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Download Pre-Columbian Civilizations in the Americas
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The Americas on the Eve of Invasion AP Chapter 11 Major Pre-Columbian Civilizations Postclassic Mesoamerica 1000-1500 A.D. Mayan civilization gone by 8th century Chichen-Itza Observatory Chichen-Itza - Ball Court Mayan Cultivation of Maize Chac, God of Rain --> Mayan Glyphs Rise of Aztecs Toltecs collapsed by 1150 Aztecs (Mexica) arrive by 14th century Founded Tenochtitlan Dominant power by 1434 Lands of the Aztecs Aztec View of Tenochtitlan Aztec Society Driven by expansion and conquest Stratified society under ruler People chosen to serve the gods Human Sacrifice Military-class – supplied war captives for sacrifice Means of political terror Moctezuma II - civil and religious power Heart Sacrifice on an Aztec Temple Pyramid Wall of Skulls, Tenochtitlan Sacrificial Statue, Tenochtitlan Religion and Conquest Hundreds of gods Three major divisions – Fertility (agriculture, maize, water) – Creator deities: (warrior sun, night) – Warfare and sacrifice: Huizilopochtli becomes top deity (sun god that drew strength from sacrifice) Economy Conquered pay food as tribute State-controlled: tribute, markets, commodities highly regulated Innovations: chinampas (floating islands) allowed multiple yearly crops Aztec Chinampa or Floating Garden: 15ft. to 30ft. wide Social Gulf Widens Noble class controlled military and priesthood Military linked to cult of sacrifice New class of serfs developed Society becomes more stratified Roles of Women Worked fields and household Weaving Arranged marriages Inherited property - politically and socially subordinate Empire Built on Tribute Tribute and sacrifice drove conquest Domination not direct control Rise of nobility, terror and tribute contributed to collapse Aztec Writing Aztec Math Lands of the Incas The Inca Conquest by 1520’s from Columbia to Chile “Split inheritance” drives conquest Sun god represented by ruler Temple of the Sun in Cuzco Cuzco: Ancient Capital of the Inca (11,000 ft. above sea level) Imperial Rule Provincial governors Bureaucracy Local rulers Redistributive economy Gender Cooperation “Complementary” ideology Senior wife links state to moon (cosmology) Machu Picchu Incan Suspension Bridges Incan Terrace Farming Incan Ceramic Jars Peanut Cacao God Potato Cacao Pod Squash The Quipu: An Incan Database Inca Gold & Silver Aztecs and Incas Similarities Built on earlier empires Excellent organizers Intensive agriculture under state control Redistributive economy Kinship transformed to hierarchy Ethnic groups allowed to survive Differences Aztecs have better developed trade, markets