1 / 10

HOOK

At certain times of the day it looked as if a writhing serpent was crawling up the steps. HOOK. In what ways do the huge buildings at Chichen Itza show how the Mayan people felt about their gods?.

savea
Télécharger la présentation

HOOK

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. At certain times of the day it looked as if a writhing serpent was crawling up the steps HOOK In what ways do the huge buildings at Chichen Itza show how the Mayan people felt about their gods?

  2. What conclusions might someone make about U.S. culture from viewing the heads of the presidents at Mount Rushmore?

  3. SWBAT Explain and describe the key features of the Mesoamerican civilizations. Understand how Mesoamerican cultures shared ideas about gods and astronomy.

  4. BERINGIA Beringia is a fancy way of naming the Bering Land Straight that once connected the northeast Asian continent to the northwest American continent. This natural bridge lasted approximately 15,000 years. Why did people travel across the land bridge?

  5. Mesoamerica

  6. This region shared cultivating corn, the building of pyramids, a 260 day calendar, an important ritual ball game, & a belief in the role of human blood in sustaining the gods & the universe.

  7. Olmecs • Earliest known of the Mesoamerican civilizations • Not united politically (unusual for ancient civilizations) • Highly developed astronomy - used to predict agricultural cycles and please the gods • Polytheism; religious rituals important, shamans as healers • Writing, calendars, ritual ballgames, irrigation and drainage canals • Well-developed agriculture based on maize, beans and squash—no large domesticated animals • Perhaps the best-recognized Olmec art is the enormous helmeted heads. There have been 17 colossal heads unearthed to date.

  8. Mayans • Constructed fortified cities and palace • complexes, which included terraced pyramidal • shrines for rituals and burial of rulers • All buildings having to do with beginning of life • faced east, while those related to death faced west. • Ceremonial games are played in a ballpark. • One of the teams is sacrificed to the sun god. • Bloodletting of Mayan nobility was believed to • appease the gods and to prove the legitimacy • of the rulers. • Mayans produced a written language made up • of hieroglyphs. • Unfortunately, most records of Mayan • literature were destroyed by Spanish • missionaries and colonial settlers. • Mayans developed a calendar and recorded their astronomical observations on temple • facades, which may have served as • observatories.

  9. Aztecs • A conquering tribe of people, the Aztecs • created an enormous empire • Tenochtitlán (“Place of the Gods”) is their capital (present day Mexico City) • Aztecs were skillful engineers, created roads, canals, aqueducts, pyramids, temples, and palaces • Believed in a pantheon of gods; particularly • important was the sun god • Expanded trade networks

  10. The Inca consolidated lands and imposed their authority on other peoples to create an empire that extended almost 3,000 miles from Ecuador to Chile (climates varied from tropical to polar) • Inca built a network of roads to link the cities of the empire and to encourage trade • The sun cult dominated religious life • Gold and silver were used for ceremonial purposes • Temples and fortresses were built Inca

More Related