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AZTEC HISTORY


Very Short Introduction employs the disciplines of history, religious studies, and anthropology<br />

This<br />

it illuminates the complexities of <strong>Aztec</strong> life. Readers meet a people highly skilled in sculpture,<br />

as<br />

city planning, poetry, and philosophy, who were also profoundly committed to cosmic<br />

astronomy,<br />

through the thrust of the ceremonial knife and through warfare. Davíd Carrasco looks<br />

regeneration<br />

Spanish accounts that have colored much of the Western narrative to let <strong>Aztec</strong> voices<br />

beyond<br />

about their origin stories, the cosmic significance of their capital city, their methods of child<br />

speak<br />

THE AZTECS:<br />

A VERY SHORT INTRODUCTION<br />

rearing, and the contributions women made to daily life and the empire.


<strong>Aztec</strong>s were fierce, honorable, death-obsessed, and profoundly<br />

The<br />

A famed scholar evokes the life of this complex culture on<br />

religious.<br />

eve of its extinction, when the Spanish arrived and conquered<br />

the<br />

Montezuma and strangling Atahualpa. "It is,<br />

them--imprisoning<br />

question, the most brilliant, the clearest and most readable<br />

without<br />

of <strong>Aztec</strong> life available in any language."--The Observer.<br />

portrayal<br />

DAILY LIFE OF THE AZTECS


three years, the Spanish conquistador Hernán Cortés, leading a<br />

In<br />

hundred Spanish soldiers, overcame a centuries-old empire<br />

few<br />

could put tens of thousands of warriors on the field. Even<br />

that<br />

his god-like reputation had been shattered, and his horses<br />

after<br />

cannons were no longer regarded as supernatural, his ruthless<br />

and<br />

took him on to victory. Yet in the end, his prize was not the<br />

daring<br />

that he had sought, but the destruction of the entire <strong>Aztec</strong><br />

gold<br />

mission statement, a type of statement of purpose, is<br />

civilization.A<br />

statement which is used to communicate the purpose of an<br />

a<br />

Although most of the time it will remain the same for<br />

organisation.<br />

long period of time, it is not uncommon for organisations to<br />

a<br />

their mission statement; this generally happens when an<br />

update<br />

hundreds of years, the history of the conquest of Mexico and<br />

For<br />

defeat of the <strong>Aztec</strong>s has been told in the words of the Spanish<br />

the<br />

Miguel León-Portilla has long been at the forefront of<br />

victors.<br />

that history to include the voices of indigenous<br />

expanding<br />

In this new and updated edition of his classic The Broken<br />

peoples.<br />

León-Portilla has included accounts from native <strong>Aztec</strong><br />

Spears,<br />

across the centuries. These texts bear witness to the<br />

descendants<br />

vitality of an oral tradition that preserves the<br />

extraordinary<br />

of the vanquished instead of the victors. León-Portilla's<br />

viewpoints<br />

Postscript reflects upon the critical importance of these<br />

new<br />

CORTÉS AND THE AZTEC CONQUEST<br />

organisation evolves.<br />

BROKEN SPEARS: THE AZTEC ACCOUNT OF THE<br />

THE<br />

OF MEXICO<br />

CONQUEST<br />

unexpected historical accounts.


this captivating guide, you will discover why Maya have gained<br />

In<br />

worldwide admiration over the many other civilizations that<br />

such<br />

in Mesoamerica at the time. You will learn how the Maya<br />

existed<br />

developed, the major turning points in their 3,000-year-<br />

civilization<br />

history, the mysteries surrounding their demise, and some of<br />

long<br />

unique places where Maya exist to this day.<br />

the<br />

the first part of this book, you will discover the origins of the<br />

In<br />

civilization and the Mesoamerican cultures that may have<br />

Maya<br />

them. You will find out why Maya (out of all the<br />

influenced<br />

tribes that existed in the region at the time) have<br />

different<br />

the imagination of the West so much. The book will reveal<br />

captured<br />

they lived, ate, slept, whom they worshipped, and how they<br />

how<br />

Gods and Symbols of Ancient Mexico and the Maya is the<br />

The<br />

English-language dictionary of Mesoamerican mythology<br />

first-ever<br />

religion. Nearly 300 entries, from accession to yoke, describe<br />

and<br />

main gods and symbols of the Olmecs, Zapotecs, Maya,<br />

the<br />

Mixtecs, Toltecs, and <strong>Aztec</strong>s. Topics range from<br />

Teotihuacanos,<br />

and jester gods to reptile eye and rubber, from creation<br />

jaguar<br />

and sacred places to ritual practices such as<br />

accounts<br />

confession, dance, and pilgrimage. Mary Miller and<br />

bloodletting,<br />

Taube draw on their research in the fast-changing field of<br />

Karl<br />

studies, and on the latest Mexican discoveries, to produce<br />

Maya<br />

authoritative work that will serve as a standard reference for<br />

an<br />

scholars, and travelers. Photographs and illustrations<br />

students,<br />

CIVILIZATION: A CAPTIVATING GUIDE TO MAYA<br />

MAYA<br />

AND MAYA MYTHOLOGY<br />

HISTORY<br />

used herbal medicines and hallucinogenic plants to treat the sick.<br />

ILLUSTRATED DICTIONARY OF THE GODS AND<br />

AN<br />

OF ANCIENT MEXICO AND THE MAYA<br />

SYMBOLS<br />

throughout


an astonishing work of scholarship that reads like an adventure<br />

In<br />

historian Buddy Levy records the last days of the <strong>Aztec</strong><br />

thriller,<br />

and the two men at the center of an epic clash of cultures.<br />

empire<br />

and my companions suffer from a disease of the heart which can<br />

“I<br />

cured only with gold.” —Hernán Cortés<br />

be<br />

is the story of a lost kingdom—a complex and<br />

Conquistador<br />

civilization where floating gardens, immense wealth,<br />

sophisticated<br />

reverence for art stood side by side with bloodstained temples<br />

and<br />

gruesome rites of human sacrifice. It’s the story of Montezuma<br />

and<br />

spiritual, enigmatic, and doomed to misunderstand the<br />

—proud,<br />

he thought a god. Epic in scope, as entertaining as it is<br />

stranger<br />

Conquistador is history at its most riveting.<br />

enlightening,<br />

Townsend gives the complete history of the <strong>Aztec</strong><br />

Richard<br />

rise from humble nomads to empire builders.<br />

civilization’s<br />

a hundred years, the <strong>Aztec</strong>s established the largest empire<br />

Within<br />

Mesoamerican history, and at Tenochtitlan built a vast,<br />

in<br />

city in a lake, a Venice of the New World. The book<br />

shimmering<br />

with a dramatic narrative of the Spanish conquest, as seen<br />

ends<br />

the <strong>Aztec</strong> viewpoint. 16 color and 154 black-and-white<br />

from<br />

illustrations<br />

HERNAN CORTES, KING<br />

CONQUISTADOR:<br />

AND THE LAST STAND OF THE AZTECS<br />

MONTEZUMA,<br />

AZTECS (THIRD EDITION)<br />

THE<br />

PEOPLES AND PLACES)<br />

(ANCIENT


capital of the <strong>Aztec</strong> empire, Tenochtitlan, was, in its era, one of<br />

The<br />

largest cities in the world. Built on an island in the middle of a<br />

the<br />

lake, its population numbered perhaps 150,000, with<br />

shallow<br />

350,000 people in the urban network clustered around the<br />

another<br />

shores. In 1521, at the height of Tenochtitlan's power, which<br />

lake<br />

over much of Central Mexico, Hernando Cortés and his<br />

extended<br />

conquered the city. Cortés boasted to King Charles V of<br />

followers<br />

that Tenochtitlan was "destroyed and razed to the ground."<br />

Spain<br />

CHACO MERIDIAN: ONE THOUSAND YEARS OF POLITICAL<br />

THE<br />

RELIGIOUS POWER IN THE ANCIENT SOUTHWEST<br />

AND<br />

this return to his lively, provocative reconceptualization of the<br />

In<br />

of Chaco Canyon and its monumental 11th-century<br />

meaning<br />

Stephen H. Lekson expands—over time and distance—<br />

structures,<br />

understanding of the political and economic integration of the<br />

our<br />

Southwest.<br />

American<br />

argument that Chaco did not stand alone, but rather was<br />

Lekson’s<br />

first of three capitals in a vast networked region incorporating<br />

the<br />

of the Pueblo world has gained credence over the past 15<br />

most<br />

Here, he marshals new evidence and new interpretations to<br />

years.<br />

the case for ritual astronomical alignment of monumental<br />

further<br />

and cities, great ceremonial roads, and the shift of the<br />

structures<br />

capital first from Chaco Canyon to the <strong>Aztec</strong> Ruins site<br />

regional<br />

then to Paquimé, all located on the same longitudinal<br />

and<br />

meridian.<br />

DEATH OF AZTEC TENOCHTITLAN, THE LIFE OF<br />

THE<br />

CITY<br />

MEXICO<br />

But was it?


written in the <strong>Aztec</strong> language, Nahuatl, in 1552, this<br />

Originally<br />

codex was the first herbal and medical text compiled in the<br />

classic<br />

World. The author of this extraordinarily rare and valuable<br />

New<br />

was Martín de la Cruz, an <strong>Aztec</strong> physician, whose work<br />

document<br />

subsequently translated into Latin by an <strong>Aztec</strong> nobleman, Juan<br />

was<br />

Badiano.<br />

book was translated into English in 1939 by William Gates. In<br />

The<br />

pages are centuries-old <strong>Aztec</strong> remedies for boils, hair loss,<br />

these<br />

insomnia, sore throats, hiccups, gout, lesions, wounds,<br />

cataracts,<br />

diseases, tumors, and scores of other ailments. Over 180 black-<br />

joint<br />

figures of the plants augment the text, along with 38 full<br />

and-white<br />

illustrations made specially for the Gates edition. Additional<br />

color<br />

include an introduction to the Mexican botanical<br />

supplements<br />

an analytical index of the plants, and a new Introduction by<br />

system,<br />

<strong>Aztec</strong>s were fierce, honorable, death-obsessed, and<br />

The<br />

religious. A famed scholar evokes the life of this<br />

profoundly<br />

culture on the eve of its extinction, when the Spanish<br />

complex<br />

and conquered them--imprisoning Montezuma and<br />

arrived<br />

Atahualpa. "It is, without question, the most brilliant, the<br />

strangling<br />

and most readable portrayal of <strong>Aztec</strong> life available in any<br />

clearest<br />

AN AZTEC HERBAL: THE CLASSIC CODEX OF 1552<br />

anthropologist Bruce Byland of the City University of New York.<br />

DAILY LIFE OF THE AZTECS<br />

language."--The Observer.

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