliance & gain control of neighbors.
  Eventually covers 80,000 sq miles.
  Divide into 38 provinces w/ pop of
  5-15 mil.
• Power based on
 tribute
 thru conquest
• Local rulers & religion left in. Pay
  gold, maize, cacao, jade to Aztecs
  who kill those who don’t pay
SOCIETY
Tenochtitlan
• Island site. 3 raised roads over water
  to travel to mainland
• Small cities ring island
• Streets connect to city center
• Canals cross underneath
• Massive walled complex,
   w/ 45 public buildings)
  temples, ball courts,
   govt buildings)
• Palace of 100 rooms
• DON’T WRITE!!!! city divided into 4 zones or
  campan, each campan was divided into 20
  districts (calpullis,) & each calpulli was crossed by
  streets or tlaxilcalli.
• 3 main streets crossed the city, each leading to
  one of the three causeways to the mainland;
  (wide enough for 10 horses).
• calpullis were divided by channels used for
  transportation, w/ wood bridges were removed
  at night.
• Main market place (20,000 traders)
• 45 public buildings (schools, temples, govt
  buildings, rack of skulls, platforms for sacrifice!)
• Grow avocados, beans, chilies, corn,
  squash, tomatoes, many grown on
  chinampas
• barter items & foodstuffs: gold, silver,
  & other precious
  stones, cloth &
  cotton, animal
  skins, wild game
  & woodwork
Religion
• 1000s of gods, adopted
from others (Quetzacoatl)
• Elaborate public ceremonies w/
  offerings. Rituals,dramas, songs,
  dances, masked performances
• Huitzilopochtli makes sun rise &
  set. Battles evil nightly & needs
  human blood for strength or sun
  would not rise, all life perish
• 1000s sacrificed each year. Heart
  carved out, most POWs. Often
 purpose of conquest was to get
 victims
*The victim was taken to the top of the
 temple & laid on a stone slab by 4 priests.
 His abdomen was sliced open by a 5th priest
 w/ a ceremonial knife made of flint. This
 cut went through the diaphragm. Then,
 the priest would grab the heart out of the
 victim while it was still beating. The heart
  was placed in a bowl held by a statue of
  the honored god while the body was
 thrown on the temple’s stairs & the head
would be placed on display. The rest was fed
to the zoo
• God of the night sky. Knows all the deeds &
                           thoughts of men, challenge warriors.
                           Protector of slaves. Reward good doers with
                           wealth & fame, punish bad people with
                           sickness . Each year in the 5th month, one
                           prisoner was chosen to live in luxury &
                           pretend to be Tecat. 4 beautiful girls dressed
                           as goddesses live with him. On feast day, he
                           was sacrificed!




He told the Aztecs
where to build their
city. He was the Sun
god who they fed with
human sacrifice.
He was the god of war.
Sacrifice
• According to the Aubian Codex, the Aztecs originally came from a
  place called Aztlan. They lived under the ruling of a powerful elite
  called the "Azteca Chicomoztoca". Huitzilopochtli ordered them to
  abandon Aztlan and find a new home. He also ordered them never
  to call themselves Aztec; instead they should be called "Mexica."
  Huitzilopochtli guided them through the journey. For a time,
  Huitzilopochtli left them in the charge of his sister, Malinaloxctili,,
  but the Aztecs resented her ruling and called back Huitzilopochtli.
  He put his sister to sleep and ordered the Aztecs to leave the
  place. When she woke up and realized she was alone, she became
  angry and desired revenge. She gave birth to a son called Copil. .
  When he grew up, he confronted Huitzilopochtli, who had to kill
  him. Huitzilopochtli then took his heart and threw it in the middle
  of Lake Texcoco. Many years later, Huitzilopochtli ordered the
  Aztecs to search for Copil's heart and build their city over it. The
  sign would be an eagle perched on a cactus, eating a precious
  serpent. The Aztecs finally found the eagle, who bowed to them,
  and they built a temple in the place, which became Tenochtitlan
• 1502: Montezuma II weakens
  empire. More sacrifice tribute
  needed, so areas rebel. He makes
  concessions, but doesn’t work
• Aztecs see omens every where.
•
• Hernan Cortes lands in Mexico, a Sp
  conquistadors search for gold, god &
  glory
• Looking for land to claim more
  colonies.
• Hears about
 Aztec wealth,
 marches
 into mtns
• Makes friends w/ Aztec enemies
  along way
• 600 men reach
 Tenochtitlan.
 Montezuma
 thought he was
 a god, gave him
 share of Aztec
 gold, wants more.
• 1520: Cortez’ men kill warriors &
  chiefs at a religions celebration.
  Rebel & drive sp out.
• 1521: comes back, defeats Aztecs.
  Why did he win?
  1. superior weapons: musket cannon
  2. Help from native groups who
      hate Aztecs
  3. Disease: mumps, small pox,
      typhus no immunity
Inca
  s
• High plateaus of Andes. Wander &
  settle in Valley of Cuzco. Est 1200
  AD
Don’t write!!!!
• Belief in ruler descended from Sun
  God Inti (who brings in prosperity
  and greatness)
• Leader must be 1 of 11 noble
  lineages from sun god
*The Incas were known as the
  "Children of the Sun".
• 1438: Pachacati conquered all of
  Peru. Eventually empire stretches
  2500 miles along w coast (land of
  4 quarters)
• 80 provinces, of nearly 16 mil
  people
• powerful military used only when
  needed. Diplomats offered chance
  to surrender, but keep own
  customs & rulers in
  exchange for loyalty.
  Even if fight, still
  try to get loyalty
Strong Central Government
           SAPA INCA
      Supreme Council (4 men)
        Provincial Governors
             Officials
(army officers, priests, judges,& others
from the noble class. Special privileges)
             Tax collectors.
      (1 tax collector for every ayllu)
            Workers:
       ( family units called ayllus)
Don’t Write
• Tax requirements were high. Women
  were expected to weave a certain amount of
  cloth, while men had to mine or serve in the
  army. Taxes were expected to be paid by
  commoners. If the commoners didn't have
  money, they'd pay with service on state projects
  or make items to sell such as thread or hand-
           woven cloaks. People could also pay the
           government by giving a portion of their
                 yearly crop to the collectors for
                 storehouses instead.
How they controlled an empire
1.Central bureaucracy ( w/ people
 divided into units, all powerful Inca,
 strict laws, basic needs satisfied)
2.Single language : QUECHUA
3Communication (roads & runners)
4.Schools teach Incan ways
5.Service Tax (huge free labor
 force)
6.Govt regulates trade
7.Technology (terrace
 farming, surplus crops, irrigation
 systems
8.Clothing has specific
 colors, patterns for social classes
9.Built cities in conquered areas
10.All govt buildings have same
 architecture thru empire
11.All roads lead to Cuzco
12. Specialized Professions
 (engineers, metal workers, stone
12.Local admin left in hands of local
  ruler & keep traditional ways.
13. tribute in form of labor (mita)
14.All citizens work for state so
  many days a year (on farms, public
  works, make crafts for storage)
15. Like socialism; work for
 state, provided for by state
• AYLLU: extended family group.
  Takes on large tasks, build canals,
  cut terraces, store food
Records:
• No writing system, memorize
  stories & history
• QUIPUS- knotted strings whose
  color & position kept accounting
  records (red: warriors, yellow: gold)
Religion
• Worship nature spirits
 ( sun god, the god of thunder,
  Moon, rainbows, mountain tops,
  stars, planets, etc)
• Mamakuna- virgins of the sun-
  help lead sun worship ceremonies,
  unmarried lifelong service, weave,
  teach, make beer
• Yamacuna: male workers, full time
• Don’t Write! Worshiped gods of nature - the sun god,
  the god of thunder, Moon, rainbows, mountain tops,
  stars, planets, etc.
• believed the gods could intervene to help you or hinder
  you.
• believed that the gods & ancestors could communicate
  through dreams, omens & signs, which priests
  interpret.
• Believe in afterlife & mummify dead. Mummies
  of dead rulers remained in their palaces & were
  treated as if they were still alive. were carried
  through the streets.
• Major religious festivals monthly
Cuzco
• Cuzco: the “Navel of the world”
  built w/ no wheel or iron tools.
  Engineers & stone masons used no
  mortar. Religious center
• Temple of the Sun in Cuzco most
  sacred. Decorated
  in gold, (even garden w/
 gold animals (sweat of the
 sun) Walls thin gold
 sheeting)
•             Don’t Write!!!!
• 1520s: Hayan Copec tours Ecuador,
  opens box, moths & butterflies come
  out. Bad omen. He dies later
• Empire split btw sons, Atahualpa
  (Ecuador) & Huascar (rest). Ata kills
  Huascar
• Don’t Write!!!!! Quizquiz (Atahualpa's commander)
  led 100,000 men vs 60,000 of Huáscar’s. Very
  brutal war! Atahualpa's punishment? Rip out the
  hearts of the chiefs & force their followers to eat
  them, as well as killing babies in the wombs of
  pregnant women. It was partly due to the civil
  war that Pizarro won. First, the Incan armies were
  depleted from the civil war. Secondly, the Incas
  were not united as different groups supported
  different brothers. Plus, Atahualpa had Huáscar
  killed so that he was not in a position to offer
  Pizarro a larger ransom of gold than Atahualpa
  was offering for his own release.
• 1532: Francisco Pizarro, SP
  conquistador leads 200 men into
  Andes. Met Atahualpa (who has
  30,000 unarmed men). Ambush &
  crush,& kill Incas.
•
• Kidnap Atahualpa who offers room
  filled w/ gold, twice over with
  silver.
• Pizarro takes it,
  strangles Atahualpa
• Sp conquer rest of
  empire
Achievements of the Incas
•   Terrace Farming
•   Freeze Dried Foods
•   Use of Gold and Silver
•   Marvelous Stonework
•   Textiles
•   Aqueducts
•   Hanging Bridges
•   Panpipes
•   Systems of
    Measurement (calendar, quipus)
Machu Picchu
Don’t Write
•    Found in 1911.
•     Palace? City? Home for Pachacati?
•    Built around 1450 AD.
•    Still a mystery
    of it’s purpose
• http://educatoral.com/aztec_maya_inca_web
  q/webquestindex.html

• http://questgarden.com/69/60/9/080829054
  640/process.htm

• http://www.cumbavac.org/Aztecs_Incas_May
  a.htm
• http://www.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http:/
  /home.freeuk.net/elloughton13/images/azxip
  e.jpg&imgrefurl=http://home.freeuk.net/ellou
  ghton13/aztecgod.htm&h=259&w=219&sz=12
  &tbnid=ssF1gPw-
  XvJkjM:&tbnh=112&tbnw=95&prev=/search%
  3Fq%3Daztec%2Bgods%26tbm%3Disch%26tb
  o%3Du&zoom=1&q=aztec+gods&usg=__kPKK
  tfR7pX4MLsTN39iA52pU_u0=&hl=en&sa=X&e
  i=PIe-
  T9jKIumM6QHuyO1K&ved=0CBoQ9QEwBA

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Meso-American Civilizations: Aztecs, Mayans & More

  • 1. Meso-Americans, Aztecs, Incas & Mayans, oh my!
  • 2. The Beginning • N & S America connected by a land bridge (Beringia) • Cross at end of Ice age (40,000-10,000 bc), following animals (probably on foot, some in boats) • Bridge disappears 12,0000-10000 bc due to melting glaciers and rising waters • 7000 BC. Begin farming, raise plants in Central Mexico • 5000 BC raise maize, squash, gourds, chilies, beans, avocados • Create more advanced farming methods • Experience pop growth, permanent settlements, specialized skills in arts & crafts
  • 4. Meso-American Geography • From C Mexico, Belize, Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras, Nicaragua & Costa Rica. • Hot humid w/ swamps & jungles. • Giant trees form canopies, little sunlight on floor, 100 inches of rain per yr w/ severe flooding
  • 5. • Salt & tar deposits, clay for pottery, wood & rubber from rainforest • Hills provide stone, rivers for transport, flooding for farming
  • 6.
  • 7. Olmecs • Olmecs emerge around 1200 BC along Gulf coast of Mexico • San Lorenzo, built 1150 BC, oldest site. It has earthen mounds, courtyards & pyramids, w/ giant stone heads weighing up to 44 tons!
  • 8.
  • 9.
  • 10. • La Venta-900 BC: 100 ft high mound of earth, mud & clay. • Religious center? Worship jaguar spirits (rain, fertility, & earth) • Create a large trade network (N to Mexico City, S to Honduras). • SL collapses 900 BC & LV in 400 BC
  • 11.
  • 12.
  • 14. Zapotecs • SW Mexico: Rugged mtns, in area where 3 valleys meet to form Oaxaca Valley. • Fertile soil, lots of rainfall, mild climate • villages scattered thru valley
  • 15. • 1000 BC: San Jose Mogote dev as power center. Platforms, temples & huge sculptures individual homes had hearths & stone mortars, used pottery, food stored in pits outside home, w/ burials nearby, trade w/ Olmecs
  • 16. • 500 BC. Build Monte Alba, 1st urban center in Americas (25,000 people) • Giant plaza paved w/ stones, stone pyramids, temples & palaces • Observatory, had a calendar & writing systems • Disappear 700 AD?
  • 17.
  • 18.
  • 19. • Olmec contributions: art styles, jaguar motif, ritual ball games, & ruling class • Zapotecs: hieroglyph writing system, calendar based sun, urban centers
  • 20. Nazca • Andes Mtns stretch for 4500 miles, 20,000 feet. Steep & rocky. Hot, dry days, & cold nights • Narrow coastal plain runs btw Andes & Pacific. • Atacama Desert has little rain, a few rivers
  • 21.
  • 22. • 3600-2500 BC: villages est • 200-600 AD settle on coast of Peru. • Develop irrigation systems, underground canals • Beautiful pottery
  • 23. Nazca Lines • 1000 drawings of plants, animals humans, etched on plains • Only seen from air. Why? *Drawn for sky or mtn gods? *Map out underground water sources? • (survive due to 20 minutes of rain per year!)
  • 24.
  • 25.
  • 26.
  • 27. • Don’t write! • The Pampa is covered w/ a layer of dark colored stones that have been baked into a lighter colored and relatively soft sediment. To make their lines and drawings, the Nazcans simply cleared away the darker top layer to reveal the lighter sediment leaving the cleared stones along the edges of the lines which helped to increase their contrast. • Wooden stakes have been found marking out the lines and these suggest that the Nazcans drew their long and very straight lines using the following simple method: two stakes are placed a long way apart with a rope stretched taut between them along which the first part of the line is drawn. A third stake is then placed a similar distance away from the second so that it is visually in line with the the first two. The rope is then stretched between these two stakes and the line is continued along it. This can then be repeated for as long as the line needs to be.
  • 28.
  • 29. Moche 1.100-700 AD on N coast of Peru 2. Used rivers to build irrigation systems to plant many crops: corn, beans, potatoes, squash, peanuts 3. Lots of gold
  • 30. 4.Great ceramic artists, showing daily life, soldiers, instruments, weaving 5. What happened to them?
  • 31.
  • 32.
  • 33. Mayas
  • 34. • S. Mexico to N. Cen America • Lowlands: dry scrub forest on Yucatan Peninsula, dense jungle in S.E Mexico & N. Guatamala. • Highlands: Cool, cloud covered mtns, from S Mexico to El Salvador
  • 35.
  • 36. MAYANS! Don’t write! • 250 AD, influenced by Olmecs • 250 AD-900AD aka Classical period • Built Tikal, Copan, Palenque, Tulum & Chichen Itza
  • 37.
  • 38. • All independent city states ruled by god king. Centers for religion & trade • Each city had giant pyramids, temples, palaces, stone carvings, & ball courts (playing game kept up sun/moon & rain cycles) • 1000s live around city center
  • 39.
  • 40. Don’t write! The game was a combo of volleyball, basketball, & soccer. The ball was not allowed to touch the ground & bounced off the walls of the court and the players themselves. The ball was allowed to bounce off the player's elbows, hips, knees, or head, but using their hands was an illegal move. the goal in which you scored your points was very small. Points were scored by directing the ball through a stone circle hoop. It is also believed you scored points by hitting particular posts & markers situated along the ball court. Players came dressed in elaborate costumes & the ball was made of heavy rubber (about 9 lbs)
  • 41.
  • 42.
  • 43. Agriculture & trade • City-States linked thru trade • Exchange salt, flint,feathers,shells, honey, cr aft goods (cotton textiles, jade ornaments) • Cacao used as money
  • 44. • Raised maize, beans, squash (use slash & burn farming, hills side terraces & raised beds above swamps)
  • 45. Mayan Social Hierarchy King Nobles : (priests warriors) Merchants, skilled artisans peasants
  • 46.
  • 47. Mayan Religion • Polytheistic: worship corn, death, rain, & war gods, some evil or good or both (up to 160!) • Gods associated w/ 4 directions & colors : White- n Blue- w Yellow-s Red- e Green center
  • 48. Mayan Gods & Goddesses • Chac Kukulcan Ix Chel
  • 49. • Pray, offer food, flowers,pierce skin, cut bodies to offer blood • Human sacrifice of prisoners into cenotes (deep water filled pit)
  • 50.
  • 51. The Mayan Calendar (Don’t write!) • Each day was a living god. Time was a burden carried on back of the god. At end of each day, month or year, another god picked it up • The day was lucky or unlucky based on nature of god. A calendar was needed to track days to predict it. • One calendar had a 260 day yr, 13 20 month days • Another had 365 day yr, w/ 18 20 month days & they meshed together like cogs • Developed based on observation of sun, planets, & moon
  • 52.
  • 53.
  • 54.
  • 56. Mayan Mathematics!!! *Concept of 0, base system of 20 (see shell dots) • 365 day calendar
  • 57. Language • Most advanced in Americas • 800 glyphs- symbols, words & syllables, carved in stone or in CODEX, (bark paper books) (3 left) • Popul Voh- story of creation. They also recorded history & events.
  • 58. • Don’t write!!! • 800s: abandon cities, Toltec's take over, destroy. • Warfare btw city-states • Damage to environment from S & B farming may have hurt the empire
  • 59.
  • 61. • Valley of Mexico- mtn basin 7500 feet above sea level, w/ large shallow lakes at center. Fertile soil, lots of resources
  • 62. • Teotihuacan- founded 100 AD by? – Had 150,000 - 200,000 people • Multi-ethnic city w/ a central ave, w/ 20 pyramids for gods, 200 ft tall Pyramid of the Sun
  • 63. • Center of trade network w/ (trade obsidian) • Art & religion influence areas • no conquering. • Falls 750 AD due to: Invasion? Drought? Conflict?
  • 64. TOLTECS • 900 AD: Toltecs founded Tula. Built pyramids & temples. • Very warlike, worship war gods, give blood sacrifice, conquest
  • 65.
  • 66. • Topiltzin tries to change religion & get rid of sacrifice. • Ask people to worship Quetzalcoatl, (feathered serpent) but people rebel. • He & followers forced out to Yucatan peninsula (influence the Mayas) • Decline & gone by 1200
  • 67. • DON’T WRITE!!! Topiltzin & Quetzalcoatl become legend. After their exile, they traveled east on raft of snakes, crossing the sea, to one day return, bringing peace. (Light skinned w/ beard, will cause a problem later) Quetz was tied to the year Ce Acatl (One Reed), which correlates to the year 1519, an important date!!!!)
  • 69. Aztecs • 1200 AD: poor nomads from deserts of N Mexico wander & work as soldiers for hire from surviving Toltec cities
  • 70. • Huitzilopochtli, god of war, sacrifice & sun tells Aztecs to found a city (look for eagle on a cactus on a lake with a snake in its mouth) • Find Lake Texacoco & build Tenochtitlan
  • 71. • 1428: Tecoco & Tlacoan form alliance & gain control of neighbors. Eventually covers 80,000 sq miles. Divide into 38 provinces w/ pop of 5-15 mil. • Power based on tribute thru conquest • Local rulers & religion left in. Pay gold, maize, cacao, jade to Aztecs who kill those who don’t pay
  • 73.
  • 74. Tenochtitlan • Island site. 3 raised roads over water to travel to mainland • Small cities ring island • Streets connect to city center • Canals cross underneath • Massive walled complex, w/ 45 public buildings) temples, ball courts, govt buildings) • Palace of 100 rooms
  • 75. • DON’T WRITE!!!! city divided into 4 zones or campan, each campan was divided into 20 districts (calpullis,) & each calpulli was crossed by streets or tlaxilcalli. • 3 main streets crossed the city, each leading to one of the three causeways to the mainland; (wide enough for 10 horses). • calpullis were divided by channels used for transportation, w/ wood bridges were removed at night. • Main market place (20,000 traders) • 45 public buildings (schools, temples, govt buildings, rack of skulls, platforms for sacrifice!)
  • 76.
  • 77.
  • 78.
  • 79. • Grow avocados, beans, chilies, corn, squash, tomatoes, many grown on chinampas • barter items & foodstuffs: gold, silver, & other precious stones, cloth & cotton, animal skins, wild game & woodwork
  • 80. Religion • 1000s of gods, adopted from others (Quetzacoatl) • Elaborate public ceremonies w/ offerings. Rituals,dramas, songs, dances, masked performances • Huitzilopochtli makes sun rise & set. Battles evil nightly & needs human blood for strength or sun would not rise, all life perish
  • 81. • 1000s sacrificed each year. Heart carved out, most POWs. Often purpose of conquest was to get victims *The victim was taken to the top of the temple & laid on a stone slab by 4 priests. His abdomen was sliced open by a 5th priest w/ a ceremonial knife made of flint. This cut went through the diaphragm. Then, the priest would grab the heart out of the victim while it was still beating. The heart was placed in a bowl held by a statue of the honored god while the body was thrown on the temple’s stairs & the head would be placed on display. The rest was fed to the zoo
  • 82.
  • 83. • God of the night sky. Knows all the deeds & thoughts of men, challenge warriors. Protector of slaves. Reward good doers with wealth & fame, punish bad people with sickness . Each year in the 5th month, one prisoner was chosen to live in luxury & pretend to be Tecat. 4 beautiful girls dressed as goddesses live with him. On feast day, he was sacrificed! He told the Aztecs where to build their city. He was the Sun god who they fed with human sacrifice. He was the god of war. Sacrifice
  • 84. • According to the Aubian Codex, the Aztecs originally came from a place called Aztlan. They lived under the ruling of a powerful elite called the "Azteca Chicomoztoca". Huitzilopochtli ordered them to abandon Aztlan and find a new home. He also ordered them never to call themselves Aztec; instead they should be called "Mexica." Huitzilopochtli guided them through the journey. For a time, Huitzilopochtli left them in the charge of his sister, Malinaloxctili,, but the Aztecs resented her ruling and called back Huitzilopochtli. He put his sister to sleep and ordered the Aztecs to leave the place. When she woke up and realized she was alone, she became angry and desired revenge. She gave birth to a son called Copil. . When he grew up, he confronted Huitzilopochtli, who had to kill him. Huitzilopochtli then took his heart and threw it in the middle of Lake Texcoco. Many years later, Huitzilopochtli ordered the Aztecs to search for Copil's heart and build their city over it. The sign would be an eagle perched on a cactus, eating a precious serpent. The Aztecs finally found the eagle, who bowed to them, and they built a temple in the place, which became Tenochtitlan
  • 85. • 1502: Montezuma II weakens empire. More sacrifice tribute needed, so areas rebel. He makes concessions, but doesn’t work • Aztecs see omens every where. •
  • 86. • Hernan Cortes lands in Mexico, a Sp conquistadors search for gold, god & glory • Looking for land to claim more colonies. • Hears about Aztec wealth, marches into mtns
  • 87. • Makes friends w/ Aztec enemies along way • 600 men reach Tenochtitlan. Montezuma thought he was a god, gave him share of Aztec gold, wants more.
  • 88. • 1520: Cortez’ men kill warriors & chiefs at a religions celebration. Rebel & drive sp out. • 1521: comes back, defeats Aztecs. Why did he win? 1. superior weapons: musket cannon 2. Help from native groups who hate Aztecs 3. Disease: mumps, small pox, typhus no immunity
  • 89.
  • 91. • High plateaus of Andes. Wander & settle in Valley of Cuzco. Est 1200 AD
  • 92. Don’t write!!!! • Belief in ruler descended from Sun God Inti (who brings in prosperity and greatness) • Leader must be 1 of 11 noble lineages from sun god *The Incas were known as the "Children of the Sun".
  • 93. • 1438: Pachacati conquered all of Peru. Eventually empire stretches 2500 miles along w coast (land of 4 quarters)
  • 94. • 80 provinces, of nearly 16 mil people • powerful military used only when needed. Diplomats offered chance to surrender, but keep own customs & rulers in exchange for loyalty. Even if fight, still try to get loyalty
  • 95. Strong Central Government SAPA INCA Supreme Council (4 men) Provincial Governors Officials (army officers, priests, judges,& others from the noble class. Special privileges) Tax collectors. (1 tax collector for every ayllu) Workers: ( family units called ayllus)
  • 96. Don’t Write • Tax requirements were high. Women were expected to weave a certain amount of cloth, while men had to mine or serve in the army. Taxes were expected to be paid by commoners. If the commoners didn't have money, they'd pay with service on state projects or make items to sell such as thread or hand- woven cloaks. People could also pay the government by giving a portion of their yearly crop to the collectors for storehouses instead.
  • 97. How they controlled an empire 1.Central bureaucracy ( w/ people divided into units, all powerful Inca, strict laws, basic needs satisfied) 2.Single language : QUECHUA 3Communication (roads & runners) 4.Schools teach Incan ways 5.Service Tax (huge free labor force) 6.Govt regulates trade
  • 98. 7.Technology (terrace farming, surplus crops, irrigation systems 8.Clothing has specific colors, patterns for social classes 9.Built cities in conquered areas 10.All govt buildings have same architecture thru empire 11.All roads lead to Cuzco 12. Specialized Professions (engineers, metal workers, stone
  • 99. 12.Local admin left in hands of local ruler & keep traditional ways. 13. tribute in form of labor (mita) 14.All citizens work for state so many days a year (on farms, public works, make crafts for storage) 15. Like socialism; work for state, provided for by state • AYLLU: extended family group. Takes on large tasks, build canals, cut terraces, store food
  • 100. Records: • No writing system, memorize stories & history • QUIPUS- knotted strings whose color & position kept accounting records (red: warriors, yellow: gold)
  • 101. Religion • Worship nature spirits ( sun god, the god of thunder, Moon, rainbows, mountain tops, stars, planets, etc) • Mamakuna- virgins of the sun- help lead sun worship ceremonies, unmarried lifelong service, weave, teach, make beer • Yamacuna: male workers, full time
  • 102. • Don’t Write! Worshiped gods of nature - the sun god, the god of thunder, Moon, rainbows, mountain tops, stars, planets, etc. • believed the gods could intervene to help you or hinder you. • believed that the gods & ancestors could communicate through dreams, omens & signs, which priests interpret. • Believe in afterlife & mummify dead. Mummies of dead rulers remained in their palaces & were treated as if they were still alive. were carried through the streets. • Major religious festivals monthly
  • 103.
  • 104. Cuzco • Cuzco: the “Navel of the world” built w/ no wheel or iron tools. Engineers & stone masons used no mortar. Religious center • Temple of the Sun in Cuzco most sacred. Decorated in gold, (even garden w/ gold animals (sweat of the sun) Walls thin gold sheeting)
  • 105.
  • 106. Don’t Write!!!! • 1520s: Hayan Copec tours Ecuador, opens box, moths & butterflies come out. Bad omen. He dies later • Empire split btw sons, Atahualpa (Ecuador) & Huascar (rest). Ata kills Huascar
  • 107. • Don’t Write!!!!! Quizquiz (Atahualpa's commander) led 100,000 men vs 60,000 of Huáscar’s. Very brutal war! Atahualpa's punishment? Rip out the hearts of the chiefs & force their followers to eat them, as well as killing babies in the wombs of pregnant women. It was partly due to the civil war that Pizarro won. First, the Incan armies were depleted from the civil war. Secondly, the Incas were not united as different groups supported different brothers. Plus, Atahualpa had Huáscar killed so that he was not in a position to offer Pizarro a larger ransom of gold than Atahualpa was offering for his own release.
  • 108. • 1532: Francisco Pizarro, SP conquistador leads 200 men into Andes. Met Atahualpa (who has 30,000 unarmed men). Ambush & crush,& kill Incas. •
  • 109. • Kidnap Atahualpa who offers room filled w/ gold, twice over with silver. • Pizarro takes it, strangles Atahualpa • Sp conquer rest of empire
  • 110. Achievements of the Incas • Terrace Farming • Freeze Dried Foods • Use of Gold and Silver • Marvelous Stonework • Textiles • Aqueducts • Hanging Bridges • Panpipes • Systems of Measurement (calendar, quipus)
  • 112.
  • 113.
  • 114.
  • 115. Don’t Write • Found in 1911. • Palace? City? Home for Pachacati? • Built around 1450 AD. • Still a mystery of it’s purpose
  • 116. • http://educatoral.com/aztec_maya_inca_web q/webquestindex.html • http://questgarden.com/69/60/9/080829054 640/process.htm • http://www.cumbavac.org/Aztecs_Incas_May a.htm
  • 117. • http://www.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http:/ /home.freeuk.net/elloughton13/images/azxip e.jpg&imgrefurl=http://home.freeuk.net/ellou ghton13/aztecgod.htm&h=259&w=219&sz=12 &tbnid=ssF1gPw- XvJkjM:&tbnh=112&tbnw=95&prev=/search% 3Fq%3Daztec%2Bgods%26tbm%3Disch%26tb o%3Du&zoom=1&q=aztec+gods&usg=__kPKK tfR7pX4MLsTN39iA52pU_u0=&hl=en&sa=X&e i=PIe- T9jKIumM6QHuyO1K&ved=0CBoQ9QEwBA