AP WH Chapter 11 ppt

82
Peoples & Civilizations of the Americas 200-1500 C.E.

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Chapter 11 - The Americas - Maya, Aztec, Inca

Transcript of AP WH Chapter 11 ppt

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Peoples & Civilizations of the Americas

200-1500 C.E.

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Classic-EraCulture & Society in

Mesoamerica

200-1500 C.E.

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Teotihuacán

• Large Mesoamerican city.

• Height of its power – 450-600 C.E.

• Population of 125,000 to 200,000

• Dominated by:– Religious structures

• Had pyramids and temples where human sacrifice was carried out.

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Growth of Teotihuacán

• Possible by forced relocation of farm families to the city by agricultural innovations like:

• irrigation works

• floating gardens– These helped to support a larger population.

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Living Quarters

• Apartment-like stone buildings housed commoners and artisans.

• Artisans made pottery, obsidian tools, and weapons for export.

• Elite lived in separate residential compounds.• Elites controlled:

– State bureaucracy– Tax collection– Commerce

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Rule

• Ruled by alliances of wealthy families rather than by kings.

• Military was used primarily to:– protect and expand long-distance trade– Ensure that farmers paid taxes or tribute to

the elite.

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Collapse

• Teotihuacán collapsed around 650 C.E.

• Caused by:– mismanagement of resources– conflict within the elite– invasion

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Teotihuacán City Plan

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Pyramid of the Moon

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Avenue of the Dead

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Architecture

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Remains

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The Maya

• Single culture living in modern Guatemala, Honduras, Belize, and southern Mexico but never formed a politically unified state.

• Various Maya kingdoms fought each other for regional dominance.

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Map of Mayan Territory

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Agricultural Productivity

• Drained swamps

• Built elevated fields

• Terraced fields

• Constructed irrigation systems

• Managed forest resources to increase production of desired products

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City-States

• Largest city-states dominated neighboring city-states and agricultural areas.

• Constructed impressive and beautifully decorated buildings and monuments by using levers and stone tools.

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Mayan Observatory

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The Cosmos

• To Maya, consisted of three layers:– Heavens– Human world– Underworld

• Temple architecture reflected this cosmology

• Rulers and elites served as priests to communicate with residents of supernatural worlds.

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Mayan Pyramid

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Military Forces

• Fought for captives, not for territory

• Elite captives were sacrificed

• Commoners were enslaved

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Mayan Women

• Elite women participated in bloodletting rituals and other ceremonies

• Rarely had political power

• Non-elite women probably played an essential role in agricultural and textile production.

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Mayan Technology

• Developed:– Maya calendar– System of mathematics– Maya writing system

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Mayan Hieroglyphics

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Mayan Calendar

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Mayan Decline

• Most city-states were abandoned or destroyed between 800-900 C.E.

• Possible reasons:– Disruption of Mesoamerican trade upon fall of

Teotihuacán– Environmental pressure caused by

overpopulation– Epidemic disease

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Post-Classic Period in Mesoamerica

900-1500 C.E.

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Toltecs

• Arrived in central Mexico in the tenth century.

• Built a civilization based on the legacy of Teotihuacán.

• Contributed innovations in the areas of politics and war.

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Toltecs

• Toltec capital = Tula• Center of the first conquest state in the

Americas.• Dual kings ruled the state

– Arrangement probably caused the internal struggle that undermined the Toltec state around 1000 C.E.

• Toltecs destroyed by invaders around 1156 C.E.

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Toltec Statues

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Toltec Shield

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Toltec Ruins

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Aztecs

• Originally a northern people with a clan-based social organization.

• Migrated to Lake Texcoco area

• Established cities of Tenochtitlan and Tlatelolco around 1325

• Developed a monarchical system of government

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Aztec Kings

• Increased wealth and power by means of territorial conquest.As Empire grew in size, commoners lost ability to influence political decisions– Result was increase in inequalities in wealth

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Agricultural Production

• Increased in the capital area by undertaking:– Land reclamation projects– Constructing irrigated fields

• Food tribute met nearly ¼ of capital’s food requirements

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Trade• Merchants who were distinct from and

subordinate to the political elite controlled long-distance trade.

• Technology of trade:– No wheeled vehicles– No draft animals– No money used

• Goods carried by human porters and exchanged through barter.

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Aztec Worship

• Large number of gods– Most important = Huitzilopochtli, the sun god

• Huitzilopochtli required a diet of human hearts that were supplied by sacrificing thousands of people every year.

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Aztec Sacrifice

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Northern Peoples

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Southwestern Desert Cultures

• Irrigation-based agriculture was introduced to Arizona from Mexico around 300 B.C.E.

• Hohokam constructed extensive irrigation works in the Salt and Gila valleys around 1000 C.E.

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Anasazi

• Developed a maize, rice, and bean economy

• Constructed underground buildings (kivas) in Arizona/New Mexico/Colorado/Utah region around 450-750 C.E.

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Chaco Canyon

• Population of about 15,000.

• People engaged in:– Hunting– Trade– Irrigated agriculture

• Exerted political or religious dominance over a large region.

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Anasazi Decline

• Twelfth or thirteenth centuries as a result of:– Drought– Overpopulation– Warfare

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Anasazi Ruins

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Mound Builders of the Mississippi

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Mound Builders:The Mississippian Culture

• Chiefs served as priests and managed secular affairs such as long-distance trade

• People built large mounds both as:– burial sites– as platforms upon which temples and

residences of the society’s elite were constructed.

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Mississippian Center

• 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

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Reconstruction of Cahokia

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Andean Civilizations

600-1500 C.E.

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Cultural Response to Environmental Challenge

• Human inhabitants had to respond to:– High-altitude Andes– Dry coastal plain– Tropical headwaters of the Amazon

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Labor Organization

• Basic unit of Andean labor = clan or ayllu

• Clans held land collectively

• Obligated to assist each other in production and to supply goods and labor to the clan chief.

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Organization

• Territorial states organized after 1000 C.E.

• Introduced the institution of the mit’a– Required each allyu to provide a set number

of workers each year to provide labor for:• Religious establishments• Royal court• aristocracy

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Division of Labor• Work was divided along gender lines.• Men were responsible for:

– Hunting– War– Government

• Women were responsible for:– Weaving– Crops– Home

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Andean Environment

• Four major ecological zones:– Coast– Mountain valleys– Higher elevations– Amazonian region

• Each region produced different goods and exchanged through network of trade routes.

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Moche

• Culture emerged in the north coastal region of Peru in about 200 C.E.

• Used mit’a labor system to construct irrigated agriculture system.

• Produced:– Maize– Quinoa– Beans– Manioc

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Map of Moche Region

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Society

• Stratified and theocratic

• Wealth and power were concentrated in the hands of an elite of priests and military leaders

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Elite vs. Commoners

• Elite:– Lived atop large

platforms– Decorated themselves

with fancy clothes, jewelry, and tall headdresses.

• Commoners:– Cultivated fields of

elite– Supplied mit’a labor to

the elite

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Moche Artisans• Skilled in production of:

– Textiles– Portrait vases– Metallurgy

• Gold and silver used for decorative purposes

• Copper and copper alloy used for farm tools and weapons.

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Moche Art

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Decline and Fall

• Attributed to:– series of natural disasters in the sixth century– Pressure from warlike Wari people in the

eighth century

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Tiwanaku

• Located in Bolivia.

• Experienced increased agricultural productivity and urbanization after 200 C.E.

• Cultivated potatoes and grains on raised fields reclaimed from marshland.

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Urban Construction

• Urban areas included:– Large terraced pyramid– Walled enclosures– Reservoir

• Construction process:– Large stones quarried, moved and laid by

many workers – Used simple technology– Had copper alloy tools

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Tiwanaku

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Tiwanaku Society

• Highly stratified

• Ruled by hereditary elite

• Included specialized artisans

• Tiwanaku was a ceremonial and political center for a large regional population

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Statue by Artisans

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Wari

• Located near city of Ayucuho, Peru

• Had contact with Tiwanaku, but separate culture

• City built without central planning, different techniques, and very small compared to Tiwanaku

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Wari Artwork

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Tiwanaku and Wari

• Both civilizations declined to insignificance by 1000 C.E.

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The Inca

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Origins

• Small chiefdom in Cuzco until leaders consolidated political authority.

• Began program of military expansion in the 1430s.

• By 1525, constructed a huge empire.

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Key to Inca Wealth

Ability to develop a

strong professional military

AND

Use it to broaden and expand traditional exchange system that linked regions of

Andes together.

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Inca Map

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Labor System

• Used mit’a labor system to:– Man armies– Build capital city– Maintain religious institutions– Provide for old, weak, and ill

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Local Rulers

• Inca left local rulers in place

• Controlled them by:– Military garrisons located close by– Took heirs to Cuzco as hostages

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Central Government

• Inca created an imperial bureaucracy led by a king.

• Each king was required to prove himself by conquering new territory.

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Capital City

• Capital = Cuzco

• Laid out in shape of a puma

• Buildings constructed of stone without mortar

• Palaces and temples decorated with scenes of rituals, feasts, and sacrifices.

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Cultural Contributions

• Astronomical observation

• Weaving

• Copper and bronze metallurgy

• Gold and silver working

• Did not introduce new technology, but made existing technology more efficient to increase profits throughout region.

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Inca Artwork

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Civil War

• Incan domination increased wealth, but reduced levels of local autonomy.

• Elite fell into civil war in 1525.

• Inca control over vast territories was weakened.

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Cuzco

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Cuzco

Which way to Machu Pichu?

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Machu Pichu

Now how do we get down from here?