Monday, November 25, 2019
Mexico Essays - Valley Of Mexico, Americas, History Of North America
Mexico Essays - Valley Of Mexico, Americas, History Of North America    Mexico      The Aztecs  The Aztecs were the native American people who  dominated northern Mxico at the time of the Spanish  conquest led by Hernan Cortes in the early 16th century.  According to their own legends, they originated from a  place called Aztlan, somewhere in north or northwest  Mexico. At that time the Aztecs (who referred to  themselves as the Mexica or Tenochca) were a small,  nomadic, Nahuatl-speaking aggregation of tribal peoples  living on the margins of civilized Mesoamerica. In the  12th century they embarked on a period of wandering and  in the 13th century settled in the central basin of  Mxico. Continually dislodged by the small city-states  that fought one another in shifting alliances, the  Aztecs finally found refuge on small islands in Lake  Texcoco where, in 1325, they founded the town of  TENOCHTITLAN (modern-day Mexico City). The term Aztec,  originally associated with the migrant Mexico, is today  a collective term, applied to all the peoples linked by  trade, custom, religion, and language to these founders.   Fearless warriors and pragmatic builders, the  Aztecs created an empire during the 15th century that  was surpassed in size in the Americas only by that of  the Incas in Peru. As early texts and modern archaeology  continue to reveal, beyond their conquests and many of  their religious practices, there were many positive  achievements:   the formation of a highly specialized and stratified  society and an imperial administration   the expansion of a trading network as well as a  tribute system   the development and maintenance of a sophisticated  agricultural economy, carefully adjusted to the land   the cultivation of an intellectual and religious  outlook that held society to be an integral part of  the cosmos.   The yearly round of rites and ceremonies in the  cities of Tenochtitlan and neighboring Tetzcoco, and  their symbolic art and architecture, gave expression to  an ancient awareness of the interdependence of nature  and humanity.   The Aztecs remain the most extensively documented  of all Amerindian civilizations at the time of European  contact in the 16th century. Spanish friars, soldiers,  and historians and scholars of Indian or mixed descent  left invaluable records of all aspects of life. These  ethnohistoric sources, linked to modern archaeological  inquiries and studies of ethnologists, linguists,  historians, and art historians, portray the formation  and flourishing of a complex imperial state.    
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