Les Civilisations perdues : Les Aztèques

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The so-called pre-Columbian civilizations are those that developed in Central and South America prior to the arrival of Christopher Columbus in 1492. The best known among them are the Inca, Aztecs, and Maya civilizations. However, not much is left of the Aztec cities since the capital Tenochtitlan was destroyed by the conquistadors and covered by the Colonial Center of Mexico City. The site of Teotihuacan, 50 kilometers from Mexico, is the last remaining vestige excluding the Codex. The research on the civilization is thus based on the Codex. Books painted by the Aztecs themselves, and the writings of the conquistadors, like Hermán Cortés and chroniclers from the 16th and 17th century. Most of them were made before the late 16th century. They depict objects, characters, and shapes in line with the very specific conventions they put concepts into imagery. Here, for example, the billow emanating from a character's mouth symbolizes speech. What we know about the Aztecs is that they were first nomads. They settled in the Mexico Valley in the early 16th century. From their capital, they erected an empire conquering neighboring lands and forming alliances with other city-states. Aztec civilization was a latecomer on the pre-Columbian scene, and its own culture was linked to older traditions. The Aztecs arrived on the high central plateau in the 13th century or at the beginning of the 14th according to the translations of the text. In fact, it is a group of migrants who probably came from the northwesterner confines of West America. Through their war-like qualities, and a system of alliances mostly but not only matrimonial they came to establish themselves as the head of all the other cities and take power. This is a small group of migrants who arrive from the north and pass the capital city of Tula, the Toltec capital. They stay there for a certain time. This trip to Tula is extremely important because the Aztecs are able to obtain a form of Mesoamerican legitimacy. Like the Teotihuacan, Aztecs themselves claim to be the heirs of Teotihuacan. They arrived from the north of the Basin and will enter a valley where there are many lakes. This is a region that is very favorable for agriculture and for human settlement. It has been highly populated for a long time. They try to find a place to settle. They will clash with the cities on the banks. Some of these cities will hire them as mercenaries to take advantage of their warlike qualities. That quickly turns bad since the Aztecs are known for their brutality. This is what the texts say, and for practicing outrageous human sacrifices. For these reasons, they are chased from all the cities on the banks and they are forced to seek refuge on a tiny island located in the center of Lake Texcoco. This is where they will discover a sign sent to them by their main deity, Huitzilopochtli, God of the sun and war. This sign is an eagle perched on a cactus in the middle of devouring, according to the traditions, a prickly pear, the fruit of the cactus, which is a symbolic representation of the human heart. The Spanish tell us that it is a serpent, which would be the equivalent of evil in Western thought. They decide that it is here that the gods tell them to establish their temple. The Aztecs believe they were created by the winged snake God called Quetzalcoatl, who descended into the underworld of the dead and sprayed the bones of the ancestors with his own blood to bring them back to life. It is known for excavations that the Island was in evidence before the arrival of the Aztecs. Certainly not very popular, but the Aztecs did not move into a completely unpopulated area. The city, Tenochtitlan, the Aztec capital was created in the middle of the lake. This will cause challenges for urban planning in terms of control of the level of the lake's waters, because it is a region where it rains a lot in the rainy season. On the other hand, the dry season is very long, with the due variation of life which they will have to manage. The Aztecs will develop highly complex systems of locks and aqueducts to bring drinking water to the island and construct a lakeside city, which at the moment of the conquest will amaze the Spaniards with its beauty, its cleanliness, and the organization of its neighborhood. The Aztecs used writing, knew how to make paper and practiced astronomy. Trade was very developed throughout the empire and the capital held huge markets. At first, they control very little. Indeed, they are surrounded by enemies. As soon as they create their dynasty, they request that one of the cities on the banks to give them a sovereign. This is a way for them to gain a kind of legitimacy in the basin of Mexico. After that, both by war, especially with the Totonac, but also through a system of alliances, as the Texcoco, they will gradually succeed in establishing alliances. There was a major turning point in 1428, with the creation of a triple alliance. A mutual aid agreement between the City of Texcoco, the City of Tenochtitlan, and a City of Tiacopan on the western side of the basin of Mexico. This military treaty signed between these three cities, but allow the expansion of the empire outside of the basin of Mexico. The Aztecs will quickly take the lead of this triple alliance, practically to the point of dominating the other cities. The purpose of the Aztec expansion is mainly economic, as it will allow the population of Tenochtitlan to benefit from a certain prosperity. The Aztecs will develop their own political entity. From the founding to the beginning of the expansion in control of the basin of Mexico. They're forced to rely on other allies up to the formation of the Aztec empire that the Spanish will encounter. The Aztecs claim a double origin, which you find elsewhere in the text. The Huntawoi is in the north and the sedentary farmers in the Basin of Mexico. This represents the two economic bases of the empire, the two great social categories, the producers, and the predators. They're the warriors who deal with the tribes. Gradually, the Aztecs will take control of the entire south of the Basin and all the areas of raised fields or Chinampas which are particularly richer culturally. Thus the Aztecs practice a political expansion which is not based solely on religious or military criteria, but economically. From 1420 or 1430, the Aztec expansion leaves the Basin of Mexico and does so by a policy. It seems highly calculated. The Aztecs take control of the bordering regions little by little and the conquests accumulate progressively until the arrival of the Spaniards. That is to say that the Aztec policy of expansion truly aimed to control an entire collection of territories in order to acquire riches like cotton, cocoa, marine resources, etc. The expansion is increasingly led by Mexico City. That is to say, Tenochtitlan, the two other allies taking a progressively secondary place. We are facing an expanding empire with territories under its control. At first, we talked about an Aztec empire, but then we took a step back saying that it was a more or less uncertain expansion, and to speak of an empire was a little audacious. The latest works seem to show that there's a policy of expansion that is quite organized and structured and meets specific goals. The capital, Tenochtitlan, was one of the biggest cities in the world with more than 200,000 people. Progressively, the city-state became the most powerful on the central plateau of Mexico. It first dominated the Mexico Valley, then progressively extended its influence from the Gulf of Mexico to the Pacific Ocean Coast. The Aztecs, to affirm the superiority into better integrating themselves, assimilated preexisting cultures with their own. They claim to be the descendants of the Toltec. In the legends, the Toltec are said to be at the origin of all civilizations. They are called the Master Builders. The later Aztec civilization thus thought of the Toltec as their predecessors, on both an intellectual and cultural level. Immediately before the Aztecs there were the Toltecs. We know today that it is a population that developed between 950 and 1,250 at least, and that Tula is their capital. Historical tradition makes it so that later populations of the Basin of Mexico always refer to the Toltecs as the great founders. At the moment, when the Aztecs take power on the Basin of Mexico, at the beginning of the 15th century, there was only 100 years before the arrival of the Spaniards. During this period, an entire tradition is put into place which values the ancient cities in which the Aztecs would take their place and their continuity. At the same time, their community clearly mark their differences and just say that they came from somewhere else. The Aztecs took over the abandoned Toltec city of Teotihuacan. This site is the only physical trace that remains of the Aztec and was not even built by them. Only Tenochtitlan, the capital, was their work, but it disappeared under the foundations of Mexico City. At Teotihuacan, which is the most famous pre-Columbian city-state, it is clear that the word Toltec refers to master builders. When the Aztecs arrived here, they saw it too. Its ruins are located about 50 kilometers northeast of Mexico City. The city reached its peak glory between 150 and 450 A.D. It then had a population of over 150,000. Teotihuacan civilization was very close to the Mayan civilization and strongly influenced the populations that later appeared in Mexico, like the Aztec. Teotihuacan at the moment when the city emerges is already the fruit of a long history and people have settled. They've become great farmers with an economy based on the growth of corn in particular. Little by little, they will give birth to this city, which in the space of one or two centuries will become this great metropolis, the greatest political and economic power in all of Mexico. The city was designed around a central access, the avenue of the dead. On either side of the avenue stand pyramids and temples devoted to the gods. It is divided into four quadrants. It is the symbolic representation of the world on a horizontal plane. Note the absence of all military structures and fortifications within the city. Teotihuacan was abandoned in the seventh century, perhaps following a revolt of the people against the leading class. We are well aware that this city has lasted for seven centuries and has known many changes. Do not think that it is the moment frozen in time. There are monuments that are built, that are expanded and others that are destroyed. The cities moved, operated, and developed in an extraordinary way. What remains a great mystery for the archaeologists is the way in which it collapses, disappearing completely during the seventh century until scientists uncovered it in our days. What is striking about the city of Teotihuacan is the urban plan, with a grid layer, built on a north, south and east, west access. It is structured around major monuments, including the pyramid of the moon and the pyramid of the sun. It shows a very strong political power capable of gathering more than 300,000 inhabitants in one place in a pre-industrial economy which is incredible. Above all, there must have been a coercive power, certainly very strong, so this urban plan remains strict to this point. We are facing a flourishing city which truly dominates Mesoamerica in the third and fourth centuries. From the sixth and seventh centuries onwards, the city will collapse, disappear, and be abandoned. Many causes have been suspected for the decline and disappearance of such a power. Currently, archaeologists attribute it to climate change, saying that a long drought possibly destabilized the agricultural economy of the region and that the agricultural region of Teotihuacan could no longer continue like his. We talked about foreign policy but this is something else. In fact, at the end of Teotihuacan, we see a certain number of buildings that are burned down. However, even here, strictly speaking, we have no trace of any civilization that was powerful enough to destroy Teotihuacan. We also talk about internal problems. One could imagine elites or other groups clashing in the interior of the city itself to the point of causing its implosion. In the end, it is certainly a combination of all these elements. Economic problems linked to the drought, internal political problems, and possibly some foreign aggressions that make it so that effectively at a given moment, the city disappears. This is how the Aztecs will discover this city at the time when they arrived in the basin of Mexico. They will discover it in ruins. Like many other political stories from around the world, they will finish by writing their own history and mythology on top of the previous site. They will give birth to their God at Teotihuacan which is one of the subtlest ways on the religious and economic level to join these new peoples with an already existing territory. We see fascinating things. The Aztecs themselves could act like archaeologists as they will unearth certain objects in Teotihuacan, including a very blue mask characteristic of the Toltec civilization. They will recover the Teotihuacan, bring it to the current location of Mexico City, their own capital, and hide it away in one of their own pyramids, like a relic of some sort. Coming from Tenochtitlan, their capital, on the other side of the lake, the Aztec found enough in the forgotten city to satisfy their ambitions. What must have increased on the land is the existence of these Great Pyramids that are turned back into hills, which are completely isolated in the middle of a plane will attract your attention. They knew perfectly well that there were ancient pyramids and temples. It was very close to their home, something like 40 kilometers away. It's completely logical that the Aztecs set a certain number of their origin myths and Teotihuacan itself. It's from Teotihuacan that the Aztecs thought the sun and the moon appeared in our world. The Aztecs were the first to conduct excavations in Teotihuacan to find offerings for the Templo Mayor in Mexico City, for example, because a certain number of the objects found are of the Teotihuacan style and were probably recovered from the site via excavations or looting. In any case, the Aztecs were eager to recover these elements which had a strong symbolic connotation for them in order to join in the tradition of the inhabitants of the region. The Aztec thus took over the site, its buildings and gods, as well as all the techniques used by their predecessors and integrated them into their own culture to make the new city evolve and develop. The pyramid is the support for a temple. That is to say, the summit of this which is flatter and less slender than the Egyptian pyramids, there lies a temple where a number of rituals are practiced including some human sacrifices. The symbolism of the pyramid is a form of representation of mountains. The churches around the site of Teotihuacan are considered vital places, sources of water, and are particularly honored by the ancient Mexicans. The city stretched out over 30 square kilometers. It started being built in the early pre-classic period around the year 300 B.C. The Pyramid of the Sun was completed in 150. To the north, the avenue of the dead leads to the pyramid of the moon, 46 meters high behind which rises an ancient volcano. There are two pyramids, that of the moon and the sun. Names that were given by the artists of the 19th century. They were built during the very first years of our era. The recent excavations, conducted at the Pyramid of the Moon in the north of the site, reveal a complex place. We could see from tunnels dug in this that was built in seven stages. In fact, there were seven successive pyramids. Each one a little larger than the last in the style of a Russian doll. Building upon the first small pyramid, a second was constructed. Then the third, the forth, up to the seventh, which is the one we can see today. These constructions were spread between the beginning of our era and the fourth century. Recent excavations are shown that are on the equation of these new constructions. The second has human and animal sacrifices as a kind of inauguration of the new buildings. The digs also revealed caches. Pits in which, in one case more than 15 people were decapitated or buried with their hands tied behind their backs. Elsewhere, we could find the skeletons of jaguars, wolves, and raptor, some of which were buried alive. All these accompanied by exceptional funeral offerings, obsidian knives, statuettes, and masks, which makes this discovery an exceptional event for the archaeological world, on the level of understanding these signs and their practice for human sacrifices. In front of the edifice is the moon Plaza, lined with platforms that conform to rigorous symmetry. The pyramid was devoted to the God of storms. The pyramid of the sun is 65 meters high. The pyramid of the sun is a pyramid orientated to the west, thus towards the setting sun. On the other side of the pyramid there is a door that gives access to a long tunnel that goes deep into the bowels of the pyramid and ends at a chamber designed like a flower with four petals, with four limbs which is located exactly below the platform at the summit of the pyramid. It is therefore thought that the pyramid was built to cover this cavity, which was the original site of worship in Teotihuacan. Unfortunately, this space was constantly visited, notably by the Aztecs. We find Aztec ceramics there. The Aztecs themselves probably practiced rituals there, so we don't know what occurred there originally. Were there funerals or high-ranking people in the hierarchy of Teotihuacan? Was there a spring? We don't know. It is a place has been too upset since ancient times, but it is certainly quite an important place for the rituals practice at the beginning of the Teotihuacan, underneath the pyramid of the sun. It is worth mentioning that grottoes played an important role in the Mesoamerican religion. They symbolize fertility, the site of man's creation, and also represent access to the underworld of the dead. At the intersection of the Avenue of the Dead and the great East-West Road stands a huge complex that archaeologists call the Citadel. From 150 AD, the Citadel became the nerve center of the city. It is the point where the two great avenues that oriented the entire city crossed. It is located in the southeast corner of the intersection. This is a great set of platforms that surround an enormous square in the center, in which there is the pyramid of the feathered serpent, Quetzalcoatl, which itself is bordered to the north and the south by two sets of palaces. The results of the digs have not confirmed that they were the homes of people with major political powers. Gradually, with time, this citadel and this is why we call it that, was surrounded by platforms to restrict entry. On these platforms, there are a series of pyramidal foundations that were certainly topped by temples. Between the pyramidal bases of the top, they will gradually build walls along with the evolution of the city until it becomes almost fortified. The complex occupies the surface of 16 hectares and forms the surrounding wall 400 meters long along the side, giving it the appearance of a citadel, though it had no defensive role at all. At the back of the Esplanade stands the temple, a step pyramid flanked by two residential buildings. The Citadel is a hollow space. It is roughly the same size as the pyramid of the sun, but it's hollow. It is round on top and a center in which the temple of the feathered serpent is located. This is where we find the famous frescoes showing the feathered serpent and the God of thunder, the God with circular eyes, who the Aztecs would call Tlaloc. These are the most well-known beliefs of pre-Columbian art. This decoration is specific to Teotihuacan. The heads of reptiles jutting out from a winged body alternate with sculptures that are difficult to define in geometric shapes. This work required considerable means. Each head weighs no less than four tons. In the time of the city's glory, these sculptures were painted. The Aztec practiced human sacrifice as well as cannibalism. They sometimes ate their enemies and they sacrificed victims. The skulls of the victims were left on display by the hundreds. There was some practice of human sacrifice. It was definitely something that was quite exceptional and must have taken place during great ceremonies and in very specific circumstances. One had all kinds of other possible sacrifices to avoid resorting to human sacrifice. However, human sacrifice did exist in this time. It existed before and it will exist afterward. The sacrifices constantly required new victims and so the Aztecs left on expeditions to take prisoners of war. However, victims could also be taken from the general population with their consent. For it was believed that the sacrificed would depart to a better world. The text describe the recurrence of human sacrifices. According to Spanish sources, for the inauguration of a great temple, there were 80,000 sacrifices. We always consider the number to be inflated by the Spaniards. That said, archaeology shows us that human sacrifice was practiced. In particular, we find toes on the floor with particularly high levels of hemoglobin and there is no doubt that the floors were regularly watered with blood and statues as well. Each divinity had its own specific rite. Some victims had their hearts ripped out for the sun to raise each morning. Children were drowned for the rains to be abundant. Some were skinned in honor of the god of renewal in vegetation, and their skins were then worn by the priests. The Aztec worshipped the sun, the rain, the moon, and many other gods. Their religion was a mix of polytheism, Shamanism and animism inherited from the more ancient civilizations of central Mexico. It was a combination of the Astro religion of the nomads and the agrarian religion of the sedentary peoples of central Mexico. The Aztec pantheon is all the more complex, though the Aztecs exhibited great liberalism. That is to say that they adopt the gods of groups that they conquer very easily and integrate them, which is also a manner of integrating the groups. The principal treaty deity of the Aztec group is called Huitzilopochtli, God of war and the sun. The sun at its zenith. Huitzilopochtli means the hummingbird of the left. This is a God who is not represented often in statue. On the other hand, we have numerous portrayals of other divinities like Tlaloc, the masculine God of rain. Offering divinities linked to water and fertility were numerous. Death is also present as in the image with this depiction of a God through a human skull representing the God of death. Furthermore, there are portrayals in different-sized sculptures of the feathered serpent God, or Tlaloc. For example, one can even find them in tiny figurines made of ceramic or stone. Quetzalcoatl, the famous feathered serpent god, is this animal that combines the form of a serpent with a covering of feathers. It is at once both a land animal and an air animal, which shows the relationship between the celestial world and the underworld. It is a portrait prominently in Teotihuacan where can be found in murals that show an animal painted in the sparkling colors of the quetzal. The tropical bird that is a symbol of Mesoamerican. We also find it portrayed on monuments, in particular on the pyramid of the feathered serpent in the heart of the Citadel where several dozen great feathered serpents are depicted. Notably having the head of a feline with its fangs and the body of a serpent. Another important god is the god of rain and storms, whom the Aztecs later called Tlaloc. This god is also portrayed in numerous places across the city of Teotihuacan. Where one recognizes him by his two large binocular-like circled eyes. This God is the giver of life through the water, which is the source of agriculture. This rain god, Tlaloc, is also the god of thunder, hail, or the god of devastating storms. In some way, he also has a warlike dimension in a way that honored the ancient Aztecs. In general, Mesoamerican civilizations had a very advanced vision of astronomy. The movement of the planets, the sun, and the moon no longer had any mystery for these civilizations. Their calendar system was particularly well developed and even gathered all the workings of society. They were great astronomers. Furthermore, we can see calculations based on astronomical bearings in the division of the city and in certain axis that structured it. What is incontestable is the degree of precision in the calendars. In the movement of the planets by the Mesoamerican civilizations. Those of Teotihuacan in particular were quite exceptional and rival the knowledge that one could have not long ago in the West. The Aztecs had the same character as the other Mesoamerican people. The same way of counting time based on two principal calendars, along with a Venetian calendar. The two principal calendars are the calendar of 365 days and the ritual calendar of 260 days. For a given day, we have a date on both calendars, which is an extremely precise way of controlling the flow of time and therefore all ritual events depending on these calendars. For each month, each day, there is a deity who is the patron deity for whom one will practice a certain number of rituals. We have very precise information, thanks to the Spaniards, especially from the work done by a Franciscan named Zion Sahagun. He recorded a great deal of aspects related to the life of the Aztecs in particular, it's ritual characteristics, but also domestic lives. Social organizations, and the organization of agriculture. He described the markets, etc. We have an enormous amount of information. However, what is more difficult for us to perceive is everything related to religious organizations. The organization of rituals is very carefully described by Sayagun and brings us essential information on the celebration calendar, which celebrations one carries out which month. Writing in Mexico appeared only in the 12th century AD. It was used to register economic data and for historical and religious writings. Scribes wrote on various materials like agave fiber, deerskin, and beaten bark. Thousands of codex were destroyed by the Spanish at the time of the conquest. The writing of the Aztecs is not like that of the Mayans. With the Mayans, there is a syntax, the notion of time. It is true writing. For the Aztecs, writing is more like points of reference that are both visual and phonetic. Here as well, but which probably serve to relay the oral tradition. The essential myths, the historic traditions were preserved, transmitted from generation to generation in the form of an oral tradition as stories were told before crowds and certain celebrations. In fact, this writing is a code for the transmission of that oral tradition. The Aztec empire reached its peak in the early 16th century under the reign of Moctezuma. He had been an emperor for 17 years, when the conquistador Hernán Cortés landed on Mexican soil in the spring of 1519. The arrival of the conquistadors sealed the end of Aztec domination. Cortés first allied himself with their enemies. The Spanish and their Native American allies arrived before Tenochtitlan, the capital, on November eight, 1519. Moctezuma greeted them peacefully at first. Then doubt and hostility set in and ended with a massacre of Tenochtitlan population and the death of the Aztec leader. The city was then reduced to ruins on which Mexico City was built. When Cortés arrived, he arrives to conquer. He knows of the existence of the Aztec empire and its richness. His objective is to conquer. We are no longer in the age of discovery. He arrives at the head of a small army. Generally, we count around 450 men of old, soldiers. Cortés arrives on the coast around Veracruz, where the Indians we call Totonacs are settled who are tributaries of the Aztec empire. From the beginning, these people who pay a tribute to the Empire will see in the arrival of the Spaniards the possibility of liberating themselves from the yoke of the Aztecs. They will rapidly ally themselves with the Spaniards or provide them with the troops they need to be victorious. Cortés will quickly climb up the high central pattern. He was received by Emperor Moctezuma, the second in the city of Teotihuacan. Moctezuma received him in the palace of his father. Cortés and his troops in the heart of the ceremonial Aztec center. This is a great Aztec ceremony with music day and night. Human sacrifices are made inside the walls of the great temple. Then the Spanish troops lose their self-control and massacre a good portion of the indigenous nobility who have gathered in the center of the ceremonial space for celebrations. This is the Noche Triste, the sad night. Through his diplomacy and prudence, Cortés succeeded in maintaining a kind of status quo for several months, living with Aztecs. He began to amass the gold that they offered him. This will be the beginning of the war and the Aztec resistance. The Emperor Moctezuma who was held prisoner will be killed. It was an extremely hierarchical political system, cut off the head and everything collapses. The Aztec resisted, but there is a very quick collapse of this political structure that has been so powerful. It takes about two years from the arrival of the Spaniards to the full fall of Tenochtitlan. The capital city is destroyed. In its place, the capital of New Spain will be built. Colonial power is directly established in the same place, and the whole structure of the empire collapses at once. For a long time, knowledge of the Aztecs was based on ethno historical context and on accounts of the Spanish made at the time of the conquest. They came into contact with these living civilizations at their peak. We have an enormous amount of information that comes from texts mostly written by the religious and by Franciscans in particular from the time of evangelization. Archaeology is much more recent. It had been hindered by the fact that the Aztec capital had been covered over by the modern city. However, over the years have still been able to accumulate a lot of information, archaeologically, as well. North of Mexico City Central Plaza, a number of Aztec buildings form the religious center, the Templo Mayor. It included one pyramid with two sanctuaries, temples, and also a college, a music school and arsenals. The Templo Mayor was a great double pyramid with a pair of stairways finishing the two temples at the summit. Two principal deities were worshipped. They were at the top of the Aztec pantheon. That is to say, they're various deities. There was Huitzilopochtli, the God of sun and war, the God who guided them to the place they settled. Then the traditional god, at least the one that passed for the most traditional in the basin of Mexico City, the god of rain, agriculture and the settled population. Both are associated with the summit. The Templo Mayor, like many of these pyramids, opens towards the West. It is behind these pyramids the sun rises in the morning. It overlooks the place that was crowded with buildings. It was surrounded by buildings. Excavations have taken place in the center of Mexico City for almost 40 years now. In fact, they started the excavations again beginning in 1978, thanks to the discovery of a very large sculpture at the foot of the Southern access to the main pyramid. It portrays the goddess of the moon, dismembered by her brother, the sun god, which Huitzilopochtli himself. Everything that was in the same area, winning over the buildings, which were often historic buildings from the colonial era, shows that there was an extraordinary overload of structures. Thanks to the excavations that there have been, along with nearby construction projects in the streets or in blocks of colonial houses. We begin to reconstruct a map of this main enclosure. For example, there was work done in a building acquired by the Spanish that they made into a cultural center, which is just next to the current Mexico City Metropolitan Cathedral. In doing this work, they had to redo all the foundations. They excavated what was underneath, and there are buildings that were part of the 78 buildings. They dug on the ground which made up the heart of the city. The excavations of the Templo Mayor are extremely important to the understanding of ritual architecture, iconography, and even the rituals themselves. Now, testing is carried out, especially chemical analysis of the soil. After the Spanish conquest in the 16th century, the Templo Mayor was destroyed and its exact location was forgotten. To dig the site of the great temple, archaeologists had entire buildings and shops razed down and cut into one of the main roads of the Mexican capital. Digs have brought to light 13 phases of construction, notably that of the pyramids double staircase rising 45 meters high. In the colonial era, Native Americans had shown very little resistance against the conquistadors who they considered to be superhumans, and the Spanish had carte blanche in the country. The Spanish arrived in 1519. They build a colonial capital in Tenochtitlan. The city is destroyed and they build colonial edifices on top of it. The modern city of Mexico is built on the place where there used to be lakes. The Spanish were not used to handle this type of environment with a variation in the level of the lakes and hygiene problems as well. During the 16th century, there is a series of catastrophes linked to flooding and pestilence arise. The Spanish, could not know how to manage this lakeside environment, had the idea of draining the lake. They would take a long time to achieve it, and it's only at the end of the 19th century that they will be able to eliminate these Great Lakes by digging a canal to help evacuate the water. Today, there are virtually no more lake in Mexico City able to expand onto the ancient lake areas. The modern city is superimposed on the Aztec capital. The excavations are part of urban archaeology. They are done for occasions like the construction of the subway or when there are restorations in the historic center which allows the excavations of the Templo Mayor. Of the marvelous lakeside city of Tenochtitlan, nothing remains today. The tentacular expansion of Mexico City has covered everything. The Aztec empire went by in a flash. In less than 200 years, this humble nomad people became the masters of the Mexico Valley and its surrounding area. The Mexicás, as they called themselves, loved recounting the glorious epic of their lengthy wandering in the desert. The empire they quickly developed and the submission of foreign city-states before them. They found legitimacy in the belief that their people had been chosen by the sun to lead the world. Today, the descendants of the Aztec represent ten to 12 percent of the Mexican population.
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Channel: Histoire & Civilisations
Views: 66,923
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Keywords: reportage, documentaire, histoire, civilisation, patrimoine, voyage, monde, tourisme, monument historique, lieu historique, culturel, merveilles, aztèques
Id: gDGJ1y7AZvQ
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Length: 51min 2sec (3062 seconds)
Published: Thu Mar 09 2023
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