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I. Origins of Americans and Their Culture II. Emerging Civilizations in Mesoamerica III. Classical Mayan Civilization IV. The Post-Classical Era in Mesoamerica V. The Amerindians of North America. I. Origins of Americans and Their Culture Origins from 20,000 years ago
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I. Origins of Americans and Their Culture II. Emerging Civilizations in Mesoamerica III. Classical Mayan Civilization IV. The Post-Classical Era in Mesoamerica V. The Amerindians of North America Brummett, et al, Civilization, Past & Present
I. Origins of Americans and Their Culture • Origins • from 20,000 years ago • Clovis points, c. 11,200 B.C.E. • Chile by 10,500 B.C.E. • Caral, Peru • first city, c. 2600 B.C.E. • Maize • Tehuacán valley of Mexico c. 5000 B.C.E. • Mississippi Valley to Argentine pampas, • by 1000 B.C.E.
II. Emerging Civilizations in Mesoamerica • A. Formative Period (1500–150 C.E.) • Olmeccivilization • c. 1200 B.C.E., Vera Cruz • pyramids • B. The Classical Period (150–900 C.E.) • Achievements: • written communication • complex time reckoning • interregional trade • Teotihuacán • 125–200,000 • Monte Alban
III. Classical Mayan Civilization • A. Origins • B. Centers • Kaminaljuyu • Tikal, by 550 C.E. • C. Achievements • calendar • writing system • pictographs, glyphs
IV. The Post-Classical Era in Mesoamerica A. The Toltecs • Capital: Tollan • Quetzalcoatl - Teotihuacan god • Tezcatlipoca - Toltec war-god • Yucatán • Chichén Itzá • Mayapán • B. The Aztecs • into central Mexico by 1200 • Tenochtitlán (Mexico City) • Lake Texcoco, c. 1325 • tributary of Atzcapotzalco • Alliance with Tecoco, Tlacopán against Atzcapotzalco • Itzcoatl (1427–1440) • Montezuma I (1440–1468) • Montezuma II (1502–1520) • Spanish invasion
IV. The Post-Classical Era in Mesoamerica • (B. The Aztecs) • Social organization • Calpulli (clans) • Pipiltin (nobles) • Pochteca (merchants) • Religion • Huitzilopochtli (sun/war god) • Tlateloco (god of rain) • Pyramids to both Agriculture • dams, canals • chinampas (floating gardens)
Infrastructure • canal system • roads • Command economy • Society • nobles • nobles of conquered peoples • common workers • slaves • Emperor • ministers – Imperial Council Religion • vast clergy Sun-god • IV. The Post-Classical Era in Mesoamerica C. The Inca • 200 ethnolinguistic groups • c. 600, cities emerge Kingdoms at Huari, Tiahuanaco collapse, tenth century • Kingdom of Chimu • c. 1200, Cuzco valley settled • Viracocha (d. 1438) • conquest • Pachacuti (1438-1471) Quechua, official language • Topa Upanqui (1471-1493) conquest of Chimu
V. The Amerindians of North America • A. The Iroquois of the Northeast Woodlands settled agriculture • B. The Adena and Hopewell Cultures, Ohio Valley • from 800 B.C.E. • Sunflowers, squash, maize • Mounds • C. The Mississippian Culture • Cahokia, Illinois • wattle-and-daub houses • 900–1150 • Decline, c. 1400
V. The Amerindians of North America • A. The Iroquois of the Northeast Woodlands settled agriculture • B. The Adena and Hopewell Cultures, Ohio Valley • from 800 B.C.E. • Sunflowers, squash, maize • Mounds
V. The Amerindians of North America • C. The Mississippian Culture • Cahokia, Illinois • wattle-and-daub houses • 900–1150 • Decline, c. 1400
V. The Amerindians of North America • D. The Southwest: Mogollon, Hohokam, and Anasazi • Commonalities maize, beans, squash • adobe, masonry • pottery • Mogollon , 300 B.C.E.–1340 C.E. • Hohokam • canals • Anasazi, 300–1300 • Cotton cloth
V. The Amerindians of North America • E. The Navajo, the Apache, the Mandan • Navajo • Apache • Mandan • F. The Far North: Inuit and Aleut • Aleuts • kayaks • Inuits (Eskimos)