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6.2 History and Culture – Mexico

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1 6.2 History and Culture – Mexico

2 Early Cultures The Olmec were the first people to live in Mexico around 1500 BC. They lived on the humid southern coast of the Gulf of Mexico where they built temples and giant statues. They traded carved stones like jade or obsidian with other cultures in eastern Mexico.

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4 The Maya were the next to live in Mexico between AD 250-900.
The Aztec settled into central Mexico in 1325. They built the first empire (land with different territories and people under a single ruler) in the Americas.

5 Colonial Mexico and Independence
In 1519 Hernan Cortes arrived in Mexico and by 1521 he defeated the Aztecs and claimed Mexico for Spain.

6 Colonial Times Spanish and American Indian people and cultures mixed forming a new Mexican identity. Spaniards called these people mestizos (people of mixed European and Indian ancestry).

7 Life in colonial Mexico was greatly influenced by the Roman Catholic Church.
The church created missions (church outposts) all throughout Mexico. Priests at missions learned native languages and taught the Indians Spanish. They also worked to convert the American Indians to Catholicism.

8 Spaniards also wanted to find gold and silver in Mexico.
American Indians and enslaved Africans did most of the hard physical labor in the mines.

9 Agriculture also became an important part of the colonial economy.
Spanish monarchs granted haciendas (huge expanses of farm or ranch land) to some favored people of Spanish ancestry.

10 Independence Spain ruled Mexico for almost 300 years before the people of Mexico demanded independence. The revolt against Spanish rule was led by a Catholic priest named Miguel Hidalgo who gave a famous speech calling for the common people to rise up against the Spanish in 1810. He was killed in 1811, but fighting continued until Mexico won its independence in 1821.

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12 Later Struggles 15 years after Mexico gained its independence, a large area, Texas, broke away. Eventually Texas joined the United States. As a result, Mexico and the United States fought over Texas and the location of their shared border. This led to the Mexican-American War, in which Mexico lost nearly half its territory to the U.S.

13 In 1910 the Mexican Revolution broke out after Mexican citizens became fed up with the government giving the rich too many special privileges. Fighting lasted 10 years with one major result being land reform where the government took land from the large landowners and gave it back to the peasant villages.

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15 Culture Language: Most Mexicans speak Spanish because of the Spanish influence from colonial times. Many Mexicans also speak American Indian languages.

16 90% of all Mexicans are Roman Catholic. Practices & Rituals:
Religion: 90% of all Mexicans are Roman Catholic. Practices & Rituals: Day of the Dead (November 1 & 2) – holiday to remember and honor dead ancestors. Day of the Dead Everyone is sad when a loved one dies. But during Day of the Dead, Mexicans celebrate death as part of life. This attitude comes from the Mexican Indian belief that the souls of the dead return every year to visit their living relatives. To prepare for this visit, Mexican families gather in graveyards. They clean up around their loved one’s grave and decorate it with flowers and candles. They also set out food and drink for the celebration. Favorite foods often include sugar candy skulls, chocolate coffins, and sweet breads shaped like bones.


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