1 / 67

Pre-Columbian Civilizations In the Americas

Pre-Columbian Civilizations In the Americas. Unit 2, Chapter 11. Early Human Migrations. Major Pre-Columbian Civilizations. MesoAmerica. Classic Era – 600-900. People of Teotihuacan Maya. Post-Classic Era – 900-1500. Toltecs Aztecs. Teotihuacan . Pre-Aztec Largest city in Americas

gtruax
Télécharger la présentation

Pre-Columbian Civilizations In the Americas

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Pre-Columbian Civilizations In the Americas Unit 2, Chapter 11

  2. Early Human Migrations

  3. Major Pre-Columbian Civilizations

  4. MesoAmerica

  5. Classic Era – 600-900 • People of Teotihuacan • Maya Post-Classic Era – 900-1500 • Toltecs • Aztecs

  6. Teotihuacan • Pre-Aztec • Largest city in Americas • Polytheistic • Human sacrifice • Dependence on agriculture • Chinampas • No clear evidence of rulers • Probably elite families • Collapsed about 650

  7. The Mayans

  8. Lands of the Mayans The Yucatan Peninsula

  9. Overview • Never politically united • Individual city-states with rulers • Shared culture • Shifting agriculture • No use of wheels, pulleys, carts, or metal tools

  10. Astrology • Cosmos divided into 3 layers connected on a vertical axis • Earth in between the heavens and the underworld • Sacred tree rose through the 3 layers • Roots in underworld • Branches reached into the heavens • Priests communicated with gods throughbloodletting & use of hallucinogens • Human sacrifice

  11. Society • Patrilineal • Evidence of female roles in political and religious arena • Focus on war • Definite Class structure

  12. Achievements • Development of calendar • Each day had 3 dating systems • Ritual cycle • Solar cycle • Long calendar • Mathematics • Concept of 0 • Place value • Heiroglyphics

  13. Mayan Decline • Between 800 and 900 • Cities abandoned or destroyed • Theories • Epidemic disease • Disruption of trade because of decline of Tenochtitlan • Population expansion led to environmental destruction and food shortages provoking warfare

  14. Chichen-Itza - Pyramid

  15. Chichen-Itza - Observatory

  16. Mayan Cultivation of Maize Chac, God of Rain -->

  17. Mayan Underground Granaries: Chultunes

  18. Overview of Tikal (Guatemala) Temple of the Masks

  19. Tikal - Main Court

  20. Tikal: Temple of the Masks

  21. Tikal - Wall Mask of the Rain God

  22. Mayan Glyphs sky king house child city Mayan Mathematics

  23. Mayan Glyphs

  24. Pakal: The Maya Astronaut

  25. Quetzalcoatl:The God of Wisdom & Learning

  26. The Aztecs

  27. Overview • Northern peoples who pushed into centralMexico after the collapse of Tula • Beginning – clan based • Adapted to the local political & social practices • Around 1325 built capital at Tenochtitlan(old site of Teotichuacan)

  28. Political • Monarchy • Not absolute or hereditary • Aristocratic families had much say • Sometimes war provided political legitimacy • Tribute system

  29. Society • Very focused on class distinction • Commoners – monogamous • Nobles – polygamous • Prisoners of war used for labor • Class of merchants • Used bartering system

  30. Achievements • Dikes • Chinampas • Canals • Writing system

  31. Rituals • Polytheism • Dual natured gods • Cult of Huitzilopochtli • Demanded diet of human hearts to bring sun’s warmth to the world

  32. Lands of the Aztecs

  33. Aztec View of Tenochtitlan

  34. Ruins of the City Center, Tenochtitlan

  35. The Codex Mendoza :The FoundingofTenochtitlan

  36. Tenochtitlan: The “Venice” of the Americas

  37. Aztec Chinampa or Floating Garden:15ft. to 30ft. wide

  38. Tenochtitlan - Chinampas

  39. Aztec Writing Aztec Math

  40. Aztec Sun Stone -- Calendar

  41. Aztec Sun Motifs

  42. Aztec Codex(15c Manuscript)

  43. The Aztecs WereFierce Warriors

  44. Aztecs Sacrifice Neighboring Tribes to the Sun God

  45. Heart Sacrificeon an Aztec Temple Pyramid

  46. Wall of Skulls, Tenochtitlan

  47. Sacrificial Statue, Tenochtitlan

  48. Aztec Gold

  49. Andean Civilizations600 – 1500 • Moche – northern coast of Peru • Tiwanaku & Wari – Peruvian coast • Inca – Chile & Ecuador, along Pacific coast, along Andes Mountains, into Amazon, and south into Argentina

  50. Introduction to all Andean Civilizations • Fisheries • Maize fields • Herds of llamas and alpaca • Terraced farming • “refrigeration” • Khipus – record keeping ropes • Roads • Ayllu – communal land • Mit’a – labor draft

More Related