Friday, August 2, 2019
Aztecs, Incas, and Toltecs
The Americas on the Eve of Invasion I. Introduction A. By 1500, Americas densely populated by Indians ââ¬â misnomer ââ¬â Columbus/Indies 1. Term has meaning only when used to apply to non-Indians B. Mesoamerica and Andean heartland 1. Imperial states in place when Europe arrives 2. Few areas influenced by two main centers 3. Areas that developed independently II. Postclassic Mesoamerica A. Introduction 1. Toltecs/Aztecs replace Mayas of 8th century CE a. By 15th century Aztecs created extensive empire ââ¬â war, religion, agrarian 2. Downfall of Mayans ââ¬â Teotihuacan a. Nomads from North come down . Toltec Culture ââ¬â 968 established capital Tula 1. Sedentary/agrarian peoples with militaristic ethic 2. Cult of sacrifice/war 3. Aztecs saw Toltecs as givers of civilizationB. The Toltec Heritage 1. Leader Topilitzin followed Quetzalcoatl ââ¬â feathered serpent 2. Empire spread over much of central Mexico 3. 1000 Conquered Chichen Itza ââ¬â Mayans under cont rol of Toltecs 4. Toltec influence northward a. Trade turquoise with American Southwest b. How far ââ¬â to Mississippi/Ohio ââ¬â debatable evidence 1. Stepped temples ââ¬â Monkââ¬â¢s Mound 2. Ritual sacrifice 3. pottery 4. Social stratification . Large city ââ¬â Cahokia could handle 30,000 people C. The Aztec Rise to Power ââ¬â eagle with serpent on cactus 1. Geography ââ¬â aquatic environment ââ¬â chinampas a. Aztecs/Mexicas won control of lake b. Nomadic tribes or agricultural culture 2. Political structure ââ¬â centralized city with tributary city-states 3. Military ââ¬â tough warriors/fanatic followers of religion 4. 1428 emerged as independent power D. The Aztec Social Contract 1. Subject peoples a. Pay tribute, surrender lands, military service b. King civil power/god on earth 2. Stratified society a. Histories rewritten 3.Human sacrifice ââ¬â cult of military class supplying war captives as sacrifices E. Religion and the Ideology of Conquest 1. Incorporated features from past Mesoamerican religions a. Little distinction between world of gods and natural world b. Deities ââ¬â fire, rain, water, corn, sky, sun ââ¬â pantheon 1. Gods of fertility/agriculture 2. Creator deities 3. Warfare and sacrifice c. Female form for all gods 2. Yearly festivals/ceremonies a. Expansive calendar 3. Sacrifice ââ¬â to energize the sun god ââ¬â needed nourishment of human blood a. Types and frequency/degree changed with Aztecs ââ¬â borrowed from Toltec . religious conviction vs. political control 4. Religious questions ââ¬â afterlife, good life, do gods exist 5. Art has flowers/birds/song and blood F. Tenochtitlan: The Foundation of Heaven 1. Metropois ââ¬â central zone of palaces/whitewashed temples 2. Adobe brick residential districts 3. Larger houses for nobility 4. Zoos, gardens for king 5. Geographically connected to island by four causeways 6. Calpulli ruled neighborhoods G. Feeding the People: The Economy of the Empire 1. Mass population needed to be fed a. Tribute b. Irrigated agriculture ââ¬â chinampas ââ¬â floating islands 1. 20,000 acres 2.High crop yields ââ¬â 4 times a year ââ¬â corn/maize 2. Trade a. Regular intervals to market b. Barter or cacao beans/gold for currency c. Pochteca ââ¬â long distance trade 3. State controlled distribution of tribute a. Primarily redistributed to nobility III. Aztec Society in Transition A. Widening Social Gulf 1. Life based on calpulli (neighborhood) groups a. Governed by council of family heads 2. Nobility came from heads of calpullis 3. Military leaders based on success in taking captives a. Ritual warfare ââ¬â uniforms 4. As society grew, widening social disparity ââ¬â no longer egalitarian (hmmmâ⬠¦where have I seen this pattern before? a. Scribes, artisans, healers between peasants and nobility 5. Butâ⬠¦competition not between social classes, but between corporate groups B. Overcoming Technologic al Constraints 1. Role of women ââ¬â relatively equal, but subordinate to men a. Peasant women ââ¬â fields, child-rearing b. Revered as weavers c. Polygamy among nobility, monogamy among poor d. Could inherit property 2. Limits of technology a. Women ââ¬â six hours a day grinding corn/maize 1. Couldnââ¬â¢t be freed from 30-40 hours of preparing food 3. Controlled vast number of people amazingly ââ¬â 1. 5 million to 25 million C.A Tribute Empire 1. Most power in hands of Aztec ruler and chief advisor a. ââ¬Å"electedâ⬠from best siblings of royal family 2. As time passed, ritual sacrifice/military dominated all elements of life 3. City-states ââ¬â as long as they made tribute ââ¬â they could have autonomy 4. Weaknesses a. Rise of nobles altered dynamics b. Society based on system of terror 5. By 1500, Aztec society was in the down, military period ââ¬â height far earlier IV. Twantinsuyu: World of the Incas A. Inca Empire ââ¬â Twantinsuyu â⬠â highly centralized 1. Integrated various ethnic groups 2. Irrigated agriculture 3.Incorporated elements of previous civilizations ââ¬â agriculture/religion/metallurgy 4. Introduction a. Genius for state organization/bureaucratic control b. When central authority broke down, regional leaders took over i. war between rival chiefdoms B. The Inca Rise to Power 1. Inca ââ¬Å"rulerâ⬠ââ¬â military alliances and campaigns to take over 2. Subsequent rulers with names youââ¬â¢ll never remember expanded and consolidated land a. Between 9 and 13 million people under rule C. Conquest and Religion 1. Reason for conquest a. economic gain b. political power 2. religion ââ¬â cult of ancestors a. deceased rulers mummified . split inheritance a. leaderââ¬â¢s power goes to successor b. leaderââ¬â¢s property goes to male family 4. political and social life related to religion a. holy shrines ââ¬â stones, mountains, rivers, caves, tombs ââ¬â huacas 1. Prayers/human sacrifices b. Temple of the Sun ââ¬â center of state religion D. The Techniques of Inca Imperial Rule 1. Leader/inca considered a god 2. Court also temple 3. Four provinces ruled by governor, power then divided further a. Local rulers could remain autonomous if they were loyal 4. All nobles played role in state bureaucracy a. Nobles gained privileges, had a lot to lose b.Could wear large ear spools ââ¬â orejones ââ¬â gee thanks 5. Spread language ââ¬â unified 6. System of roads with way stations ââ¬â tambos ââ¬â one day apart 7. For labor, people benefited from large, expensive work projects ââ¬â only central govââ¬â¢t can provide a. State-sponsored irrigation made cultivation possible 8. Instead of tribute, they wanted labor 9. Relation between men and wome a. Needed to stay close b. Women link to the moon 10. Downfall a. Marriage alliances created rivals for the throne ââ¬â ahhhâ⬠¦that whole succession problem rears its ugly head E. Inca Cul tural Achievements 1. Art ââ¬â built on styles of predecessor peoples . Metallurgy ââ¬â gold/silver/bronze, copper b. Pottery/cloth 2. Butâ⬠¦No system of writingâ⬠¦No wheel 2. Math a. Knotted strings quipo to count 3. Infrastructure ââ¬â greatest achievement a. land/water management b. extensive road systems c. Architecture and public buildings d. Terraced farming on steep slopes F. Comparing Incas and Aztecs aka ââ¬Å"if you forget everything else, remember thisâ⬠1. But first, before we get startedâ⬠¦look at the words used in this section a. No reallyâ⬠¦look at the words used b. They start with words like ââ¬Å"althoughâ⬠, or ââ¬Å"bothâ⬠c. Itââ¬â¢s just beautiful how the reader can make connections . In fact, my eyes are filling a little misty a. This is one of the best Comparative Analysis Essays Iââ¬â¢ve ever seen in your Stearns book, and after 14 chapters of taking notes, Iââ¬â¢m starting to i. feel like Stearns is like a brother, an older brother, but a brother ii. butâ⬠¦I digressâ⬠¦letââ¬â¢s get back to it 3. Similarities a. Represented military and imperial organization success b. Controlled circulation of goods c. Agricultural based with a food surplus d. Nobles became more important than local leaders e. Allowed for diversity as long as authority f. Empires acquired by conquest of sedentary peoples . Belief systems, cosmology similar roots h. Both couldnââ¬â¢t survive shock of conquest i. Your book says they do survive the conquest, but I beg to differ, they were split up into small little regions ii. But, I will accept that they carried on the culture 4. However ââ¬Å"We cannot overlook the great DIFFERENCESâ⬠a. Aztecs have better trade and markets b. First, there quite similar, variations of same system c. Metallurgy, writing systems, hierarchy i. Ummmâ⬠¦bookâ⬠¦could you give us some specifics d. Overallâ⬠¦this section does a horrible job discussing differenc es V. Other Indians A.How to differentiate ââ¬â based on degree of social order/material culture/political structure 1. Diversity based on geographical factors 2. Not all agriculture based B. How many Indians? 1. If you guessed 14,375,421, you were wrong 2. Between 8. 4 million and 112 million ââ¬â Gee thanksâ⬠¦thatââ¬â¢s real close i. Numbers changed due to a. Understanding of impact of disease b. archaeological studies c. improved estimates of agricultural techniques 3. Europe about the same size as the Americas ââ¬â population wise C. Differing Cultural Patterns 1. Basicallyâ⬠¦itââ¬â¢s hard to say there is just one type of ââ¬Å"Indianâ⬠. Some hunted, some gathered, some farmed, some did a mixture ii. Some had huge class divisions, some were more egalitarian iii. Most lived in small kin-ship based groups 2. North America extremely diverse i. Some lived in cliffs, towns or teepees ii. Agricultural unless farming too tough, then hunter gatherers 3. Similar to Europe/Asia i. Kin based societies ii. Communal owning of property iii. Women subordinate, but some had high positions 4. Part of ecological system, not controlling it ââ¬Å"You think you own whatever land you land onâ⬠¦earth is just a dead thing you can claim, but I knowâ⬠¦Ã¢â¬ D. American Indian Diversity in World Context 1. Paradox ââ¬â wealthy/accomplished civilizations, but ââ¬Å"primitiveâ⬠to Europe 2. Butâ⬠¦how much is the difference based on lack ofâ⬠¦ i. wheel ii. large pack animals iii. metal tools iv. written language 3. They developed, just differently E. Global Connections 1. Isolation prevented diffusion of ideas ââ¬â itââ¬â¢s not bad, just the reality 2. Lacks world religions, large domesticated animals (yesâ⬠¦they had guinea pigs) 3. Not immune to diseases 4. Lacked ironworking F. Iââ¬â¢m tired, and Iââ¬â¢m going to bed
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.