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Download The Americas on the Eve of Invasion
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Review Questions 1. What two empires in Latin America were destroyed by the Spanish? 2. What were the wars the Aztecs waged for sacrifice victims known as? 3. What were the chinampas? 4. What was one of the methods the Inca used to unify their empire? 5. What hallmark of civilization did the Aztec possess that the Inca did not? People and Places Moctezuma II Tenochtitlan Cuzco Toltec Heritage Rose after the Mayans and extended from Yucatan to trade with the Southwest Strongly militaristic with same religion as the Aztecs Perhaps contact between Mississippian culture Mississippians based on maize and bean agriculture and built large earthen pyramids Aztec Rise When Toltec fell in 1150 power shifted north Aztecs were nomads who migrated to Lake Texcoco in 1325 and spoke Nahuatl Powerful fighting skills made good them mercenaries in the citystate competition Became their own power in 1428, triple alliance in 1434 Religion of Conquest Traditional deities of nature, different manifestations Three cults of gods Gods needed blood to continue to fight Ritual cannibalism Cyclical view of history Great Speaker seen as divine Tribute Empire Great Speaker in Tenochtitlan was the emperor, prime minister had extreme power as well City-states left alone if they fulfilled their obligations A few territories left unconquered for flower wars Many revolts Economy Food demanded as tribute supplemented high yield chinampas Each community had land set aside for temples and state, as well as periodic markets The great market operated by pochteca, specializing in longdistance trade Not a market economy because the state regulated markets and unfairly redistributed tribute Aztec art was a mix of religious and natural themes Society Seven capulli went back to nomad times and were organizers of the commoners lives Originally everyone was in a capulli but eventually a nobility emerged from families in the most distinguished capulli Nobility controlled priesthood and military Also created a serf-like class to work their lands Military was highly ritualized, rank based on captives taken Fashion restrictions made social class apparent Other social groups had their own capulli Aztec Women Women had political rights but were expected to stay in the house and grind corn Marriages arranged, weaving skill highly regarded Older women trained young girls Militaristic Aztec empire governed through religious tactics of terror Twantinsuyu: The Incan World The Inca were successors of Tihuanaco and Huari Inca emerged in 1350 and under Pachacuti began conquest Conquered Chimor, creating a large multiethnic empire Emperor or inca was divine and the high priest was usually a relative Politics Empire divided into four provinces, each with a governor Local rulers(curacas) were given privileges in exchange for loyalty, as well as their sons being taken to Cuzco Movement of Quechua-speakers and conquered populations forced integration This was done on the amazing road system with tambos Being conquered had benefits for the peoples Tribute was mita and cloth, as well young women for state purposes Incan Religion and Society Split inheritance and cults of the mummies caused a constant for expansion Cult of the sun official religion but others were tolerated Places in nature were often temples staffed by priests and women Each community aimed at self-sufficiency, relying on the government for other goods Nobility drawn from 10 royal ayllus, yanas removed from their ayllus to serve them State-sponsored irrigation for maize Not much trade or merchant class Unequal Society Women had property rights and were called equal but were still inferior The inca queen was the link to the moon, like the inca was for the sun Gender hierarchy shown by the temple selections Andean Achievements Advanced pottery, metalworking, and cloth Kept records using quipu The Inca had a passion for numerical order Amazing stonecutting and terracing All of this was done without the wheel The Rest of the Americas A lot of variation, from hunter-gatherers to farmers Generally societies were kin-based, with social standing not based on wealth Different outlook on the environment than AfroEurasia Cahokia was a major settlement Though many will say that pre-Columbian Latin America is just a footnote in world history, that view depends on one’s definition of world history. Should we define world history as the history of global interactions, therefore ignoring the isolated peoples of the world? Or should world history be defined as the history of the world’s peoples, which shapes their interactions? Just throwing a little TOK in there. Thanks for listening.