The Aztecs

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The Aztecs Page 1

by Michael E Smith




  Contents

  Cover

  The Peoples of America

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Dedication

  List of Figures

  List of Tables

  Preface

  Guide to Pronunciation and Spelling

  Chapter 1: The Aztecs of Mesoamerica

  Who Were the Aztecs?

  Mesoamerican Context

  The Aztec Environment

  Sources of Information

  Ethnohistory

  Archaeology

  Art History

  Aztec Studies Today

  Chapter 2: The Rise of Aztec Civilization

  Timetables

  Pre-Aztec Civilizations

  The Aztlan Migrations

  Toltecs, Chichimecs, and Aztec Identity

  The Growth of City-States: The Early Aztec Period

  Tenochtitlan and Empire: The Late Aztec Period

  Chapter 3: People on the Landscape

  How Many Aztecs?

  The Aztec Diet

  Farming Systems

  Rural Settlement

  The Rural Landscape

  Chapter 4: Artisans and their Wares

  Utilitarian Crafts

  Luxury Crafts

  Otumba: An Aztec Craft Center

  Chapter 5: The Commercial Economy

  Marketplaces

  Money

  Material Evidence for Aztec Commerce

  A Complex Economy

  Chapter 6: Family and Social Class

  Growing up Aztec

  Adult Life and Social Roles

  Social Classes

  Commoners

  Nobles and their Palaces

  Chapter 7: City-State and Empire

  City-States

  Relations Among City-States

  The Empire of the Triple Alliance

  Imperial Strategies and Control

  Mexica Propaganda and the Limits of Empire

  Chapter 8: Cities and Urban Planning

  City-State Capitals

  Provincial Cities and Towns

  Tenochtitlan

  Chapter 9: Creation, Death, and the Gods

  Myths of Creation

  Aztec Religion: Historical Background

  The Gods

  Death, Burial, and the Afterlife

  Chapter 10: Temples and Ceremonies

  Priests

  Human Blood Offerings

  The Templo Mayor

  Public Ceremonies

  Private Rituals

  Chapter 11: Science, Writing, and Calendars

  Writing

  Calendars and Astronomy

  Technology

  Medicine

  Chapter 12: Art, Music, and Literature

  Art

  Literature and Poetry

  Music and Dance

  Chapter 13: Final Glory, Conquest, and Legacy

  The Final Century: 1428–1519

  Conquest by Spain

  The Nahuas under Spanish Rule

  Continuity and Change

  The Aztec Legacy: Modern Nahua Indian Culture

  The Aztec Past and the Mexican Present

  A Wider Perspective

  Notes

  Glossary of Nahuatl Terms

  References

  Index

  The Peoples of America

  General Editors: Alan Kolata and Dean Snow

  This series is about the native peoples and civilizations of the Americas, from their origins in ancient times to the present day. Drawing on archaeological, historical, and anthropological evidence, each volume presents a fresh and absorbing account of a group's culture, society, and history.

  Accessible and scholarly, and well illustrated with maps and photographs, the volumes of The Peoples of America will together provide acomprehensive and vivid picture of the character and variety of the societies of the American past.

  Already published:

  The Tiwanaku: A Portrait of an Andean Civilization

  Alan Kolata

  The Timucua

  Jerald T. Milanich

  The Aztecs

  Third Edition

  Michael E. Smith

  The Cheyenne

  John Moore

  The Iroquois

  Dean Snow

  The Moche

  Garth Bowden

  The Nasca

  Helaine Silverman and Donald A. Proulx

  The Incas

  Terence N. D'Altroy

  The Sioux

  Guy Gibbon

  Mixtecs, Zapotecs, and Chatinos: Ancient Peoples of Southern Mexico

  Arthur A. Joyce

  This edition first published 2012

  © 2012 Michael E. Smith

  Blackwell Publishing was acquired by John Wiley & Sons in February 2007. Blackwell's publishing program has been merged with Wiley's global Scientific, Technical, and Medical business to form Wiley-Blackwell.

  Registered Office

  John Wiley & Sons Ltd, The Atrium, Southern Gate, Chichester, West Sussex, PO19 8SQ, UK

  Editorial Offices

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  9600 Garsington Road, Oxford, OX4 2DQ, UK

  The Atrium, Southern Gate, Chichester, West Sussex, PO19 8SQ, UK

  For details of our global editorial offices, for customer services, and for information about how to apply for permission to reuse the copyright material in this book please see our website at www.wiley.com/wiley-blackwell.

  The right of Michael E. Smith to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted in accordance with the UK Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, except as permitted by the UK Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988, without the prior permission of the publisher.

  Wiley also publishes its books in a variety of electronic formats. Some content that appears in print may not be available in electronic books.

  Designations used by companies to distinguish their products are often claimed as trademarks. All brand names and product names used in this book are trade names, service marks, trademarks or registered trademarks of their respective owners. The publisher is not associated with any product or vendor mentioned in this book. This publication is designed to provide accurate and authoritative information in regard to the subject matter covered. It is sold on the understanding that the publisher is not engaged in rendering professional services. If professional advice or other expert assistance is required, the services of a competent professional should be sought.

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Smith, Michael Ernest, 1953–

  The Aztecs / Michael E. Smith. — 3rd ed.

  p. cm. — (The peoples of America)

  Includes bibliographical references and index.

  ISBN 978-1-4051-9497-6 (pbk. : alk. paper)

  1. Aztecs–History. 2. Aztecs–Antiquities. 3. Aztecs–Social life and customs. 4. Mexico–Antiquities. I. Title.

  F1219.73.S58 2011

  972—dc23

  2011029132

  A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.

  In memory of William T. Sanders

  and Thomas H. Charlton: mentors,

  colleagues, friends

  Figures

  1.1 Artist's reconstruction of the Templo Mayor

  1.2 Map of Mesoamerica

  1.3 A Mesoamerican tropical forest

  1.4 The island capital Tenochtitlan in Aztec times

  1.5 Map of Aztec sites in central Mexico

  1.6 Typical central Mexican co
untryside

  1.7 Page from an Aztec ritual almanac, the Codex Borgia

  1.8 A rural Aztec site

  1.9 A small temple platform at the site TA-8 in the Teotihuacan Valley

  1.10 Archaeologists collecting surface artifacts

  1.11 Excavation of an elite residence at Yautepec

  1.12 “Mexican antiquities which exist in the National Museum of Mexico, 1857”

  2.1 Archaeological and native historical chronologies

  2.2 Air photo of the ruins of Classic-period Teotihuacan

  2.3 Air photo of the ruins of the central ceremonial district of Tula

  2.4 Aztec ethnic groups leaving their homeland of Aztlan

  2.5 Scene in the Mapa Quinatzin showing Chichimecs and toltecs

  2.6 An Early Aztec twin-stair pyramid at Teopanzolco

  2.7 A large Early Aztec pyramid at Tenayuca

  2.8 Construction stages of the Early Aztec pyramid at Tenayuca

  2.9 Genealogy of the Mexica kings

  2.10 Cycles of expansion of the Triple Alliance Empire

  2.11 Page from the Tira de Tepechpan

  2.12 Stone monolith with image of the deity Tlaltecuhtli

  2.13 Excavation and cleaning of the Tlaltecuhtli monument

  3.1 Schematic map of population growth in the Valley of Mexico

  3.2 Mother teaching her 13-year-old daughter to make tortillas

  3.3 Traditional maize granary (cuexcomatl)

  3.4 Aztec agricultural terraces at Cerro Texcotzinco

  3.5 Aztec embankment built to contain the new channel of the Cuauhtitlan River

  3.6 Modern chinampa fields in Xochimilco, ca. 1905

  3.7 Maps of Cuexcomate and Capilco

  4.1 Obsidian blade-core and four prismatic blades

  4.2 Ceramic vessels from Aztec kitchens

  4.3 Small ceramic objects from Cuexcomate and Capilco

  4.4 Girls being taught by their mothers to spin and weave cotton

  4.5 Ceramic cotton-spinning tools from Capilco

  4.6 A maguey plant at the Aztec city of Otumba

  4.7 Bronze tools from Aztec houses in Yautepec

  4.8 Ceremonial featherwork shield

  4.9 Master craftsmen instructing their sons in their crafts

  4.10 Gold necklace and pendants made by lost-wax casting

  4.11 Obsidian ear spools

  4.12 Mosaic mask of stone with turquoise, shell, and coral inlay

  4.13 Map of Otumba showing areas of craft production

  4.14 Technological sequence for the manufacture of obsidian jewelry

  5.1 Modern Maya woman selling vegetables in the marketplace

  5.2 An Aztec market

  5.3 Pochteca merchants

  5.4 Cacao pods

  5.5 Cacao beans in a gourd

  5.6 Sherds from imported Aztec III Black-on-Orange ceramic plates

  5.7 Cholula Polychrome ceramic tripod plate

  5.8 Imported Valley of Mexico ceramic sherds

  6.1 Aztec childbirth customs

  6.2 Aztec wedding ceremony

  6.3 Wall foundations and floor of a peasant house at Capilco

  6.4 Modern adobe peasant house in Tetlama

  6.5 Excavation of an urban commoner house at Calixtlahuaca

  6.6 Recently excavated commoner house at Xaltocan

  6.7 Burial of a commoner woman at Xaltocan

  6.8 Artist's reconstruction of the Cuexcomate palace

  6.9 Genealogy of the inhabitants of the palace of Molotecatl tecuhtli

  6.10 Royal palace of Calixtlahuaca

  6.11 Polished red goblet used to drink cacao

  7.1 Tax roll from the province of Tlapa

  7.2 Map of city-state territories in southeastern Valley of Mexico

  7.3 Soldiers carrying maquahuitl swords into battle

  7.4 Map of the provinces of the Aztec Empire

  7.5 The tax of the imperial province of Coayxtlahuacan

  7.6 Entrance to the EagleWarrior Temple

  7.7 Mexica-style temple at the fortress of Quauhtochco, 1805

  7.8 The City of Zempoala

  8.1 Main plaza at Coatetelco, Morelos

  8.2 Temple group at Calixtlahuaca in the Toluca Valley

  8.3 Excavation of an urban commoner house in Yautepec

  8.4 Map of Aztec Yautepec

  8.5 Reconstruction of the city of Tenochtitlan

  8.6 Map of Tenochtitlan and Tlatelolco

  8.7 Map of the ceremonial zone at Tlatelolco

  9.1 Large stone disk showing Coyolxauhqui's dismembered body

  9.2 Classic-period antecedents of Aztec gods Tlaloc and Quetzalcoatl

  9.3 Five Aztec gods

  9.4 Obsidian mirrors associated with Tezcatlipoca

  9.5 The god XipeTotec

  9.6 Serving bowl decorated with skull and crossbones

  9.7 Remains of a commoner child

  9.8 Remains of commoner adults

  9.9 Burial of a king

  9.10 Two ceremonial secondary burials with offerings

  9.11 Notched bone rasp, carved from a human femur

  10.1 Long-handled censer decorated with small circular reliefs

  10.2 Rituals of autosacrifice

  10.3 A heart sacrifice on a temple-pyramid

  10.4 Objects used in heart sacrifices

  10.5 Early Spanish drawing of the sacred precinct of Tenochtitlan

  10.6 The Templo Mayor today

  10.7 A ceremony at the Templo Mayor

  10.8 Offering 61 excavated in front of the Templo Mayor

  10.9 Partially restored small temple-pyramid at Coatetelco

  10.10 Small circular shrine from Tenochtitlan

  10.11 Circular pyramid at Calixtlahuaca

  10.12 Ritual dump from the New Fire ceremony

  10.13 An Aztec ballcourt with a game in progress

  10.14 Aztec ballcourt at Coatetelco

  10.15 Ceramic figurines used in domestic rituals

  10.16 Astrological table showing predictions

  11.1 Modern reproduction of an Aztec folded book

  11.2 Stone bark-beaters from Yautepec

  11.3 Place-name glyphs from the Codex Mendoza

  11.4 Model showing operation of 260-day ritual calendar

  11.5 Year-count calendar with dates in Motecuhzoma Xocoyotzin's reign

  11.6 A priest tracks the stars at night

  11.7 Curers prepare the sweat-bath for two patients

  12.1 Sculpture of a man holding a cacao pod

  12.2 Sculpture of a snake

  12.3 Sculpture of a jaguar

  12.4 Temple of Sacred Warfare sculpture

  12.5 The Aztec calendar stone

  12.6 The Aztec calendar stone (drawing)

  12.7 Stone relief in the Tenochtitlan imperial style

  12.8 Ceramic “flower-flutes”

  12.9 Ritual dance accompanied by drums and flutes

  13.1 Religious center of the Tarascan capital Tzintzuntzan

  13.2 Palace and temples at the highland Maya city of Iximché

  13.3 Structure at the coastal Maya city of Tulum

  13.4 Aztec warriors attack the Spaniards

  13.5 Battle between the Mexica and Spaniards

  13.6 Sixteenth-century Christian church and convent at Xochimilco

  13.7 Church built on top of the abandoned Cholula pyramid

  13.8 Carving in the Augustinian convent at Acolman, ca. 1550

  13.9 Aztec sacred stone box

  13.10 A farmer in the village of Tetlama

  13.11 A modern Nahua woman weaves cloth

  13.12 Plaza of the Three Cultures in Tlatelolco

  13.13 The national symbol of Mexico

  Tables

  3.1 Documentary estimates of the Aztec population in 1519

  3.2 Aztec archaeological sites and population levels in the Valley of Mexico

  3.3 Population and site areas of Cuexcomate and Capilco

  4.1 Types of craft specialists in Late Postclassic Mesoamerica

>   5.1 Key trade commodities in Late Postclassic Mesoamerica

  7.1 Provinces of the Triple Alliance Empire

  7.2 Imperial taxes as recorded in the Codex Mendoza

  9.1 The principal Aztec deities

  9.2 Gods of the Tezcatlipoca complex

  11.1 The 20 day names

  11.2 The year-count calendar and its correlation with the European calendar

  Preface

  Is there perchance any truth to our words here?

  All seems so like a dream, only do we rise from sleep, only on earth do our words remain.

  Cantares Mexicanos

  Words were important to the Aztecs, and we are fortunate today that many of their own words were preserved after the Spanish Conquest. Also preserved were examples of the Aztecs' picture-writing as well as descriptions by Spanish conquerors and observers. These written sources have been available for four centuries, and many works on the Aztecs make use of them. But they are not the only window into the Aztec past; words are not all that remain on earth.

  Paradoxically, the oldest information on the Aztecs is also the most recent to be discovered. I refer to the ruins of houses, temples, and towns that make up the archaeological record of Aztec civilization. Aztec archaeology is a relatively new field of study. Many exciting new discoveries over the past two decades have revolutionized our understanding of Aztec civilization, but until now most of this information has appeared only in technical reports and professional journals. A major goal of this book is to make these discoveries known to a wider audience. As a participant in this work, I try to communicate something of the excitement and significance of our research. In preparing the third edition, I have updated the text and notes in all chapters and reorganized and expanded my discussion of many topics.

  In the pages that follow I draw heavily upon the results of fieldwork that I have directed at Aztec sites in the Mexican states of Morelos and Mexico. I would like to acknowledge the following institutions and agencies for providing funding for that fieldwork: the National Science Foundation, the National Endowment for the Humanities, the Wenner-Gren Foundation for Anthropological Research, the National Geographic Society, the Heinz Charitable Trust, Loyola University of Chicago, the University at Albany (State University of New York), the Institute for Mesoamerican Studies, and Arizona State University. My research in Mexico has been greatly facilitated by Mexican officials and colleagues, particularly José Antonio lvarez Lobato, Hortensia de Vega Nova, Joaquim García-Bárcenas, Teresa García García, Roberto García Moll, Agustín Gasca Pliego, Lorena Mirambell, Mari Carmen Serra Puche, and Norberto González C. I thank the following students who participated in the fieldwork for their contributions to its overall success: Patricia Aguirre, Martín Antonio, Robert Austin, Courtney Brown, Timothy Brown, Elizabeth DiPippo, Ruth Fauman-Fichman, Caitlin Guthrie, Timothy Hare, Kathleen Haynie, Casandra Hernández, Miriam Heun, Kathryn Hirst, Angela Huster, Marieke Joel, Amy Karabowicz, Kori Kaufman, Ronald Kohler, Annette McLeod, Samantha Miller, Raúl Miranda Gómez, Lisa Montiel, Susan Norris, Juliana Novic, Joan Odess, Rikke Marie Olsen, Jan Marie Olson, Scott O'Mack, Jennifer Pinson, T. Jeffrey Price, Colleen Rhodes, Mellissa Ruiz, Jeffrey Sahagun, Maëlle Sergheraert, David Shafer, Margaret Shiels, Andrew Somerville, Jerrell Sorensen, Sharon Spanogle, Charles Stapleton, María Stapleton, Osvaldo Sterpone, Timothy Sullivan, Cheryl Sutherland, Deborah Szymborski, and Brian Tomaslewski. I also must thank my excellent field crews from the towns of TetlamaYautepec, and San Francisco Calixtlahuaca. My later father, Dudley B. Smith, deserves acknowledgment for providing pickup trucks for our fieldwork in Morelos.

 

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