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Transcript
CHAPTER 11:
PRE-COLUMBIAN AMERICA
Ms. Sheets
AP World
Pre-Columbian Latin American Communities
• Pre-Columbian: before the voyages
of Columbus and the conquests of
the Spanish
• Groups mostly develop in isolation
•
•
•
•
•
Olmecs (1500 BCE – 100 BCE)
Maya (2000 BCE – 900 CE)
Toltecs (968 – 1150 CE)
Aztecs (12th – 15th CE)
Inca (1350 – 1533 CE)
Toltecs: Precursors to the Aztecs
• Toltec Empire (968-1150)
• Central Mexico
• 968: Capital at Tula
established
• Long-distance trade, even to
American SW
• Belief in Quetzalcóatl
(feathered serpent; one of the
main Pre-Columbian gods)
• Heavily militaristic (sacrifice,
war) with a central
government
• 1150: Collapse, probably
caused by northern nomadic
attacks
Toltec Warrior Statues
Aztecs (12th – 15th centuries)
• After Toltecs collapse, political power and people move to
shores along Lake Texcoco
• One of those groups are the Aztecs in the early 13th c
• Lake Texcoco provides fishing, farming, and transportation
• Valley by Lake Texcoco inhabited by mixture of groups organized
into city-states
• Many vie for control of lakes  winners are Aztecs
• Who are the Aztecs?
• Speak Nahuatl (Toltec language) and worship Quetzalcóatl; lends
legitimacy to rule
• 1325: Aztecs found Tenochtitlan (city on island in center of Lake
Texcoco)
• 1434: Aztecs dominate central valley; conquer other city-states to
make tribute empire (demand financial payments and prisoners
to use for Aztec human sacrifices)
Tenochtitlan: Aztec City
QUICK REVIEW QUESTION
What helped the Aztecs establish power
in the Central Mexican valley?
Describe the newly established Aztec
Empire.
Aztec Society
• As the Aztecs became solidified as
the most powerful group around
Lake Texcoco, Aztec society
transformed into a rigidly
hierarchical society
1) Ruler
• Head of state/religion
• Representative of gods on earth
2) Nobles and ruling officials
3) Warriors
4) Peasants
5) Slaves (war captives)
• Clans (calpulli) dictate social status
• A large gap emerges between
nobility and commoners
Aztec Religion
•
•
•
•
Highly motivated by religious zeal
Dedicated to service of gods
Spiritual and natural world seamless
Hundreds of deities
• Mostly focused upon fertility,
agriculture, water/rain
• Aztecs worshipped gods through
festivals, ceremonies, feasting, dancing,
warfare, and sacrifice
• Sacrifice: a component of worship
• Huitzilopochtli (deity of war, sun, and
human sacrifice) needs strength
• Patron of Tenochtitlan
• Motivated by religious conviction? Or
terror and political control?
• Includes ritual cannibalism
• War captives supply Aztecs with
sacrificial victims
Aztec Economy
• Mostly an agrarian community
• Chinampas: man-made floating
islands
• 25-30 feet wide x 325-600 feet
long
• Yielded large amount of crops
• Constructed to provide
additional farming land upon
the lake
• Maize, corn, and beans
• No use of wheel or laboring
animals
• Merchants worked in daily
markets; large emphasis on trade
• Barter is main form of
exchange
Gender in Aztec Society
• Patriarchal, but women are highly
valued
• Child birth; bear sons
• Aztec women’s responsibilities:
household care, cooking, weaving
• Women had to grind corn by hand
on stone boards; time-consuming
• No wheels or suitable animals
for power like Europe
• Lack of appropriate technology
• Women could own/inherit property
and will it to their heirs
• Arranged marriages were common
• Elite were often polygamous
• Commoners were monogamous
QUICK REVIEW QUESTION
What belief necessitates Aztec
sacrifice?
What is the agricultural innovation the
Aztecs use to increase available
farmland?
The Incas (1350-1533)
• Chimor Kingdom (900-1465)
• Control of north coast of Peru
• Incas conquer Chimors by taking
over irrigation systems and
cutting off access to water
• Inca Empire (Twantinsuyu)
• Quechua-speaking clans from
southern Andes Mountains
• By 1350, Incas live centered
around and in Cuzco (capital
city)
• Control other regions by 1438,
• Led by Pachacuti (ruler, or
inca)
• Aggressive expansion for 60
years by Pachacuti, his son, and
grandson
Inca Expansion
Inca Labor and Society
• Labor system (Mita)
• All people work for the
government for a certain period
• Labor to government is free
• Enabled government to build
highways, royal houses,
monuments, bridges, fields,
mines, etc.
• Participation is mandatory after
15, and until 50.
• Centered around Lake Titicaca
• Fishing, irrigation, farming
• Government kept storehouses of grain
for famine
Techniques of Inca Imperial Rule
• Highly centralized
• Inca ruler; governors of four provinces;
large bureaucracy
• Local rulers maintain their positions
providing they defer to Inca rule
• Integrated various ethnic groups into an
tribute empire
• Quechua is spread as language to unite
empire
• Military: System of roads, pay stations
(tambos), storehouses
• Llamas used for transportation
• Extensive irrigated agriculture on raised beds
to prevent erosion (waru waru); large building
and irrigation projects
• “Split inheritance” necessitates conquest
• Power goes to eldest male; wealth and
land to other sons
Inca Culture
• Viracocha (creator/sun god) is highest
• Temple of the Sun at Cuzco is center
of state religion
• Local gods allowed to survive
• Cult of ancestors, deceased rulers
mummified
• Inca gods are animistic
• Cultural Achievements
• Metallurgy (copper, bronze)
• No writing system but knotted strings
(quipu) for accounting and census
• Monumental architecture (steep
slopes)
• Farming: potato; maize
Comparison of Aztecs and Inca
Similarities
Differences
Built on earlier empires that
preceded them
(Aztecs = Toltecs; Inca = Chimor)
Aztecs have sophisticated traders
and markets VS Inca have no
specialized merchant class
Excellent imperial and military
organizers
Aztecs have a writing system VS Inca
do not
Highly organized agricultural
sector under state control
Aztecs used clans and noblemen to
aide the ruler VS Inca used an
elaborate bureaucracy
Ethnic groups allowed to survive
(Inca incorporate them into
empire; Aztecs rule them
harshly)
Aztecs allowed cultural variety VS
Inca mandated conquered peoples
learn Quechua
Animistic religions
Ruled by powerful central
monarchs
No draft animals for labor
Major Linguistic Groups in North America
Peoples of the Americas
• Great variety; adapt to region
• Only two large states/empires
formed
• Aztecs and Inca
• Weakened by European
contact
• Long distance/regional trade
common
• By 1500: 200 languages
• Agriculturalists; nomads
• Communities are technologically
behind Europeans, Chinese, Arabs
QUICK REVIEW QUESTION
What similarities do the Aztecs and Inca
have?
What differences?