Title: Mesoamerican Mother Culture
1Mesoamerican Mother Culture
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3Olmec Area
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5Olmecs The Mother Culture?
- The Discovery of the Big HeadsOnly Mayan?
This discovery in 1862 shocked many, but it was a
later discovery of a date symbol on the back of a
traditional Olmec artifact that really threw the
archeologists for a loop.
Significance?
6These pictures display the immense size of the
big heads.
7What do we know about the Olmecs?
- Two classes Olmec form of Feudalism?
- Elite who lived in towns and carried on business
affairs and religious ceremonies - Lower class of farmers who lived outside of the
towns - Religion Shamanism shapeshifting is suggested
by the were-jaguars - Sacrifices
8The Americas Mesoamerica and Andean South America
- Peoples and Civilizations of the Americas 200-1500
9Land Bridge, Island Hopping Less water, more
opportunities?
Maya
Aztec
Inca
10Classic-Era Culture and Society in Mesoamerica
200-900
11Classic and Post-Classic era commonalities
- Independence
- Human sacrifice
- Pyramid structures
- Warriors fought to retain prisoners for sacrifice
- Agriculturalists
- Role of Women
12The City of the Gods
- The Great City of Teotihuacan
13TeotihuacanThe City of the Gods
The Ceremonial City of Teotihuacan
14Teotihuacán 450-600 CE
- Demographics
- At height largest city in Mesoamerica ? 125,000
to 200,000 inhabitants - agricultural innovations including irrigation
works and chinampas (floating gardens) - Religion
- dominated by religious structures, including
pyramids and temples where human sacrifice was
carried out. - Structures
- Apartment-like stone buildings housed commoners,
including the artisans who made pottery and
obsidian tools and weapons for export - elite lived in separate residential compounds and
controlled the state bureaucracy, tax collection,
and commerce
15Teotihuacán
- Military?
- The military was used primarily to protect and
expand long-distance trade and to ensure that
farmers paid taxes or tribute to the elite. - Commerce
- Pottery and Obsidian
- May have had a monopoly on obsidiana good that
may have revolutionized warfare. - Collapse
- Teotihuacan collapsed around 650 C.E.
- mismanagement of resources
- conflict within the elite
- or as a result of invasion.
16The City covered approx. 8 square miles
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18Avenue of the Dead
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20Pyramid of the Sun
21Pyramid of the Sun
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23Pyramid of the Moon
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25Feathered Serpent Pyramid
The Pyramid of the Feathered Serpent is at the
center of the Ciudadela, which is the geographic
center of the city. It could accommodate over
100,000 folks without much crowding. This area
may have been used for religious rituals
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29Maya
30The Maya
- The Maya were a single culture living in modern
Guatemala, Honduras, Belize, and southern Mexico, - never formed a politically unified state?Various
Maya kingdoms fought each other for regional
dominance. - Agriculture
- Religion
- The Maya believed that the cosmos consisted of
three layers the heavens, the human world, and
the underworld - Temple architecture reflected this cosmology, and
the rulers and elites served as priests to
communicate with the residents of the two
supernatural worlds - Maya military forces fought for captives, not for
territory.
31The Maya
- Culture
- Maya elite women participated in bloodletting
rituals and other ceremonies, but rarely held
political power. - Non-elite women probably played an essential role
in agricultural and textile production. - The most notable Maya technological developments
are the Maya calendar, mathematics, and the Maya
writing system - Collapse
- Most Maya city-states were abandoned or destroyed
between 800 and 900, environmental pressure
caused by overpopulation
32Tikal
33Chichen Itza, Mexico Chichen Itza is a large
pre-Columbian archaeological site built by the
Maya civilization located in the northern center
of the Yucatán Peninsula, present-day Mexico
34The Post-classic Period in Mesoamerica 900-1500
35Engineering an Empire to 327
36Aztecs
- Early History
- The Aztecs were originally a northern people with
a clan-based social organization. - They migrated to the Lake Texcoco area,
established the cities of Tenochtitlan and
Tlatelolco around 1325, and then developed a
monarchical system of government - Social Stratification
- From clan based to a more typical imperial
hierarchical system - Agriculturalists
- The Aztecs increased agricultural production in
the capital area by undertaking land reclamation
projects and constructing irrigated fields and
chinampas - Nonetheless, grain and other food tribute met
nearly one quarter of the capitals food
requirements
37Aztecs
- Commerce
- Merchants who were distinct from and subordinate
to the political elite who controlled
long-distance trade - The technology of trade was simple
- no wheeled vehicles, draft animals, or money was
used - Goods were carried by human porters and exchanged
through barter - Religion
- Polytheistic
- most important Huitzilopochtli, the Sun god
- Huitzilopochtli required a diet of human hearts
that were supplied by sacrificing thousands of
people every year
38Huitzilopochtli
39Sacrifice to Huitzilopochtli
40Aztec Warriors
- Eagle Warriors
- Jaguar Warriors
41Andean Civilizations
- Moche, Tiwanaku, Wari and the Inca
42Andean People
- Environment
- The harsh environment of the high-altitude Andes,
the dry coastal plain, and the tropical
headwaters of the Amazon forced the human
inhabitants of these areas to organize labor
efficiently in order to produce enough food to
live. - The Andean region is divided into four major
ecological zones - the coast, mountain valleys, higher elevations,
and the Amazonian region. - Each region produced different goods, and these
goods were exchanged between the various regions
through a network of trade routes. - Social Structure
- Clans (ayllu)
- Clans held land collectively and clan members
were obligated to assist each other in production
and to supply goods and labor to the clan chief. - mit'a ?required each ayllu to provide workers
each year to provide labor for religious
establishments, the royal court, or the
aristocracy.
43Inca
44Inca
- The Inca were a small chiefdom in Cuzco until
their leaders consolidated political authority
and began a program of military expansion in the
1430s. By 1525, the Inca had constructed a huge
empire - Military and Conquest
- developed a strong professional military
- At the central level, the Inca created an
imperial bureaucracy led by a king. Each king was
required to prove himself by conquering new
territory. - The Inca used the mita labor system to man their
armies, to build their capital city, to maintain
their religious institutions, and to provide for
the weak. - Cuzco
- The capital city of Cuzco was laid out in the
shape of a puma and its buildings constructed of
stone laid together without mortar. - Cuzcos palaces and richly decorated temples were
the scene of rituals, feasts, sacrifices of
textiles, animals, other tribute goods, and the
occasional human.
45Machu Picchu
46Cuzco was shaped like a puma
To aid in the creation of this shape some believe
the Incas used hot air balloons.
47Inca
- Culture
- astronomical observation,
- weaving,
- copper and bronze metallurgy, and gold and silver
working - frozen mummies
- puma
- Inca domination resulted in increased wealth, but
also in reduced levels of local autonomy. - When the elite fell into civil war in 1525, Inca
control over its vast territories was weakened.
48Incan Frozen Mummies
49Incan Suspension Bridges and stone walls
50Comparing the Aztecs and Incas
- Political and Economic Comparisons
- Aztec and Inca Empires similarities
- powerful armies,
- strong economies based on large workforces,
- dependence on organized government
- religious practices that connected secular rulers
to the gods - Distinctions between the two empires were in
their systems of distributing goods and in their
management of the empire. - The Aztec used local leaders, while the Inca
created a strong central government administered
by trained bureaucrats. - Imperial Comparisons
- Both the Aztec and Inca were the last in a line
of successive indigenous populations organized
into strong empires from former collapsed
civilizations. - Other?
- Inca had no writing system