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Aztec |
The Aztec are best known for their location in present-day Mexico in the south central area. However, it is also believe that they originally came from further north in areas of Arizona, New Mexico, Nevada, and Colorado...migrating south around the 13th century. Around 1325, they stopped migrating southward on the border of Lake Texcoco, where they built their city and capital of Tenochtitlan. Most of the Aztec culture was sedentary, relying on hunting and gathering. Gardening and fishing were also prominent. Those near the ocean ate crabs, oysters, fish and turtles. Wild game that was consumed included rabbits, snakes, armadillos, deer, pumas, coyotes, and turkey. Some of the crops that were domesticated included cocoa, banilla, bananas, squash, pumpkin, beans, chili, tobacco, onions, red tomatoes, green tomatoes, sweet potatoes, jicama, huautli, and maize. Maize was the most important crop. Slash-and-burn agriculture was utilized repeatedly. The Aztec also constructed irrigation systems to bring in water to the dry farm lands. Shallow lakes were farmed by creating islands called chinampas...mud that had been piled to form small islands. The Aztec spoke Nahuatl and utilized hieroglyphic writing and paintings as a form of written records. There was a very strong dedication to their religion, which included human sacrifices to the gods. On various special religious and social occasions, a slave was sacrificed. His flesh would be elaborately dressed and would be the center ornament of a banquet. It was believed that human hearts and blood gave the gods strength. It was believed that humans were responsible for the pleasure or displeasure of the gods and that they had to make sure that the gods were happy. They worshiped hundreds of gods and goddesses, each representing a different aspect of life. Twenty-Fifty thousand people were sacrificed each year...usually war prisoners or children. Large temples were constructed to perform these sacrifices. It is often accounted how the heads of the sacrificial victim would roll down the steps of the large temples. The dress of an Aztec would display their status as well as place within their civilization. Dress played a significant role in both religious and social settings. Because of the warm climate, most clothing was loose. Women wore sleeveless blouses and skirts, men wore clothing on the hip area and a cloak over the shoulders. Nobles wore cotton clothes with a great deal of decoration. |
Aztec society consisted of four primary classes. Nobles, commoners, serfs, and slaves...with a hierachy of each. Slaves were usually obtained through war and people who couldn't pay their debts and were thus enslaved. Commoners consisted of the majority of the population and utilized farming. Serfs worked the land for the nobles. The Aztec economy was based around agriculture, with goods and services being traded as the chief payment system; no monetary system existed. Most housing structures consisted of adobe or walls made with branches plastered with clay. Women would usually be the ones to cook and weave clothing. Young boys were educated by their fathers, and girls stayed home with their mothers to do various chores. Common wedding ages were sixteen for women and twenty for men. Some of the dishes that they enjoyed included tacos, tortillas, and tamales. Other foods included seeds from the sage plant to use as cereal, spicy peppers, eggs, turkey, rabbit, and dog. An Aztec delicacy was "green slime"...which was scooped off the top of Lake Texococo. It supposedly tasted something like cheese. Water and beer were drank, and nobles enjoyed chocolate sweetened with honey. Music played a significant role in Aztec religious rituals and practices. The most common instruments included flutes, drums, and rattles. Art also played a significant role with feathers being utilized for head dresses, cloaks, and masks at various ceremonies and rituals. The Aztec had a 365 day calendar that is accurate by today's scientific standards. |
Fired clay and paint Votive vessel of ?Xilonen Circa 1500 |
Price: $8.24 |
Price: $10.98 |
Price: $32.29 |
An Illustrated Dictionary of the gods and Symobols of Ancient Mexico and the Maya By: Mary Miller & Karl Taube |
Price: $12.89 |
The Codex Borgia: A Full-Color Restoration of the Ancient Mexican Manuscript By: Gisele Diaz & Alan Rodgers |
Price: $13.57 |