Title: EARLY SOCIETIES OF MESOAMERICA
1EARLY SOCIETIES OF MESOAMERICA
2Possible Migration Routesindians are not only
asians
- Genetic Evidence
- DNA evidence indicates several different sources
to Amerindian DNA - Route 1 The Bering Land Bridge
- Asian migration across a land bridge from Asia
- Lower sea levels made this possible, probably
route through glaciers - Migration due to hunter-gatherers following game
- Route 2 Sea-based migration down coasts of
Western Americas - Strong evidence of Paleolithic sea-based
migration in Asia - Would explain how humans bypassed ice, barriers
- Currents would drive ancient sea-farers down
coast - Route 3 The Ancestors of the Polynesians
- Early humans settled Southeast Asia and Australia
by boats and sea routes - They island hopped across Pacific to South
America - Would account for older archaeological remains in
South America - Route 4 Sea-based Migration across North
Atlantic - Early humans from Europe followed islands, ice
pack of ice shelf - DNA in Great Lakes area indicates someone from
Europe migrated to this region - Route 5 Across the narrow passage from Africa to
South America - Would presuppose a sea-based migration
3Paleolithic Migrations To the Americas
4What Blood Types Tell Us
- B Allele
- Highest occurrence is in Central Asia
- Lowest in the Americas/Australia
- Relatively high frequency pockets in Africa
- B is the rarest ABO blood allele in Americas
- A Allele
- Highest found in small, unrelated populations in
Americas - Absent among Central/South American Indians.
- O Blood Type
- Very common around the world
- High in Indians of Central/South America (around
100) - Also relatively high among Australian Aborigines
- High in Europe (in populations with Celtic
ancestors) - Lowest frequency found in Eastern Europe, Central
Asia - Conclusion
- Diego Negative
- All Africans, Europeans, East Indians, Australian
Aborigines, and Polynesians are Diego negative. - Diego Positive
- The only populations with Diego positive people
may be Native Americans (2-46) and East Asians
(3-12).
5Waves of Migration
- Blood Groups
- Use Haplogroups
- Shows four waves
- Patterns
- First Wave
- c. 20-13,000 years ago
- Patagonians, Fuegians
- Pericu of Baja California
- Second Wave
- c. 12,000 years ago
- Amerindians
- Third Wave
- c. 10,000 years ago
- Na-Dene Amerinds
- Fourth Wave
- c. 6,000 years ago
- Aleut, Eskimo
6The First Americans
- Patagonians and Fuegians
- Lacked A, B, N Mitochondrial DNA common to
Amerindians - Clearly the first to arrive as they lacked DNA
common to northerners - Arrived between 13-20 thousand years ago
- Extensive DNA Study
- 1-2 different migration waves in peopling of
southern South America. - Three hunter-gatherer groups from Tierra del
Fuego cluster together - Mesa Verde, Chile
- Remains dated from 30,000 BCE to c. 12,000 BCE
- Indicates earlier arrival date that previously
thought - Suggests migration by canoe from SE Asia,
Australia - Land-living Ona (Selknam)
- Called Foot Indians split off from ancestral
Patagonian group - Gave rise to the Tehuelche Confined to Tierra
del Fuego - Walked around naked when Europeans discovered
them - Boat Oriented
- Yamana and Kawesgar
- Distant relatives who split off 6,000 years ago
- Use boat technology identical to oldest known to
man
7The Na-Dene Amerindians
- Arrived 10,000 Years Ago
- Likely route was by sea-route and boats, the by
foot - Closest relatives are the Aleut and Inuit-Eskimo
- Groups tend to be clanish and clickish
- First settlements
- Settled in Taiga area of Alaska, Northwest
America - Athabaskan-Eyak Indians (Interior Regions)
- Haida and Tlingit Coastal Indians of Alaskas
Panhandle - Hunter-gatherer-fisher
- Natural Highways of Migration
- Yukon River
- Great Slave Lake, Great Bear Lake River Systems
- Later Migration
- Languages are clear indication of migration
- Aspects of languages are unique to Amerindians
- Clusters exist in Canada and United States
distant from main areas - Coastal Na-Dene of Pacific Northwest
- New Mexico and Texas
- Navaho (Pueblo Indians) of New Mexico, Arizona
8Largest Group Amerind
- Came From Asia
- Mitochondrial DNA indicates
- Likely Asian origin
- Two likely routes
- Down the West Coast of the Americas
- Across central regions of North America
- Creation myths
- Tell of a variety of originations of their
respective peoples. - Sometimes people were "always there
- Other times humans were created by gods or
animals - Some migrated from a specified compass point
- Others came from "across the ocean
- Geographic Distribution of Languages
- Indicates waves of migration
- Indicates clusters of similar, related settlers
in a given area
9Amerindian Language Families
10The Last to Arrive
- Aleuts of Alaska
- Inuit (Eskimo) of Arctic
- Very close relatives exist in Arctic Asia
- DNA/Blood Types identical to North Asians
- Languages have close Asian relatives
- Arrived 6000 years ago
- Ice-Age had ended long ago
- Migratory Hunter-Gatherers
- Seasonal hunters of sea lion, whales, walrus
- Followed game across northern coasts
- Settled Arctic area all the way to Greenland
- Still today semi-nomadic
- Tended to inhabit coastal islands, tundra
- Stopped penetration at forests of north
11What about Europeans?
- The Solutrean Hypothesis
- Suggests an early Cro-Magnon migration into the
America - DNA Evidence exists
- Technological Remains
- Lack of certain archeological remains
- Stone tool technology of Solutreans in
prehistoric Europe - May have later influenced the development of the
Clovis tool-making culture - Clovis spear points found all throughout North
America - Strong similarities between Solutrean and Clovis
toolmaking styles - No predecessors of Clovis Technology in Eastern
Asia, Siberia, or Berinigia - Probable Migration
- Came From Ice Age Europe probably by boat like
Eskino (Inuit) hunt - By way of British Isles, Iceland, Greenland
island hopping - Which Amerindians?
- Paleo-Indians who produced the Clovis Point in
North America - Some Indians from Great Lakes have European
mitochondrial DNA
12THE FACE OF THE AMERICAN INDIAN
Inuit
Aleut
Incan
Fuegian
13EARLY PRE-HISTORY
- Migration to Mesoamerica
- Humans traveled from Siberia to Alaska, 40,000
years ago - Probably came in search of big game
- By 7000 B.C.E., reached southern-most part of
South America - As hunting became difficult, agriculture began,
7500 B.C.E. - Modern theorists question Bering Strait migration
- Early agriculture in Mesoamerica
- Valley of Mexico was first center of agriculture
- Beans, chili peppers, avocados, squashes, gourds
cultivated - By 5000 B.C.E., discovered potential of maize,
the staple food - Later, developed tomatoes
- Agricultural villages appeared after 3000 B.C.E.
- No large animals, no wheeled vehicles
- Ceremonial centers, by the end of the 2nd
millennium B.C.E.
14Migration in Meso-America
- Migration
- A common them in legends, writings of
Pre-Columbian Age - Linguistic distributions clearly show migration
- In Mesoamerica
- Commoners required to migrate seasonally to labor
on lands of - Nobility, state, religious centers
- People exited from existing communities to
establish new ones - Quite common amongst tribes of both continents
- Major way new tribes were formed
- Dynastic Migration
- Ruling elites are said to have come from
somewhere else - They migrate, take over and assimilate into the
society - Migrations from town to town were common
- Often accompanied a change in status or wealth
- Rapid growth of cities
- Shows that numbers migrated from rural to urban
- Common in the Mayans
- Northern Mesoamerica semi-nomadic groups moved
almost daily - People captured in war were forced to migrate as
captives
15The Linguistic Matrix
16THE OLMECS
- Olmecs The "rubber people"
- Earliest center, on the coast of Mexico Gulf,
1200 B.C.E. - The other two later centers La Venta and Tres
Zapotes - Olmec society
- Authoritarian in nature
- Colossal heads possibly rulers
- Power shown in pyramid construction
- Trade in jade and obsidian
- Decline and fall of Olmec society
- The cause remains a mystery
- Olmecs destroyed ceremonial centers
- Most likely, civil conflict ruined their society
- By 400 B.C.E., other societies eclipsed the
Olmecs - Influence of Olmec traditions
- Maize, ceremonial centers were common to later
societies - Other legacies Calendar, rituals of human
sacrifice, ballgame - Olmecs did not leave written records
17OLMEC ART
18TEOTIHUACAN
- The city of Teotihuacan
- Built in the highlands of Mexico
- Colossal pyramids of sun and moon dominated the
skyline - Between 400 and 600 C.E., the city had 200,000
inhabitants - Paintings and murals reflect the importance of
priests - Teotihuacan society
- Rulers and priests dominated society
- Two-thirds of inhabitants worked in fields
- Famous for obsidian tools, orange pottery
- Professional merchants traded widely
- No sign of military organization
- Cultural traditions
- Inherited Olmecs' culture
- Honored earth god, rain god
- Decline of Teotihuacan
- Military pressure from other peoples since 500
C.E. - Began to decline 650 C.E. Invaders sacked city,
mid-8th century
19TEOTIHUACAN THE CITY
20Teotihuacan and Tula among the Maya
- Mayan Origins
- Original home southern Mexico, Yucatan, Central
America - Tikal 600-900 CE expanded from Belize into
Yucatan, Mexico - Evidence that a group, its ideas (Teotihuacan?)
migrated into area to establish states - Toltec Origins
- Several lineages such as Cocom, Xiu, Itza were
called dzulob or foreigners - Chronicles of Chilam Balam kept by villages
indicate this origin - Founders had special knowledge that gave them
right to establish a state - Many leaders recorded in Mayan records for 700
years but had Nahua names - Popul Vu and Chronicles of Cakchiquels
- Show migration as common in region and in
founding of cities in area - Indicate Nahua or Tolan connections
- Teotihuacan Influences
- Use of aspects of Teotihuacan writing and
phraseology suddenly appear in Mayan - In 378 CE in Mayan Long Count, Tikal conquered
Uaxacatun - A stella erected to commemorate the event its
iconography is from Teotihuacan - After that the iconography occurs in other Mayan
stella - Chichen Itza
- Early founders are clearly Toltec
21EARLY GEOGRAPHY
22The Mayans
23THE MAYA
- The Maya
- Earliest heir of the Olmecs, lived in highlands
of Guatemala - Kaminaljuyú, a ceremonial center, but not a
full-fledged city - Teotihuacan became dominant during the 4th
century C.E. - After the 4th century, society flourished in
lowlands - Besides maize, also cultivated cotton and cacao
- Tikal
- Most important Maya political center, 300 to 900
C.E. - A bustling city of 40,000 people
- Enormous plazas, scores of temples, pyramids,
palaces - Maya warfare
- Victorious warriors won enormous prestige
- War captives became slaves or sacrificial victims
to gods - Chichén Itzá
- Rose as a power by the 9th century
- Organized a loose empire in the northern Yucatan
- Maya decline
- Began in 800 C.E., the Mayas (except in Chichén
Itzá) deserted their cities - Causes of decline remain unclear
24MAYAN SOCIETY
- Maya society
- Kings, priests, and hereditary nobility at the
top - Merchants were from the ruling class, served also
as ambassadors - Professional architects and artisans were
important - Peasants and slaves were majority of population
- The Maya calendar
- Maya priests understood planetary cycles and
could predict eclipses - Besides the solar year, also had a ritual year of
260 days and 20 months - Combined attributes of two calendars determined
the fortune of activities - Maya writing
- Contained both ideographic elements and symbols
for syllables - Maya scribes used writing extensively
- Only four books survived the destruction by
Spanish conquerors - The Maya ballgame
- Played by two individuals or two teams
- Very popular, every ceremonial center had
stone-paved courts
25MAYAN RELIGION
- Religious thought
- Popol Vuh, a Maya creation myth
- Gods created humans out of maize and water
- Gods maintained agricultural cycles
- Gods placated
- Exchanged for honors and sacrifices
- Priests interpreted calendars
- Bloodletting rituals
- Most important rituals, to honor the gods for
rains - Sacrificing captives let to many wars for victims
- Also voluntary bloodshedding
26MAYAN TRADEMayan Weaving
27EARLY Migrations in Central Mexico
- c. 800 Chichimeca and Nonoalca
- Migrated into valley may have sacked Teotihuacan
- Created Tulan Empire, a militaristic state
- After fall of Tula, Tolteca people became
migratory - 987 CE conquer or found Maya city of Chichen Itza
- Chichimecs were nomadic wanders in Central Mexico
- Tolteca and Chichimeca became progenitors of
later royal dynasties - Quetzalcoatl was a prince of Tula, perhaps a god
worshipped by Toltecs - Either the hero was deified or the gods worship
spread - It spread throughout Mesoamerica including the
Maya as Kukulcan - Michoacan
- Tarascan monarchy looked back to Chichimeca
- They had settled among the lake dwellers
- The Michoaque or Tarascans are linked with the
Nahua and Otomi - Toltec ancestry different from Chichimec
28TOLTECS AND TULA
- Toltecs
- Collapse of Teotihuacan in central Mexico, 9th to
10th century - Toltecs migrated to central Mexico about the 8th
century - Established large state, powerful army from
mid-10th to 12th century - Tula
- Capital city of Toltecs
- Center of weaving, pottery, obsidian work
- Close relations with societies of coast, Yucatan
- Toltec decline
- Civil strife at Tula, beginning in 1125
- Nomadic incursion of 1175
- End of 12th c., no longer powerful
- Quetzalcoatl
- Originally a human prince of Tula, dedicated to
his people - Tricked, driven from power
- Gradually became a hero, god in struggle with
evil deities
29The Mythical Migration of Roots
- Aztecs or Mexica
- Migration of the Aztecs from the north towards
Mexico valley - Began c. 1000 CE reached Central Valley c. 1250
CE - Glorifying their Chichimec ancestry
- The Aztec rulers chose a member of the Colhua
royal family, Acamapichtli - He became their first emperor (tlatoani) after
the foundation of Tenochtitlan - The Aztecs
- Circular Migration
- Sometimes it starts in Basin of Mexico at
Colhuacan - Means the Place of the Owners of Grandfathers
- Often disguised as Teo- (true) Colhuacan
- Aztlan
- Situated on an island in a lake like Lake Texcoco
- Duran, Spanish Chronicler records Mexica account
- Moteuczoma sent envoys to locate Chicomoztoc,
Colhuacan - His accounts indicate a primitive, idyllic
version of Tenochtitlan - Account indicates Aztecs could not go back after
fall from grace
30EARLY AZTECS
- The Mexica
- Known as Aztecs, arrived in central Mexico about
mid-13th century - Tough people, wandering, fighting for century in
central Mexico - Settled at Tenochtitlan (modern Mexico City)
about 1345 - Plentiful food supplies and chinampas by Lake
Texcoco - The Aztec empire
- Military campaigns against neighboring societies,
mid-15th century - Conquered and colonized Oaxaco in southwestern
Mexico - Made alliance with Texcoco and Tlacopan
- Empire ruled 12 million people and most of
Mesoamerica - Tribute and trade
- Tribute obligations were very oppressive
- Empire had no bureaucracy or administration
- Allies did not have standing army
- Tribute from 489 subject territories
- Tribute flowed into Tenochtitlan
31AZTEC WORLD
32MEXICA SOCIETY
- Warriors
- Military elite at top of rigid social hierarchy
- Mostly from the Mexica aristocracy
- Enjoyed great wealth, honor, and privileges
- Mexica women
- No public role, but enjoyed high honor as mothers
of warriors - Honor of bearing children was equal to that of
capturing enemies in battle - Priests
- Ranked among the Mexica elite specialized in
calendrical and ritual lore - Advisers to Mexica rulers, occasionally, became
supreme rulers themselves - Cultivators and slaves
- Cultivators worked on chinampas (small plots of
reclaimed land) - Often worked on aristocrats land
- Paid tribute and provided labor service for
public works - Large number of slaves, worked as domestic
servants - Craftsmen and merchants
- Skilled craftsmen enjoyed some prestige
- Tenuous position of merchants
- Supplied exotic goods and military intelligence
33MEXICA RELIGION
- Mexica gods
- Tezcatlipoca giver/taker of life, patron deity
of warriors - Quetzalcóatl supporter of arts, crafts, and
agriculture - Ritual bloodletting common to all Mesoamericans
- Huitzilopochtli the war god
- Human sacrifice encouraged by devotion to
Huitzilopochtli - Large temple at the center of Tenochtitlan
- Hundreds of thousands sacrificed to this war god
- Rivalry between Huitzilpochtli, Quetzalcoatl
- Quetzalcoatl protector of humans
- Tricked by some gods, fall from grace
- Driven into exile with promise to return
34Caribbean Migrations
- The Saladoids
- Migrated c. 6000 BCE to islands
- Known by the style of the pottery they made
- Ancestors of the Taino
- Arawak and Carib Indians
- Arawak
- Migrated from north coast of South America c.
1000 CE - Settled the islands of the Caribbean
- Largely peaceful, traded with other islands,
mainland - Carib
- Originated in the Orinoco Area
- Language indicate they migrated from interior of
Brazil - Master boat builders, sailors
- Traded goods for gold, silver of mainland
- Very warlike and aggressive
35EARLY ANDEAN SOCIETY
- Geography
- Impacted north-south movement and communication
- Created micro-cultures small cultures isolated
within region - Early migration
- By 12,000 B.C.E. hunter-gathers reached South
America - By 8000 B.C.E. began to experiment with
agriculture - Complex societies appeared in central Andean
region 1000 B.C.E. - Andean societies located in modern day Peru and
Bolivia - Early agriculture in South America
- Main crops beans, peanuts, sweet potatoes,
cotton - Fishing supplemented agricultural harvests
- By 1800 B.C.E., produced pottery,
- Temples and pyramids appeared
36CHAVIN AND MOCHE
- The ChavÃn Cult
- Very popular around 900 to 800 B.C.E.
- Vanished completely by about 300 B.C.E.
- Cult was probably related to introduction of
maize - Cult left large temple complexes and elaborate
art works - Complexity of Andean society
- Techniques of producing cotton textiles and
fishing nets - Discovered gold, silver, and copper metallurgy
- Cities began to appear shortly after ChavÃncult
- Early Andeans did not make use of writing
- Mochica (300-700 C.E.)
- One of several early Andean states, located in
northern Peru - Mochica ceramics lives of different social
classes - Mochica did not integrate the whole Andean region
37ANDEAN GEOGRAPHY
38COMING OF THE INCA
- After Chavin and Moche
- Several regional states dominated Andean South
America - All built upon previous accomplishments,
civilizations - Chucuito
- Chucuito dominated highlands around Lake Titicaca
- Cultivation of potatoes, herding llamas and
alpacas - Traded with lower valleys, chewed coca leaves
- Chimu
- Powerful kingdom in lowlands of Peru
- Arose prior to mid-15th century
- Extensive Irrigation networks
- Cultivation of maize and sweet potatoes
- Capital city at Chanchan, massive brick buildings
39THE INCA
- The Inca empire
- Settled first around Lake Titicaca among other
peoples - Ruler Pachacuti launched campaigns against
neighbors, 1438 - Built a huge empire stretching 4000 kilometers
from north to south - Ruled the empire with military and administrative
elite - Inca bureaucrats relied on quipu
- Mnemonic aid made of an array of small cords to
keep track of information - Cuzco and Machu Picchu
- Capital of the Inca had 300,000 people in the
late 15th century - Machu Picchu hidden in mountain, jungles last
retreat of Inca - Inca roads
- Two major roads linked the south and north
- Runners carried messages across empire
- Paved with stone, shaded by trees
- Supported centralized government, facilitated
spread of Quechua
40INCA MAP
41INCA SOCIETY
- Trade
- No large merchant class
- Incas bartered agricultural surplus locally
- Not much specialization
- The chief ruler
- Chief ruler was viewed as descended from the sun
- In theory, the god-king owned everything on earth
- After death, mummified rulers became
intermediaries with gods - Aristocrats and priests
- Aristocrats enjoyed fine food, embroidered
clothes, and wore ear spools - Priests led celibate and ascetic lives, very
influential figures - Peasants
- Delivered portion of their products to
bureaucrats - Besides supporting ruling classes, revenue also
used for famine relief - Provided heavy labor (mita) for public works
- Society ruled as a socialist type centralized
state
42INCA RELIGION
- Inca gods Inti and Viracocha
- Venerated sun god called Inti
- Considered other natural forces divine
- Also honored the creator god, Viracocha
- Sacrifices of animals, agricultural products, not
humans - Moral thought
- Concept of sin
- Violation of established order
- Concept of after-death
- Punishment and reward
- Rituals of absolving sins
- Through confession, penance
43The Inca
- Emergence, c. 1200 CE
- Emerged in the area of Cuzco
- Originated as city-state, small population
- Wide-ranging Expansion, 1438 CE
- Significance of Conquest, Expansion
- Each Inca had to conquer land, goods
- Booty became treasury for mortuary temple
- No conquest, no treasure, lousy temple to gods
- Movements
- Transportation
- Empire was linked by roads and royal runners
- Roads used to transport goods to and from
capital, store houses - Social Movement
- Local nobles educated in capital and returned to
lands to rule - Local nobles sent tribute to Incas capital
- Labor Movement
- Mita each village owed specific number of
laborers, days to Inca - Workers moved to work on projects for the Inca
- Mita also provided soldiers to the Incas armies
to expand the state
44Ayllu Mitmaq as Colonies
- Ayllu
- All Inca divided into social groups
- Kinship groups spread across geography
- Each Ayllu
- Claimed land at different elevations
- This insured a variety of produce
- Grazing land within ayllu held in common
- Farming land given to families based on size
- Conquered peoples had their own ayllus similarly
structured - Mitmaq
- Inca colonies
- Each ayllu contributed people
- Relocated to new territories
- Each new mitmaq required to bring lands under
cultivation - Each mitmaq served as a garrison to control new
lands - Each mitmaq spoke Quechua, Amyara, the Incan
languages
45Quechua Shows Colonization
46INDIGENOUSAMERICANCULTURALREGIONS
47SOCIETIES OF THE NORTH
- Pueblo and Navajo societies
- Two large settled societies in the contemporary
American southwest - By about 700 C.E., began to build stone and adobe
buildings - Iroquois peoples
- Agricultural society in the woodlands east of the
Mississippi River - Five Iroquois nations emerged from Swasco
society, 1400 C.E. - Women were in charge of Iroquois villages and
longhouses - Mound-building peoples
- Built earthen mounds throughout eastern North
America - Mounds used for ceremonies, rituals, dwelling,
burial sites - Showed influence of contacts with Mesoamericans,
Mayans - Cahokia
- The largest mound at Cahokia, Illinois
- 15-38,000 people lived in Cahokia society, c.
12th century - Burial sites reveal existence of social classes
and trade
48American Southwest
- The Anasazi
- Nomadic Hunter Gathers became Sedentary farmers
- Semi-permanent farming villages later arose with
extensive trade - Settlements linked by extensive pedestrian roads
like Inca roads - Original trade goods were surplus foods
- Area lacks trees, metals, etc. for which Anasazi
traded food, finished goods - Trade goods from the Great Basin, North Mexico,
Pacific, Mississippi area - Many trade goods (copper, feathers) from Central
Mexico - Mined turquoise for trade to Mesoamerica
- 300 Year Great Drought c. 1200 forced abandonment
of towns - Semi-sedentary, farming an area for 30 years and
migrating to new site - Environmental stress could have weakened
civilization - Area had thin soil, little water so overfarming
relatively easy - Internal conflict, invasion by new nomads likely
cause of migration - Descendents
- Likely Descendents Hopi, Navajo, Zuni
- Pueblo Indians have similar building techniques,
farming, pottery - They also had trade contacts with Mesoamerica
49 The Anasazi MovementArchaeology andSpace
Age Technology have revealed an extensive
network of roads
50GEOGRAPHIC MAP