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You are here : AllRefer.com > Reference > Encyclopedia > Mesoamerican Indigenous Peoples > Aztec
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Aztec, Mesoamerican Indigenous Peoples

Related Category: Mesoamerican Indigenous Peoples

Aztec[az´tek´´] Pronunciation Key - The Aztec Civilization


By absorption of other cultural elements and by conquest the Aztec achieved a composite civilization, based on the heritage of Toltec and Mixteca-Puebla. They attained a high degree of development in engineering, architecture, art, mathematics, and astronomy. The Aztec calendar utilized a 260-day year and a 52-year time cycle. Aztec skill in engineering was evident in the fortifications of their island capital. The Aztec further developed sculpture, weaving, metalwork, ornamentation, music, and picture writing for historical records. Agriculture was well advanced and trade flourished.

The political and social organization was based on three castes : nobility, priesthood, and military and merchants. The priesthood was a powerful political as well as religious force. Aztec government was relatively centralized, although many conquered chiefs retained political autonomy; they paid tribute and kept commerce open to the Aztec. The Aztec had a large and efficient army. Prisoners of war were used for human sacrifice to satisfy the many gods of the Aztec pantheon, notably Huitzilopochtli, the chief god, who was god of war.

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The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press.
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Topics that might be of interest to you:

archaeology
calendar
Chichimec
HernAn CortEs
CuauhtEmoc
hallucinogenic drug
hieroglyphic
Huastec
Huitzilopochtli
inscription
Mexico, city, Mexico
Mexican art and architecture
Mexico, country, North America
Mixtec
Montezuma
Natives, Middle American
pre-Columbian art and architecture
Quetzalcoatl
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TenochtitlAn
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Related Categories:

Social Sciences and the Law > Anthropology and Archaeology
History > Latin America and the Caribbean


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