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Aztecs: Facts And History About The Ancient And Powerful Mesoamerican Civilization From Aztlán

Aztecs: Facts And History About The Ancient And Powerful Mesoamerican Civilization From Aztlán

MessageToEagle.com – The Aztecs said they came from a mythical place called Aztlán.  The Aztecs were one of the world’s greatest civilizations and they created an empire that stretched over vast territories.

Aztec warriors were fearsome and cruel and warfare was the driving force of the Aztecs’ economy and religion. The Aztec empire is long gone, but the legacy of these interesting ancient people is still alive and we can admire remarkable buildings and ruins they left behind.

In this article we examine facts and history about the Aztecs, one of the greatest ancient civilizations of Mesoamerica.

Aztlán – The Mythical Homeland Of The Aztecs

The Aztecs, the Aztecs, also called Mexicas believe they came from a place called Aztlán, (also spelled Aztlan or sometimes Aztalan). In the Nahua language, Aztlan means “the Place of Whiteness” or “the Place of the Heron”.  Researchers have long debated whether Aztlán was a real place or simply a myth.

Nahuatl myths tell that seven tribes lived in Chicomoztoc, or “the place of the seven caves”. Each cave represented a different Nahua group: the Xochimilca, Tlahuica, Acolhua, Tlaxcalteca, Tepaneca, Chalca, and Mexica. When the tribes left the caves, they created a settlement “near” Aztlán.

The seven caves of Chicomoztoc, from Historia Tolteca-Chichimeca. Image credit: Wikipedia

According to the myth, the Aztects left Aztlan guided by one of their gods until they arrived in the Texcoco Lake, in what’s now Mexico City, where they founded Tenochtitlan, the capital of the Aztec empire, in the year 1325.

The Aztec migration is and their original homeland Aztlán is several codexes, in particular, the codex Boturini o Tira de la Peregrinacion as well as Spanish chroniclers including Bernal Diaz del Castillo, Diego Duran, and Bernardino de Sahagun.

The Aztecs were by no means the first civilization to create cities in Mexico, a country with an ancient history that goes back 20,000 years. Before the Aztecs, there were the cultures of Teotihuacan, Monte Alban, Palenque, and Tajin.

In the 14th century, the Aztecs began a large expansion and they conquered lands in Mexico and Mesoamerica through wars.

Fearsome Aztec Eagle Warriors And Jaguar Warriors Of Mesoamerica

The Aztecs were not peaceful people. Warfare played a central role in their society and was the driving force of their economy and religion. The Aztec army’s secret to success was good organization and well-trained and determined warriors who had a large variety of offensive and defensive weapons.

Aztec Jaguar and Eagle Warrior

The Aztec Eagle Warriors and Jaguar Warriors were without doubt some of the most skilled and feared fighting forces of the ancient world. For 200 years, they were the most dominant and terrifying warrior force in Mesoamerica. They created a huge and ruthless empire. All went well, until they came face to face with an enemy even stronger than themselves, an enemy they could never conquer. This devastating encounter was the beginning of the end. When the Spaniards arrived in the early 16th century, the Aztecs ruled over 370 small city-states that paid tribute in goods to Tenochtitlan, the capital of the Aztec empire.

Aztec Society

Aztec society was very complex. It was socially divided between the nobility and the populace. The nobles included the ruler, the priests, and the military, all of whom had privileges and did not pay taxes. The poorer people had to work as painters, poets, sculptors, peasants, doctors, or architects. They attended schools to learn their trades and received military training to be prepared for wars. They also attended schools to learn about religion, music, and their language, the Nahuatl.

Much of the Aztec society was based on agriculture. To improve their agriculture, the Aztecs built so-called chinampas. These were small, artificial islands created on a freshwater lake. The chinampas resembled floating gardens.

Chinampas were artificial islands created by the Aztecs to improve agriculture.

Chinampas were used throughout the Valley of Mexico around the lake bed and were without doubt one of the reasons why Aztec’s farming became famous.

See also:

Florentine Codex: Remarkable Manuscripts About Life Of The Aztecs

Xochicalco: Stunning Ruins Of Sacred City Linked To Maya and Aztecs Civilizations

What Is The Codex Mendoza?

More About Ancient History

Like most ancient civilizations, the Aztecs used slaves for a variety of tasks. However, ancient historical records show that slaves in the Aztec Empire had much broader rights than slaves in almost any other society in human history.

Slavery in the Aztec Empire was very different from what Europeans of the same period established in their colonies.

Aztec Religion And Body Modification

Aztecs worshipped a number of gods. Their two most important deities were Huitzilopochtli, the god of war, and Tlaloc, the god of rain.  Religion was every important to the Aztecs and it had elements of human sacrifice in connection with a large number of religious festivals which were held according to patterns of the Aztec calendar. The Sun Stone (Stone of the Five Eras), or sometimes (erroneously) called Aztec calendar stone was rediscovered during repairs in Mexico City.

Aztec Sun Stone

The sculpted motifs that cover the surface of the stone refer to main elements of the Mexica cosmogony.

In the center of the monolith, there is a depiction of the solar deity, Tonatiuh, holding a human heart in each of his clawed hands, and his tongue is represented by a stone sacrificial knife (Tecpatl). The four squares surrounding the central deity represent the four previous suns (or eras), 4 Movement (Nahuatl: Nahui Ollin). Each era ended with the destruction of the world and humanity, which were then recreated in the next era.

The Aztecs believed that when the solar and sacred cycles fell on the same day, the universe was in great danger. So every 52 years, they performed an elaborate ceremony of human sacrifice.
Many Mesoamerican civilizations practiced body modification, often for ritual or ceremonial purposes. Body modification was a symbol of power among the Aztec rulers. Archaeologists have discovered ancient labrets that the Aztecs pierced through the lower lip. These labrets were in most cases made of gold and in the shape of a serpent.

Aztecs believed that blood was very important because the spirit essence of man existed in his blood, which also explains all the blood sacrifices they performed. To the Aztecs, body alteration was also considered an important part of movement between major life stages.

The Fall Of The Great Aztec Empire

During their time, the Aztecs were one of the world’s greatest civilizations. With a population of about 200,000 people, the Aztec capital Tenochtitlan was one of the world’s largest cities in the 16th century.

The Aztecs called their ruler the Huey Tlatoani, the highest political, military and religious leader. This person spoke in both the divine and human realms. The city-states of the Aztec Empire each had their own Huey Tlatoani with the ultimate power.

Aztec Empire

The Aztecs were defeated by the Spaniards. Moctezuma II was the emperor who first confronted — and succumbed to — Hernan Cortes. When the Spaniards landed in 1519 in what is today Veracruz, the local people there, the Totonacas, complained to conquistador Hernan Cortes that they were subjugated by Moctezuma, the señor of Tenochtitlan. When Cortes heard this, he promised that they would be freed from paying tribute if they become their allies to overthrow Moctezuma.

An independent republic called Tlaxcallan in what is now central Mexico was founded in the mid-13th century and, by 1500, was effectively surrounded by the Aztec Empire, but never lost its independence.  Researchers who studied the history of Tlaxcallan discovered there were many complex international relations in the region. In fact, Tlaxcallan supported Cortés and played a critical role in the Spanish Conquest of Mexico in the 16th century.

There is a myth that 800 Spaniards managed to defeat the whole Aztec empire. It’s not entirely true.

The Spaniards defeated the whole Aztec empire but with help of thousands of indigenous people who wanted to get rid of Aztec rule.

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