Peoples and Civilizations of the Americas

Similar documents
Early Civilizations of Middle America. Chapter 2, Section 1

Before Contact with Europeans

The Civilizations of America

CHAPTER ELEVEN The Americas on the Eve of Invasion

WESTERN HEMISPHERE CIVILIZATIONS. Isolation from Eastern Hemisphere

CIVILIZATIONS OF EARLY CENTRAL AND SOUTH AMERICA

North American Societies

Name Class Date. Down 1. The Maya built these buildings to. 2. The Aztec leader killed by the. 4. He and his troops conquered the

SSWH8 The student will demonstrate an understanding of the development of societies in Central and South America.

Slide 1. Slide 2. Slide 3

The Americas. Aztec Golden age lasted between Inca -Golden age lasted between Maya -Golden age spanned between 300A.D. -900A.D.

made it seem like a bad location at first glance)

Maya, Inca, Aztec. Notes

2.1 Why and how did humans first come to north America?

Lesson 1: Migration to the Americas

Civilizations of Middle America LEARNING TARGETS

The Native American Experience

Basic parts of a friendly letter: Heading, greeting, body, closing, and signature

MAYANS. The Mayans lived on the Yucatan Peninsula (in brown, right). This civilization flourished between 300 and 900 CE.

Grade 6 Chapter 6 Social Studies Notes

ARTIFACT A ARTIFACT B

Unit 1 A New World Rising Grade 5 Social Studies/ELA Curriculum Lesson 3: Great Civilizations Emerge in the Americas.

They built a magnificent city called Tenochtitlan (now Mexico City).

Name: Date: Period: Chapter 11 Reading Guide The Americas on the Eve of Invasion p

Government city-states

Name Period. Maya, Aztec & Inca Civilizations Latin America Notes. The Maya

December 11, Study Guide

Economy The Inca government also controlled the economy. Instead of paying taxes, Incas had to pay their government in labor (usually several weeks pe

List any questions that you have pertaining about the Economics Unit we just finished.

Ancient Civilizations of North America. Prof. Ruthie García Vera Historia de Estados Unidos

States and Empires in the Western Hemisphere Aztecs and Incas

Prof. Ruthie García Vera Historia de Estados Unidos. Ancient Cultures of North America

Aztecs arrived in the Valley of Mexico in 1100s (central Mexico, including present day Mexico City).

February 10, Study Guide


Plain Local 5 th Grade Social Studies SLO

Mesoamerica. "Mesoamerican Art & The "Horse" Controversy." Lehis Library. N.p., n.d. Web. 18 June 2014.

Ancient Mayans. KP Classroom

The World before the Opening of the Atlantic BEGINNINGS 1500

Cities and Empires:Great Civilizations of

Were the Aztecs really that brutal? Basic Introduction to the Aztecs. The Aztecs

Student Handout #4: Era 3 Societies around the World. The Olmec:

Chapter 20. Worlds Apart: The Americas and Oceania. 2011, The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

World Civilizations: Latin America Spring 2016 Mesoamerica Before Europeans Initial Migration Earliest human like creature in Africa 2 million years

EARLY AMERICAS. Ice age and the Olmec

Ancient Civilizations Project

The First Civilizations Unit 1. Ancient and Classical Civilizations AP World History

Maya Teotihuacan Zapotec Moche Chavin Wari. flourished during 700s

Mesopotamian History. Chapter 2 Art History. Roxanna Ford 2014

The Fertile Crescent is a region of the Middle East that stretches in a large, crescent-shaped curve from the Persian Gulf to the Mediterranean Sea.

Mesopotamia and the Fertile Crescent

SS8 Chapter 7a: How Did Geography and History Affect the Worldviews of the Aztec?

North American Native Americans

The Earliest Americans. Chapter 1 Section 1

Chapter 5. Early Society in East Asia. 2011, The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

World Civilizations. The Global Experience. Chapter. The Americas on the Eve of Invasion. AP Seventh Edition

Chapter 16. The Americas on the Eve of Invasion OUTLINE. I. Introduction

The Aztec Empire: The Last Great Native Civilization in Mesoamerica

Competition for a Continent Why did early French and English efforts at colonization falter?

Chapter 7 The Settlement of the Americas and the Pacific Islands

Peoples and Civilizations of the Americas,

What was Africa like before global integration?

Civilizations of the Americas

The study of past societies through an analysis of what people have left behind.

Chapter 2 NOTES. RPC: What role did the Nile River play in the development of Egyptian civilization?

mathematics and obsidian

The two civilizations were isolated for years, with this they faced many challenges. They faced environmental challenges such as polar

Name Period Date. Big Idea: City-states in Mesopotamia developed into one of the world s first civilizations by using resources in new ways.

WHI.02: Early Humans

Note Taking Study Guide UNDERSTANDING OUR PAST

THREE WORLDS MEET CHAPTER 1 SECTION 1: PEOPLING THE AMERICAS SECTION 2: NORTH AMERICAN SOCIETIES AROUND Mitten CSHS AMAZ History Semester 1

Agriculture marked a dramatic change in how people lived together. They began dwelling in larger, more organized communities, such as farming

History Alive!-Chapter 20. The Shang Dynasty Introduction (p.195)

Indo-European Migrations: 4m-2m BCE The Middle East: The Crossroads of Three Continents

Did you know? Africa is one of the earth s seven continents. It is the second largest continent. Africa is a land of great beauty and resources.

EARLY AMERICAS. Ice age and the Olmec

When Worlds Collide The peopling of North America

Study Guide: Sunshine State Standards

Unit 1-Part 1 From the Origins of Agriculture to the First River- Valley Civilizations B.C.

Chapter 1 The First Americans. Section 1 Early Peoples

Aztec and Inca Review

Can you hear me? 11/9/15

Study Guide for The Americas

hapter 3 Lesson 1: The Earliest Texan

9/12/16. Lesson 2-1 Notes: Early People

CHAPTER 6 EARLY SOCIETIES IN THE AMERICAS AND OCEANIA

ANT 202 Wednesday November 19, 2014

AMERICAS OLMEC CIVILIZATION BCE. ZAPOTEC CIVILIZATION 500 BCE-1500s CE. TEOTIHUACAN 300s BCE-800 CE

Kingdoms & Trading States of Medieval Africa

Name: Date: The Olmec

Many trade routes crossed the savanna through the region farmed by the Soninke people. The Soninke called their leader Ghana, or war chief.

ADVANCED CITIES: The people who established the world's first civilization around 4000 B.C. in southern Mesopotamia were known as the Sumerians.

THE CRADLE OF CIVILIZATION

CIVILIZATION (part 1) 1. What is Civilization? 2. How the city of UR exemplifies early civilization?

Guided Reading. netw rks. The Maya. The Americas. Lesson 2 Life in the Americas ESSENTIAL QUESTION. Identifying Answer these questions about the Maya.

Chapter 1 Worlds Apart

Settling the Americas

GEOGRAPHY OF THE FERTILE CRESENT

Unit 4: The Americas

Chapter 1 Reading Guide/Study Guide Section One Early Humans (pages 19 25

Transcription:

Peoples and Civilizations of the Americas 600-1500

Teotihuacan Teotihuacan was a large Mesoamerican city at the height of its power in 450 600 c.e. The city had a population of 125,000 to 200,000 inhabitants Dominated by religious structures Pyramids and temples where human sacrifice was carried out.

The growth of Teotihuacan Made possible by forced relocation of farm families to the city By agricultural innovations including irrigation works and chinampas ( floating gardens ) ) that This increased food production and thus supported a larger population

Chinampas

Apartment-like stone buildings housed commoners, including the artisans who made pottery and obsidian tools and weapons for export The elite: Lived in separate residential compounds Controlled the state bureaucracy, tax collection, and commerce.

Who controlled Teotihuacan Appears to have been ruled by alliances of wealthy families rather than by kings The military was used primarily to protect and expand long-distance trade and to ensure that farmers paid taxes or tribute to the elite

Reasons for Collapse of Teotihuacan? Collapsed around 650 c.e The collapse may have been caused by mismanagement of resources and conflict within the elite Invasion

The Maya The Maya were a single culture living in : Guatemala Honduras Belize Southern Mexico They never formed a politically unified state Various Maya kingdoms fought each other for regional dominance.

Mayan Agriculture Increased their agricultural productivity by: Draining swamps Building elevated fields Constructing irrigation systems

Mayan Religious Beliefs The Maya believed that the cosmos consisted of three layers: The heavens, The human world, The underworld The rulers and elites served as priests to communicate with the residents of the two supernatural worlds.

Maya military forces Fought for captives not for territory Elite captives were sacrificed Commoners enslaved

Great Plaza at Tikal Great Plaza at Tikal Still visible in the ruins of Tikal, in modern Guatemala, are the impressive architectural and artistic achievements of the classic-era Maya. Maya centers provided a dramatic setting for the rituals that dominated public life. Construction of Tikal began before 150 B.C.E.; the city was abandoned about 900 C.E. A ball court and residences for the elite were part of the Great Plaza. (Martha Cooper/Peter Arnold, Inc.) Copyright Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

Mayan Women Participated in bloodletting rituals and other ceremonies Held no political power Non-elite women probably played an essential role in agricultural and textile production

Maya technological developments Maya calendar Mathematics The Maya writing system

Decline of the Maya Most Maya city-states were abandoned or destroyed between 800 and 900 c.e Possible reasons for the decline of Maya culture include: The disruption of Mesoamerican trade attendant upon the fall of Teotihuacan, Environmental pressure caused by overpopulation, Epidemic disease.

Toltecs Read about them! On to the Aztecs

Aztecs The Aztecs were originally a northern people with a clan-based social organization They migrated to the Lake Texcoco area Established the cities of Tenochtitlan and Tlatelolco around 1325 Developed a monarchical system of government

Goddess Tlazolteotl Goddess Tlazolteotl The Aztecs controlled much of central Mexico in 1519. Religion was the dynamic factor that transformed other aspects of their culture, and they had many gods. The Aztecs believed that Tlazolteotl (sometimes called "Mother of the Gods") consumed the sins of humankind by eating refuse. As the goddess of childbirth, Tlazolteotl was extensively worshipped. Notice the squatting position for childbirth, then common all over the world. (Dumbarton Oaks, Pre- Columbian Collection, Washington, D.C.) Copyright Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

Aztec Kings The kings increased their wealth and power by means of territorial conquest As the Aztec Empire increased in size, commoners lost their ability to influence political decisions and inequalities in wealth grew more severe.

Aztec Agriculture The Aztecs increased agricultural production in the capital area by undertaking land reclamation projects and constructing irrigated fields and chinampas Nonetheless, grain and other food tribute met nearly one quarter of the capital s s food requirements

Aztec Worship The Aztecs worshiped a large number of gods Most important God was Huitzilopochtli, the Sun god Huitzilopochtli required a diet of human hearts that were supplied by sacrificing thousands of people every year

Southwestern Desert Cultures Most influential was the Anasazi Anasazi developed a maize, rice, and bean economy Constructed underground buildings (kivas( kivas) in the Arizona/New Mexico/Colorado/Utah region around 450 750 c.e.

The large Anasazi community at Chaco Canyon had a population of about 15,000 people They engaged in hunting, trade, and irrigated agriculture Chaco Canyon people seem to have exerted some sort of political or religious dominance over a large region The Anasazi civilization declined in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries as a result of drought, overpopulation, and warfare.

Mound Builders:Mississippian Chiefs served as priests Chiefs managed secular affairs such as long-distance trade The Mississippians built large mounds both as burial sites and as platforms upon which temples and residences of the society s s elite were constructed

Cahokia The largest Mississippian center was Cahokia population of about 30,000 around 1200 c.e Cahokia was abandoned around 1250, perhaps because of climate changes and population pressure

Andean Civilizations, Moche The Moche culture emerged in the north coastal region of Peru in about 200 c.e Moche used the mit a labor system where clans would have to provide a set number of people each year for labor. These people would work in for religious establishments, the royal court, or the aristocracy

Moche society was stratified and theocratic Wealth and power were concentrated in the hands of an elite of priests and military leaders They lived atop large platforms and decorated themselves with magnificent clothing, jewelry, and tall headdresses Commoners cultivated their fields and supplied mit a labor to the elite

Moche artisans skilled in the production of: textiles portrait vases metallurgy Gold and silver were used for decorative purposes, copper and copper alloy for farm tools and weapons The decline and fall of the Moche civilization may be attributed to a series of natural disasters in the sixth century and to pressure from the warlike Wari people in the eighth century

The Inca The Inca were a small chiefdom in Cuzco until their leaders consolidated political authority and began a program of military expansion in the 1430s By 1525, the Inca had constructed a huge empire.

Inca wealth Ability to develop a strong professional military Used military it in order to broaden and expand the traditional exchange system that had linked the various ecological zones of the Andes region together

The Inca used the mit a labor system to: Man their armies, To build their capital city, To maintain their religious institutions, Provide for the old, the weak, and the ill.

Inca domination resulted in increased wealth, but also in reduced levels of local autonomy. When the elite fell into civil war in 1525, Inca control over its vast territories was weakened

Inca tunic Like the Aztecs, the Incas were a small militaristic group that established one of the most extraordinary empires in the world. Gradually, Inca culture spread throughout Peru; roads built by the Incas linked most of the Andean region. Weavers in this region produced beautiful textiles from cotton and from the wool of llamas and alpacas. The Inca inherited this rich craft tradition and produced some of the world's most remarkable textiles. The quality and design of each garment indicated the weaver's rank and power in this society. This tunic was an outer garment for a powerful male.