Ancient Civilizations of Latin America
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Transcript Ancient Civilizations of Latin America
Latin America
Civilizations of Latin America
Maya
Inca
250-900 AD
1438-1533 AD
Aztec
1325-1521 AD
Maya
Location: Yucatan Peninsula
– Modern day Guatemala
Maya
Government
– Series of city-states
– Each with its own King
• No single unified empire.
– Nobles and Priests were below the King in
social order but helped run the city-state.
Maya
Religion
– Polytheistic
Mayan lightning God
• Gods controlled nature.
• Priests performed rituals and ceremonies
to please the Gods.
– Without such ceremonies Mayans believed the
Gods would send drought, storms, or other
natural disasters.
pok-a-tok• Large stone, square court.
• Similar to basketball –ball through a
hoop
• Ball – size of a softball
– When nobles played the game,
depending on who won, priests
interpreted the result as a message
from God.
Maya
Achievements
– Architecture
– As seen in their buildings
– System of writing
– Hieroglyphics – to record
historical and religious
events.
– Mayan Calender
– 365 ¼ Day Calender –
most accurate during the
time.
– The concept of “0”
Maya
Decline and Fall
– 800-900
No one is sure the exact reason for decline
Theories:
– Disease weakened the empire
– War weakened the empire
– High taxes led to a revolt by peasants
Aztec
Location: Central Plateau of Mexico
– Modern day Mexico
Tenochtitlan
•Center of the Aztec Empire
•Largest city in the world (1500 AD)
•150,000 population
Lake Texcoco surrounded Tenochtitlan
Tenochtitlan
Chinampas
method of ancient MesoAmerican agriculture which
used small, rectangle-shaped areas of fertile arable
land to grow crops on the shallow lake beds in the
Valley of Mexico.
Aztec
Government
– 1 ruler
• Chosen by a small group of priests
Aztecs
– Conquered over 500 city-states
– Left rulers of city-states in place
– City-states were to pay “tributes” or taxes to the main Aztec empire
• Taxes included:
–
–
–
–
Gold
Maize
Tobacco
Precious stones
Aztec
Religion
– Human Sacrifice
• To please the Gods
• Typically captives from war or warriors.
– Quetzalcoatl
• Chief God
Quetzalcoatl
Chief God
– Believed to have
brought maize (corn)
to earth.
• Took the form of a bearded
white man. Tried to give the
Aztec priests a new religion
that ended human sacrifice.
Other priests believed the end
of human sacrifice would
anger the Gods, so they
banished Quetzalcoatl.
Aztec
Achievements
– Educated men and
women
– Civics
– History
– Religion
• Men
• Art of war
• Women
• Homemaking
– 365 Day Calendar
– Hieroglyphics
– Pyramids
Spanish Motives for Conquering Aztecs and Incas
Wealth
Convert Indians to Christianity
Aztec
Decline and Fall
– Conquistador – Spanish conqueror
– Conquistador Hernan Cortez arrives in
Mexico in 1519.
– 400 soldiers
– 16 horses
– 14 cannons
• Marched on Tenochtitlan
– A city of 200,000 – 250,000
Montezuma
Leader of the Aztec Empire
Reluctant to fight:
– Possibly believed Cortez was
Quetzalcoatl
– Cortez won allies with people the
Aztecs had conquered.
– Smallpox and other European
diseases killed thousands of Aztecs.
Additional Spanish Advantages
Rode horses
• (Aztec had never seen horses)
– Metal armor
– Muskets
– Cannons
Inca
Location: Cuzco –
capital
– Fertile Valley of the
Andes
– Empire stretched
2,500 miles
Included:
–
–
–
–
Peru
Bolivia
Chile
Ecuador
Cuzco
Capital of the Inca Empire
Inca
Government
Inca emperor owned all the land,
mines, and wealth of the empire.
• Aids: Nobles; Priests
– People:
• Were told what jobs to do.
– Peasants
• Assigned a plot of land to farm
• Taxed were collected on their crops.
Inca
Religion
Polytheistic
Chief God = Sun God
– Inca translates to “children of the sun”
– Royal family believed to be descendants of
the Sun God
– Gold was believed to be the sweat of the
Gods.
Inca
Achievements
– Communications network.
• Runners helped carry news across the
empire.
• Used a network of roads (built by an
earlier people)
• Route for:
– Armies
– Messages
• It was even paved!
Chasqui
Runner that delivered messages
Quipu – knotted string that helped transmit
messages (carried by Chasqui)
Inca
Decline and Fall - 1533
– Conquered by Francisco Pizarro
– Atahualpa
• Inca leader
• Captured and killed by Pizarro
Spanish Success
Spanish were out numbered
– 80,000 to 186
– How did the Spanish win?
• Technology
• Germs (smallpox)