Terms / Concepts:
- zocalo = center plaza of Mexico City
- talud - tablero construction
- colors
- green
- symbolized fertility
- symbolized fields
- symbolized jade
- represented everything precious
- reds
- represented blood, life itself
- represented the beating heart
Notes:
- the world was destroyed four times before, and was
created a fifth time at Teotihuacán
- Teotihuacán was created in the image of the universe,
both in its horizontal and vertical dimensions
- between the 5th and the 7th centuries A.D. Teotihuacán
was at its most glorious
- at that time the city had a population of around 100,000
- at that time it was one of the 6th leading cities of the world
- its prestige was enormous
- the Teotihuacanos carried out the first great urban revolution
in America
- the Teotihuacán architects defined the basic style of Mesoamerican
cities
- symmetry
- orthogonality
- involving right angles or perpendiculars
- orthogonal projection: "The
two-dimensional graphic representation of an object
formed by the perpendicular
intersections of lines drawn from points on the object
to a plane of projection." -- Bartleyby.com
- Teotihuacán got its wealth through trade
- The priests were the most powerful social and
political element of the Teotihuacán world
- their images can be found everywhere
- strong and well-established central authority
- their influence extended to every corner of the empire
- a powerful religious elite based their power on war on sacrifice
- including human sacrifice
- there were three kind of cults
- a local community cult devoted to the jaguar
and canine deities which represented the powerful animals of the region
- the cult of the powerful god Quetzal-Maripoza
- born of the marriage between a bird and a butterfly
- the cult based upon the state and the civilization
- mostly devoted to Tlaloc,
the master of rain and storms
- particularly venerated in this region where
water was so rare
- the god of sustenance
- represented i the form of a stylized mask with
big round eyes
- the main deity of pre-Columbian mythology was Quetzalcoatl,
the plumed-serpent
- the Quetzal is a bird from the tropical forest
- mythical god
- image is linked to the creation of the earth and the sun
- master of the earth and water
- this is the civilizing hero who led men to perfect the
arts, and move beyond the bestial to the world of morality
- symbolizes the Holy Spirit, man's ideal
- his temple stands in the courtyard, in the Citadela
- in both size and function, this is one of the city's
most important architectural complexes
- this was the seat of government from which the city's
religious and political power was exerted
- archaeologists have recently discovered several groups
of skeletons
- the bodies were laid out just like the ones under
the Pyramid of the Moon
- the skeletons were placed next to one another in
groups of 3, 4, 18 and 20
- In the eighth century A.D. the city fell to ruin
- we do
not know why
- sometime around A.D. 750 the holy city of
Quetzalcoatl was demolished
- but even after its destruction, when it was nothing more than
a pile or ruins swamped by vegetation, it continued to exert
a
powerful influence
- from the Gulf to the Yucatan peninsula its town planning
was taken as a model
- its architectural style was imitated
- its religious beliefs were perpetuated
- the archetypal civilized city, Teotihuacán marked
the start of a period of Mesoamerican urban models to which
Mexico City still belongs
- Pyramid of the Sun
- all of the major buildings were aligned to the east-west axis
of the Pyramid of the Sun
- excavations of an underground cave directly below the Pyramid
of the Sun, in the form of a four-leaf clover suggest that this
is the place where
the
world
was begun
- it is perfectly oriented to the cardinal directions
- 243 steps to the temple base at the top
- built as a single project
- Pyramid of the Moon
- actually five pyramids built on on top of the other, each
corresponding to a stage in its evolution
- skulls were found in its interior
- perhaps a sacrificial warrior
- Avenue of the Dead
- Citadela
Cultures:
Sites / Locations:
- Teotihuacán
(Teotihuacanos)
- was abandoned more than 500 years before the arrival of the
Aztecs
- Aztec mythology was built around this mysterious city
- Tula,
Hidalgo (Toltecs)
- Lake Texcoco
- Tenochtitlán
(Aztec)
- "The Venice of the Americas"
Individuals:
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