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 :: THE INDIGENOUS PEOPLES OF THE AMERICAS

A variety of societies existed in the Americas before Europeans voyaged across the Atlantic. These indigenous socieities had achievements in science, technology, art, culture, politics and the economy.

 Arawaks/Tainos | Caribs/Kalinagos | Aztecs | Incas | Mayans

Aztecs

The Aztecs/Mexicas were the native American people who dominated northern México 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. Sometime in the 12th century they embarked on a period of wandering and in the 13th century settled in the central basin of México.

THE CAPITAL CITY

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 Mexica, is today a collective term, applied to all the peoples linked by trade, custom, religion, and language to these founders.


Land of the Aztecs

The whole area which the Aztecs occupied was used to its full potential. They made chinampas on top of the shallow lake beds. These chinampas were highly productive gardens formed by piling mud on the lake bottoms to make artificial islands. Causeways and bridges were built to link the city to the mainland. Aqueducts were built to channel water to the city and dykes were made to filter the salt from the water. Canals were dug throughout the city to allow transportation of goods and people. As time went on the Aztec empire grew bigger and bigger from just the one city to a whole empire. One of there biggest triumphs was when they defeated the Tepanecs in 1427 they were one of the major tribes.

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;and
  • 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.

ECONOMY AND SOCIETY

The economy of Tenochtitlan was built off of one overwhelming fact: the urban population on the island required high levels of economic support from surrounding areas. In its earliest history, Tenochtitlan was self-supporting; the village was small and agriculture was managed through the chinampa method of architecture, practiced widely throughout Mesoamerica. In the chinampa , flat reeds were placed in the shallow areas of the lake, covered with soil, and then cultivated. In this way, the Aztecs reclaimed much of the lake for agriculture. A large part of the city's population were farmers; at its height (100,000-300,000), at least half the population would leave the city in the morning to go farm and return in the evening.

The city itself consisted of a large number of priests and craftspeople; the bulk of the economy rested on extensive trade of both necessary and luxury items. Tenochtitlan was a true urban center. It had a permanent population, it had a large and bustling market (the Spanish estimated that at least 60,000 people crowded the market), and it had the beginnings of economic class. For the kinship groups of the city were divided up into calpulli , many of which practiced a specific craft or trade, such as rope-making or pot-making. While there is a great deal of controversy over the precise nature of the capulli , it seems to be a transition point between kinship organization (the calpulli were kinship groups) and economic class (the calpulli specialized in particular crafts). In addition, the calpulli seemed to be arranged in ranks: there was the highest calpulli , another five calpulli that had schools for nobility, and then all the rest.

The Aztecs did have two clearly differentiated social classes. At the bottom were the macehualles, or "commoners," and at the top the pilli, or nobility. These were not clearly differentiated by birth, for one could rise into the pilli by virtue of great skill and bravery in war.

All male children went to school. At the age of 15, each male child went to telpuchcalli ("house of youth"), where he learned the history and religion of the Aztecs, the art of war and fighting, the trade or craft specific to his calpulli , and the religious and civic duties of everyday citizenship. The children of nobility also attended another school, a school of nobility or calmecac , if he was a member of one of the top six calpulli . There the child learned the religious duties of priests and its secret knowledge; for the distinction between government and religious duties was practically non-existent. This public education was only limited to boys.
In Aztec society, women were regarded as the subordinate of men. Above everything else, they were required to behave with chastity and high moral standards. For the most part, all government and religious functions were closed off to women. In fact, one of the most important religious offices, the Snake Woman, was always filled by men. There were some temples and gods that had priestesses, who had their own schools, but their exact position in the hierarchy is unknown.

LAWS

Aztec laws were simple and harsh. Almost every crime, from adultery to stealing, was punished by death and other offenses usually involved severe corporal punishment or mutilation (the penalty for slander, for instance, was the loss of one's lips). This was not a totalitarian state, however; there was a strong sense of community among the Aztecs and these laws, harsh as they seem, were supported by the community rather than an autocratic judiciary.
Slavery was common among the Aztecs; it was not, however, racial or permanent. One became a slave by being captured in war, by committing certain crimes, such as theft, by voluntarily entering into slavery, or by being sold by one's parents. If one was captured in war, slavery was a pleasant option, for the purpose of Aztec warfare was primarily the capture of live human sacrifices. If, however, one had a useful trade, the Tenochca would forego the sacrifice and employ the captive in that trade.

There was little distinction between the religious and the secular hierarchy, although historians and anthropologists argue that the Aztecs developed farther than any other Mesoamerican group a secular aspect of society. At the very top of the hierarchy was the tlacatecuhtli , or "chief of men." He dominated all the religious ceremonies and served as a military leader. Below the tlacatecuhtli were a series of religious offices and some secular functions, such as military generals.

RELIGION

The religion of the Aztecs was incredibly complicated, partly due to the fact that they inherited much of it from conquered peoples. Their religion was dominated by three gods: Huitzilopochtli ("hummingbird wizard," the native and chief god of the Tenochca, Huitzilopochtli was the war and sun god), Tezcatlipoca ("Smoking Mirror," chief god of the Aztecs in general), and Quetzalcoatl ("Sovereign Plumed Serpent," widely worshipped throughout Mesoamerica and the god of civilization, the priesthood, and learning). Below these three gods were four creating gods who were remote and aloof from the human world. Below these were an infinity of other gods, of which the most important were Tlaloc, the Rain God, Chalchihuitlicue, the god of growth, and Xipe, the "Flayed One," a god associated with spring.

The overwhelming aspect of Aztec religious life in the imaginations of non-Aztecs was the predominance of human sacrifice. This had been practiced all throughout the Mesoamerican world, but the Tenochca practiced it at a scale never seen before or since. We don't know a great deal about the details, but we have a fairly good idea of its general character and justification. Throughout Mesoamerica, the theology involved the concept that the gods gave things to human beings only if they were nourished by human beings. Among the Maya, for instance, the priests would nourish the gods by drawing their own blood by piercing their tongues, ears, extremities, or genitals. Other sacrifices involved prayer, offerings of food, sports, and even dramas. The Aztecs practiced all of these sacrifices, including blood-letting. But the Aztec theologians also developed the notion that the gods are best nourished by the living hearts of sacrificed captives; the braver the captive, the more nourishing the sacrifice. This theology led to widespread wars of conquest in search of sacrificial victims both captured in war and paid as tribute by a conquered people.

We can successfully reconstruct Aztec human sacrifice with a high level of accuracy. Some sacrifices were very minimal, involving the sacrifice of a slave to a minor god, and some were very spectacular, involving hundreds or thousands of captives. Aztec history claims that Ahuitzotl (1468-1502), who preceded Mocteuzma II as king, sacrificed 20,000 people after a campaign in Oaxaca ("O-a-sha-ka"). No matter what the size of the sacrifice, it was always performed the same way. The victim was held down by four priests on an altar at the top of a pyramid or raised temple while the officiant made an incision below the rib cage and pulled out the living heart. The heart was then burned and the corpse was pushed down the steep steps; a very brave or noble victim was carried down the steps. The most brutal of human sacrifices were those dedicated to the god Huehueteotl. Sacrificial victims were drugged and then thrown into a fire at the top of the ceremonial platform. Before they were killed by the fire, they were dragged out with hooks and their living hearts were pulled out and thrown back into the fire.

While human sacrifice was the most dramatic element of Aztec sacrifice, the most common form of sacrifice was voluntary blood-letting which occurred at every religious function. Such blood-letting was tied to rank: the higher one was in social or priestly rank, the more blood one had to sacrifice.

There was an urgency to all this sacrifice. The Aztec believed that the world was controlled by divine forces that were in constant conflict and opposition to one another. The universe was poised between conflicting forces of creation and destruction; human beings could, in part, influence this balance through the practice of sacrifice.In addition to sacrifice, the Aztec religion, like the Mayan religion, was dominated by calculations of time. The Aztecs had several calendars; each day was controlled by two gods, each of which had a benificient and a malevolent aspect. In a complex series of astronomical calculations, one could precisely determine how to behave and what to do in order to achieve the best results.

It is not unfair to say that Aztec culture was overwhelmingly eschatological in a way that can only be rivalled by early Christianity. The Aztecs, like the Mayans, believed that the universe had been created five times and destroyed four times; each of these five eras was called a Sun. The first age was called Four Ocelot (for it began on the date called Four Ocelot). Tezcatlipoca (Smoking Mirror) dominated the universe and eventually became the sun disk. The world was destroyed by jaguars. The second age was Four Wind, dominated by Quetzalcoatl (Sovereign Plumed Serpent); men were turned to monkeys and the world was destroyed by hurricanes and tempests. The third age was Four Rain, dominated by Tlaloc (the rain god); the world was destroyed by a rain of fire. The fourth era was Four Water and was dominated by Chalchihuitlicue (Woman with the Turquoise Skirt); the world was destroyed by a flood. The fifth era, the one we live in now, is Four Earthquake, and is dominated by Tonatiuh, the Sun-God. This age will end in earthquakes.

CALENDAR

The Aztecs had two calendars: the ritual year and the solar year. The ritual year lasted for 260 days and the solar year lasted for 365 days. Every fifty-two years these two calendars would resynchronize; the Aztecs, then, lived in 52-year cycles. In Aztec religion, the destruction of every era always occurred on the last day of each 52 year cycle (although each era lasted for several of these cycles). Every 52 years, then, the Aztecs believed that the world was about to end and the close of the 52 year cycle was the most important religious event in Aztec life for this period was the most dangerous period in human life. This was the time when the gods could decide to destroy humanity. Every cycle ended with the New Fire Ceremony. For five days before the end of the cycle, all religious altar fires were extinguished and people all over the Aztec world destroyed furniture and possessions and went into mourning for the world. On the last day, the priests went to the Hill of the Star, a crater in the Valley of Mexico, and waited for the constellation of the Pleiades to appear. If it appeared, that meant that the world would continue for fifty-two more years. The priests would light a fire in an animal carcass, and all the fires of the Valley of Mexico would be lit from this single fire. The day after saw sacrifices, blood-letting, feasting, and renovation of possessions and houses.

WRITING

We can barely read Mayan writing, but we do know how to read Aztec writing. Like the Mayans, the Aztecs developed a true system of writing. Aztec writing isn't phonetic but rather a loose system of rebus writing. Still, if the testimony of the Spanish is reliable, this writing system was seen as an aid to oral traditions rather than as a replacement. Aztec writing was used for many purposes: calculation, calendrical counts, chronicles, diaries, and even history. This is why we know far more about Aztec history before 1500-and in far greater chronological detail-than any other American peoples. Many theories have been presented for the development of a widespread literate tradition among the Aztecs, while the same didn't occur for the Mayas. Perhaps the most convincing is the fact that Aztec society was far more complex than any other preceding culture. The persistent need for accurate record-keeping which is introduced with social complexity led to the development of the most literate society on the American continents.

THE FALL OF THE AZTEC EMPIRE

Before AD 1519, strange happenings occurred, the most baffling occurrence was that of hunters discovering a bird with a mirror on its head, which was brought to Montezuma. He claimed that he could see the stars and planets. Then the picture changed and he could see a group of armed men marching over the countryside.

When the Spaniards reached coast, they started defeating or winning over other tribes. Herman Cortez, the leader of the Spaniards, made his way inland. Montezuma started getting nervous. In a desperate attempt, he tried to entice Cortez with jade, gold, silver and embroidered cloth to stay away from Tenochtitlan. But this made Cortez even more determined to find the ‘city of gold’. So Montezuma decided to meet with Cortez.

But then they learnt that Cualpopoca, one of Montezuma’s generals, killed two Spanish messengers. Herman placed Montezuma under house arrest. Montezuma ordered Cualpopoca to return to Tenochtitlan. He obeyed and was handed over to Cortez, who executed him publicly. The Aztecs were stunned.Montezuma was placed into chains because he was accused of ordering Cualpopoca to murder the Spanish messengers.

Montezuma was shocked at this treatment. All of a sudden he was released. The Aztecs thought that Montezuma had bought his freedom through sacrificing Cualpopoca. He realised that his people’s mood was changing and insisted that he remained hostage.

A rebellion started to break out among the Spaniards on the coast. Cortez and a number of his men left to deal with the situation. Cortez left Pedro de Alvarado.Alvarado misinterpreted an Aztec religious parade as an attack.

Alvarado and his men killed many of the Aztecs as they tried to escape the attack. The Aztecs recovered and retaliated with great force, Alvarado and his men retreated. Amazingly, Cortez was allowed to return to the city without interference.

Many attacks followed, when Montezuma attempted to subside the situation, by speaking to his people at the top of their defensive wall, he was showered with arrows and stones. The Spaniards quickly pulled him down, but Montezuma was severely injured. Three days later he died.

Cortez was in a hopeless situation, so he ordered an escape under darkness, but they were noticed and attacked. They attempted to swim across the lake to the mainland, but many died because they were weighed down with their armour and gold. But Cortez and a large proportion of his force escaped.

Within the following weeks, Cortez and the remaining soldiers defeated several tribes in the area. When the Texcocans, allies of Tenochtitlan, supported the Spaniards, they had a base on which to attack Tenochtitlan.

Attacks from the Spaniards on their heavily armed ships along the causeways lasted for 75 days. By the time they reached the Great Square, where the heads of Spaniards and their horses were on public display, there was further resistance. The Aztecs were starving and dying from diseases such as smallpox and measles, which were caught from the Spaniards.

When Cuauhtemoc, the last Aztec chief, was caught trying to escape in a canoe, he was executed. This was the symbol that the once great Aztec civilisation had fallen.


Montezuma II welcoming Hernan Cortez

TODAY'S AZTECS

Today's Aztecs live in Mexico .... as Mexicans. The people of Mexico, just like the people of most other countries in the world, are descendents of their history. People mix, people marry, peoples change over the years. It's nearly 500 years since Cortes overthrew Tenochtitlan but you can still find Aztecs in every walk of life ... doing the same kind of thing ... but not the sacrifice bit!! In 1982 an estimated 1,000,000 people were of Aztec descent.

 :: LEARN MORE ABOUT THE AZTECS
The Aztec
This website contains hundreds of articles on the Aztec culture, its religion, history, medicine, and links to much, much more. The site includes a search engine. Be sure to read the site information page.
http://northcoast.com/~spdtom/aztec.html
The Aztecs/Mexicas
Here you find information about the Aztecs and links to several other related websites.
http://www.indians.org/welker/aztec.htm
The Ancient Aztecs
This website has photos of temples, sculptures and glyphs,eyewitness accounts of ritual human sacrifice, poems in Nahuatl - the language of the Aztecs (translated to English),an extensive listing of the gods and goddesses worshiped, and more.
http://scrtec.org/track/tracks/s00749.html
Mexica: Aztecs
Read descriptions of the history, religion, economy, society, and writings of this culture that dominated the Valley of Mexico in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries.
http://www.wsu.edu/~dee/CIVAMRCA/AZTECS.HTM
The History of Aztecs
Very little is known of the earliest Aztecs, they did not keep a written record. Their history was passed on by word of mouth from one generation to the next.
http://www.brownpride.com/history/aztecs.html
Buried Mirror: Conflict of the Gods
This website describes Cortés' expedition to Mexico beginning in 1519 and ending with his conquest of the Aztecs in 1521.
http://www.umich.edu/~proflame/texts/mirror/conflict.html
The Conquest of the Aztec Empire: Hernando Cortes
Here you can learn of Cortes and get information about the conquest of the Aztecs.
http://www.acs.ucalgary.ca/HIST/tutor/eurvoya/aztec.html
The Aztec Calendar
There is not just one Aztec calendar, there are two more or less independent systems. A 365 day calendar, called the xiuhpohualli, describes the days and rituals related to the seasons. The other calendar has 260 days. In Nahuatl, the language of the Aztecs, it is called the tonalpohualli or, in English, the day-count. Most information on this Internet-site refers to the tonalpohualli, which is the sacred calendar.
http://www.azteccalendar.com/

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