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The Valley of Mexico, a mountain basin about 7,500 feet above sea level, served as the home base of...

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AZTECS CONTROL CENTRAL AMERICA
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Page 1: The Valley of Mexico, a mountain basin about 7,500 feet above sea level, served as the home base of several powerful cultures.  The valley had several.

AZTECS CONTROL CENTRAL AMERICA

Page 2: The Valley of Mexico, a mountain basin about 7,500 feet above sea level, served as the home base of several powerful cultures.  The valley had several.

THE VALLEY OF MEXICO The Valley of Mexico, a mountain basin

about 7,500 feet above sea level, served as the home base of several powerful cultures.

The valley had several large, shallow lakes at it center, accessible resources and fertile soil.

Page 3: The Valley of Mexico, a mountain basin about 7,500 feet above sea level, served as the home base of several powerful cultures.  The valley had several.

AN EARLY CITY-STATE The first major civilization of Central

Mexico was Teotihuacan, whose ruins lay just outside Mexico City.

At its peak in the 6th century, Teotihuacan had a population of between 150,000 and 200,000.

It became the center of a thriving trade network that extended far into Central America.

After centuries of growth, the city suddenly declined.

Page 4: The Valley of Mexico, a mountain basin about 7,500 feet above sea level, served as the home base of several powerful cultures.  The valley had several.
Page 5: The Valley of Mexico, a mountain basin about 7,500 feet above sea level, served as the home base of several powerful cultures.  The valley had several.

TOLTECS TAKE OVER After the fall of Teotihuacan, no single

group dominated Central Mexico for decades until around 900 when the Toltecs came to power.

The Toltecs were an extremely warlike people whose empire was based on conquest.

They worshipped a fierce war god who demanded blood and human sacrifice from his followers.

Page 6: The Valley of Mexico, a mountain basin about 7,500 feet above sea level, served as the home base of several powerful cultures.  The valley had several.

Around 1000 a Toltec ruler named Topiltzin tried to change the Toltec religion.

He called for the people to end human sacrifice and worship a different god, Quetzalcoatl or Feathered Serpent.

The followers of the war god rebelled and Topiltzin was sent into exile.

After his exile, Toltec power began to decline and by the 1200s their reign had ended.

The Story of Quetzalcoatl

Page 7: The Valley of Mexico, a mountain basin about 7,500 feet above sea level, served as the home base of several powerful cultures.  The valley had several.
Page 8: The Valley of Mexico, a mountain basin about 7,500 feet above sea level, served as the home base of several powerful cultures.  The valley had several.

THE AZTEC EMPIRE The Aztecs arrived in the Valley of

Mexico around 1200 C.E. The Aztecs, who were known as the

Mexica, were a poor, nomadic people from the harsh deserts of North Mexico.

They founded Tenochtitlan on an island in Lake Texcoco in 1325.

Page 9: The Valley of Mexico, a mountain basin about 7,500 feet above sea level, served as the home base of several powerful cultures.  The valley had several.
Page 10: The Valley of Mexico, a mountain basin about 7,500 feet above sea level, served as the home base of several powerful cultures.  The valley had several.

AZTECS GROW STRONGER Over the years, the Aztecs gradually

increased in strength and number. In 1428 they joined with Texcoco and

Tlacopan to form the Triple Alliance. By the early 1500s, they controlled a

vast empire that stretched from Central Mexico to the Atlantic and Pacific coasts and south into Oaxaca.

Page 11: The Valley of Mexico, a mountain basin about 7,500 feet above sea level, served as the home base of several powerful cultures.  The valley had several.

NOBLES RULE AZTEC SOCIETY Military leaders held great power and

with government officials and priests, they formed the noble class.

Commoners included merchants, artisans, soldiers and farmers who owned their own land.

Enslaved persons, who were captives, were at the bottom.

The emperor was at the top and had absolute power.

Page 12: The Valley of Mexico, a mountain basin about 7,500 feet above sea level, served as the home base of several powerful cultures.  The valley had several.

RELIGION RULES AZTEC LIFE Religion played a major role in Aztec

society and the Aztecs had about 1,000 gods.

Aztec religious practices centered on elaborate public ceremonies designed to communicate with the gods and win their favor.

The most important rituals involved a sun god, Huitzilopochtli.

He made the sun rise every day and required human blood for nourishment.

Page 13: The Valley of Mexico, a mountain basin about 7,500 feet above sea level, served as the home base of several powerful cultures.  The valley had several.
Page 14: The Valley of Mexico, a mountain basin about 7,500 feet above sea level, served as the home base of several powerful cultures.  The valley had several.

Sacrificial victims included enslaved persons, criminals and people offered as tribute.

Prisoners of war were the preferred victims and as a result priests needed a steady supply of war captives.

The Aztecs often went to war not to conquer new lands but to capture prisoners for sacrifice.

Page 15: The Valley of Mexico, a mountain basin about 7,500 feet above sea level, served as the home base of several powerful cultures.  The valley had several.

PROBLEMS IN THE AZTEC EMPIRE In 1502 a new ruler, Montezuma II, was

crowned emperor and under him the empire would began to weaken.

With the population of Tenochtitlan ever greater, Montezuma II called for even more tribute and sacrifices.

A number of provinces rose up against Aztec oppression and this began a period of unrest and rebellion.

Page 16: The Valley of Mexico, a mountain basin about 7,500 feet above sea level, served as the home base of several powerful cultures.  The valley had several.

Over time Montezuma II tried to lessen the pressure on the provinces.

He reduced the demand for tribute payment by cutting the number of officials.

But resentment continued to grow and many Aztecs began to predict that terrible things were about to happen.

The most worrying event was the arrival of the Spanish.

For many Aztecs, these fair-skinned, bearded strangers from across the sea brought to mind the legend of the return of Quetzalcoatl.

Page 17: The Valley of Mexico, a mountain basin about 7,500 feet above sea level, served as the home base of several powerful cultures.  The valley had several.

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