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THE AZTECS.

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Presentation on theme: "THE AZTECS."— Presentation transcript:

1 THE AZTECS

2 THEIR LOCATION The Aztecs were a great nation of nomadic warriors who traveled to Mexico about 700 years ago in search of a land to call their own.

3 THE EAGLE AND THE SNAKE The Aztec chief had a dream in which their god appeared to him and declared that the Aztecs would build a great nation where the eagle with a snake in its talons lands on a cactus.

4 THE ISLAND IN THE LAKE The warriors searched for many days and came upon a lake. They were tired and hungry. They gazed out upon the lake and saw a huge eagle swoop down, grab a snake in its talons and land on a cactus that was on an island in the middle of the lake.

5 Tenochtitlan- video

6 Location Lived in ancient Mexico for about 300 years.
The empire lasted during the 14th -16th centuries The Aztec Empire dominated present day central Mexico, Guatemala, El Salvador & Honduras

7 Location Tenochtitlan was the capital city and is located in present day Mexico city on Lake Texcoco. Aztec empire caused the biggest population explosion in Mesoamerican history.

8 GREAT BUILDERS The Aztecs began to build a great nation in the middle of a huge lake. They named their city, Tenochtitlan. It has been compared to Venice because of its great gardens and streams. They traveled by boat much like in Venice. It was a city built of gold.

9 Human-Environmental Interaction
As population grew, more food was needed. Aztec engineers created “floating” gardens, or chinampas. They built a series of rafts, which they anchored to the lake bed. They piled on dirt and grew crops. They made walkways out of mud and reeds to connect the floating rafts. They created a complex system of irrigation canals to water their crops The gardens were quite successful. The Aztecs grew onions, chili peppers, squash, corn, tomatoes, and beans. Teacher’s notes: The Aztecs created more useable land by filling in marshlands and swamps. They created even more by building dikes to hold back the water.

10 Movement Trade routes were set up to trade goods among the various villages. Causeways and canals were also built as a means of transportation. They built canoes so they could fish, hunt waterfowl, and trade with other tribes for the building materials they needed.

11 Architecture Considered great engineers
Built aqueducts, temples, causeways, roads, and a floating city Four main constructions- sacrificial temples, shrines to the gods, Emperor’s palace, and homes

12 People People worked as craftsmen, merchants, farmers, and fishermen.
Fierce warriors and used their fighting skills to expand the Aztec Empire. Aztec society was divided into social classes: the peasantry, the merchants and traders, warriors and priests, and the nobility. There was one emperor. Slaves consisted as a large part of the Aztec society

13 People Highly organized society, a solar calendar, system for counting, governing and keeping track of time. Developed a system of writing using picture symbols called “glyphs” Raised crops and built beautiful cities, religious temples and pyramids. They raised crops and traded with neighboring cultures.

14 Government Aztecs were ruled by a single emperor called the Huey Tlatoani which roughly translates to “The Great Speaker” and was located in the capital city of Tenochtitlan Aztec rulers were religious, political and military leaders. They ruled for life. You could tell the importance of the nobles because they wore brightly colored cloaks Ruling counsel comprised of the wisest and most powerful leaders.

15 Art The Aztecs also made other religious and non-religious artifacts such as jade masks Clothing was also a popular art form and women from around the empire would use bead, flower, and metal decorations These artifacts were sold in markets by visiting merchants

16 THE AZTEC EDUCATION The Aztecs were very well educated. They were the first to create an advanced calendar that is more accurate than our own. They performed brain surgery. They were great in mathematics, architecture, building, astronomy, medicine, surgery, and farming.

17 THE AZTEC RELIGION The Aztecs were very religious people. They were polytheistic. They had a god for almost everything. The Aztecs believed that the moon and the sun were gods. They thought that the moon and the sun did battle every night and day.

18 THE AZTECS GODS The Aztecs believed that in order to give the Sun power to defeat the moon and rise each morning the Sun must have a blood sacrifice. They believed they must sacrifice a beating heart everyday.

19 THE AZTEC SACRAFICES The Aztecs were forced to be at constant war to obtain prisoners to sacrifice. They never killed their enemies. They captured them and held them for daily sacrifice. They were placed on a bench and their heart was cut out and placed in a stone statue of Chac-mool.

20 THE AZTEC WARFARE The Aztecs were feared and hated by all of the other Indian tribes of Mexico.

21 THE ARRIVAL OF THE SPANISH
A man by the name of Hernán Cortes had heard of the infamous Aztecs. The Spanish were experiencing gold fever and Hernán Cortes agreed to come to the Americas and conquer the Aztecs and steal their gold.

22 THE CONQUEST OF THE AZTECS
The Spanish conquistadors landed in Mexico with approximately 300 men and 40 horses. They traveled Mexico and met with the Indians. Upon hearing how fierce the Aztecs were, Cortes’ men became scared and wished to return to Spain. Cortes became greedier and burned his ships. This forced his men to fight or die.

23 THE AZTEC TRAITOR Another Indian tribe gave Cortes a woman slave. She had been captured as a child by the Mayas. She was an Aztec and spoke many different languages because she had been traded by many different Indian tribes. She told Cortes that the Aztecs were awaiting their god Quetzalcoatl to return this year.

24 THE MEETING According to Aztec legend a tall white man had appeared and ruled and left the Aztecs after promising to return in 100 years to rule them again. Hernán Cortes was Spanish. He was a tall white man and he came to Tenochtitlan that exact year.

25 MOCTEZUMA Cortes presented himself to the Aztec leader Moctezuma and claimed to be their returning God.

26 THE END OF THE AZTECS Moctezuma gave the Spaniards gifts of gold and welcomed them to his city. The Aztecs had never before seen horses and guns and wept with fear. They believed Hernán Cortes to be their long lost god.

27 HERNAN CORTES Hernan Cortes and his men killed Moctezuma. The Aztecs were horrified. They had given an enemy a key to the city. As they debated on whether Hernan was actually a god, disease spread throughout Tenochtitlan. One third of the Indians were stricken and died of small pox. The great Indian nation was weakened by disease and without a leader.

28 THE GREAT BATTLE The Aztecs decided to kill the Spaniards. However, they were sick with disease and without a leader. Still the Spaniards were out numbered one thousand to one. The Spanish then sent out messages to the other Indian tribes who hated the Aztecs, telling them that they had conquered the city and killed the leader. The other Indian tribes saw this as an opportunity to be rid of the Aztecs and came to help.

29 WHAT TO DO WITH THE GOLD? The Aztecs quickly realized that they had no leadership. They were becoming sick with small pox and other Indian tribes were coming to help the Spanish. While some were fighting the Spaniards, the Aztecs men, women, and children worked and gathered up the gold throughout the city and piled it into boats. One by one they sunk those boats into the lake.

30 MEXICO CITY The bulk of the Aztec gold was lost to the world. The great Aztec empire fell. Mexico City stands where the great Aztec city Tenochtitlan once lay. The Aztec symbol is proudly flown on the Mexican flag and today the Mexican people view the Aztecs and not Cortes as national heroes.

31 Video Review


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