The Americas The Aztec the Inca Mr Somogye

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The Americas: The Aztec & the Inca Mr. Somogye AP World History

The Americas: The Aztec & the Inca Mr. Somogye AP World History

The Aztecs

The Aztecs

Rise of the Aztecs • Aztecs (Mexica) migrate to Lake Texcoco in central Mexico

Rise of the Aztecs • Aztecs (Mexica) migrate to Lake Texcoco in central Mexico c. 1325 • Founded city of Tenochtitlan in 1325 • Empire started in 1434 • Aztec kings represented civil power and served as a representative of the gods on Earth

Aztec Government • City-states ruled by a speaker chosen from the nobility • The

Aztec Government • City-states ruled by a speaker chosen from the nobility • The Great Speaker, ruler of Tenochtitlan, was in effect an emperor • Increasingly considered a living god • Conquered peoples maintained some autonomy if they paid tribute

Aztec Religion • Aztec maintained traditional deities of Mesoamerica • 128 major deities •

Aztec Religion • Aztec maintained traditional deities of Mesoamerica • 128 major deities • Huitzilopochtli (right) was the Aztec tribal patron and patron deity of the cult of warfare and sacrifice

Human Sacrifice • Human sacrifice was a typical part of Mesoamerican religion • Aztec

Human Sacrifice • Human sacrifice was a typical part of Mesoamerican religion • Aztec expand practice into a cult where military supplied war captives for sacrifice • Why? • Political purposes • Population control • Cannibal kingdom

Human Sacrifice

Human Sacrifice

Tenochtitlan • On an island in Lake Texcoco • Aztecs called it the “foundation

Tenochtitlan • On an island in Lake Texcoco • Aztecs called it the “foundation of Heaven” • By 1519 had a population of 150, 000 • Connected by causeways and canals

Tenochtitlan “The Venice of the Americas

Tenochtitlan “The Venice of the Americas

Aztec Economy • Agriculture • Food often provided as tribute • Built chinampas •

Aztec Economy • Agriculture • Food often provided as tribute • Built chinampas • Pochteca was a special merchant class which specialized in long-distance luxury trade • Cacao beans and gold dust were used as currency; bartering was most common

Chinampas were man-made floating islands 17’ long x 100’ to 300’ feet wide. Aztecs

Chinampas were man-made floating islands 17’ long x 100’ to 300’ feet wide. Aztecs built over 20, 000 acres of chinampas.

Chinampas

Chinampas

Aztec Society • Originally divided into seven clans called calpulli • Calpulli redistributed land,

Aztec Society • Originally divided into seven clans called calpulli • Calpulli redistributed land, organized labor gangs & military units, maintained temples & schools • Eventually a class of nobility emerged • Nobility controlled the priesthood & military

Aztec Society • Women’s primary role was the household • Women spent six hours

Aztec Society • Women’s primary role was the household • Women spent six hours a day grinding corn; restricted women’s rights • Marriages were arranged • Polygamy existed amongst the nobility • Women could inherit property

The Inca

The Inca

Rise of Inca • Founded by Quechuaspeaking clans, ayllus, living near Cuzco c. 1350

Rise of Inca • Founded by Quechuaspeaking clans, ayllus, living near Cuzco c. 1350 • Inca (ruler) Pachacuti expanded the empire from 1438 -1471 • Built Machu Picchu • Expansion continued after Pachacuti’s death

Machu Picchu

Machu Picchu

Machu Picchu

Machu Picchu

Conquest & Religion • Expansion motivated by split inheritance • Polytheistic • Sun God

Conquest & Religion • Expansion motivated by split inheritance • Polytheistic • Sun God was the primary god • Influenced by animism • Mountains, rivers, etc. were considered holy shrines Temple of the Sun in Machu Picchu

Inca Government • Inca was considered almost a god • Divided empire into four

Inca Government • Inca was considered almost a god • Divided empire into four provinces • Developed a bureaucracy run by nobles • Nobility drawn from the ten ayllus • Local rulers maintained their positions • Colonized conquered areas • Relocated some conquered peoples

Inca Economy • Unlike Aztecs, not a lot of trade • Tried to be

Inca Economy • Unlike Aztecs, not a lot of trade • Tried to be self-sufficient • Primarily agricultural • Terrace farming & complex irrigation • Over 200 types of potatoes • Inca Socialism • Used forced labor for massive projects • Mita

Terrace Farming

Terrace Farming

Inca Society • Inca emphasis on military reinforced gender inequality • Women worked in

Inca Society • Inca emphasis on military reinforced gender inequality • Women worked in the fields, wove cloth, and cared for the household • Women worshipped fertility deities • Recognize parallel descent • Women passed rights and property to their daughters

Inca Technology • Built a complex system of roads and bridges • 2500 miles

Inca Technology • Built a complex system of roads and bridges • 2500 miles of roads • Used a system of runners to carry messages throughout the empire • Beautiful pottery, cloth, and metalworking • Quipu • Masonry

Bridges and Roads

Bridges and Roads

Quipu

Quipu

Inca Metalworking

Inca Metalworking