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Early American Civilizations

Early American Civilizations. The Earliest Americans. Between 30,000 – 10,000 BC, nomadic groups crossed a land bridge (created by falling sea levels during an ice age) from Asia to North America After 10,000 BC, the ice age ended, the land bridge disappeared, and they became isolated

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Early American Civilizations

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  1. Early American Civilizations

  2. The Earliest Americans • Between 30,000 – 10,000 BC, nomadic groups crossed a land bridge (created by falling sea levels during an ice age) from Asia to North America • After 10,000 BC, the ice age ended, the land bridge disappeared, and they became isolated • These peoples eventually spread throughout the American continents

  3. The Olmec Civilization • About 1400 – 500 BC • First large American civilization, lived along the Mexican gulf coast • No real cities, but rather villages built around complex central ceremonial centers • Ruled by a priest class, built massive monumental pyramids for religious use

  4. The Mayan Civilization • 300 – 900 AD • Centered on the Yucatan peninsula and Central America • Lived in large cities built around towering pyramid-temples • Built roads to support their extensive trade with other peoples

  5. Mayan Society • Mayan city-states ruled by independent kings, but priests were still very powerful • Complex class structure • Upper class included king, priests, warriors, and merchants • Farmers had to give crops to ruler and serve in the army • Slaves held the lowest position in society • Slaves included orphans, slaves’ children, and people who owed money

  6. Mayan Advances • Advances • Hieroglyphic writing system • Made books from bark • Highly accurate, 365 day calendar • Performed advanced mathematical calculations • Built an elaborate trade network with neighboring civilizations

  7. Mayan Collapse • The cause for Mayan collapse is unknown, but around 900 AD, the people abandoned their cities • Excessive wars may have been a factor • An extreme drought, brought on by deforestation may have also contributed • A mix of these events is probably responsible for the decline

  8. The Aztec Civilization • 1200 – 1521 AD • Settled in the Valley of Mexico, which had been home to an earlier civilization centered on the city of Teotihuacán which had prospered from about 100 – 750 AD. • Aztecs built a new city called Tenochtitlán (now Mexico City) on man-made islands in the middle of a shallow lake • Eventually ruled most of Mexico, numbered over 30 million in population

  9. Aztec Society • Ruled by a single emperor who was selected by a council of priests and nobles • Slaves, who were usually prisoners of war or criminals, had rights under the law and could own land and buy their freedom

  10. Aztec Advances • Had formal schools for the sons of nobles • Further developed the Mayan calendar system • Advanced mathematics • Advanced medicine: could set bones, fill cavities, & treat fevers • Advanced building techniques, including canals, bridges, & pyramids

  11. Aztec Religion • Practiced human sacrifice to appease their many gods • As time passed, more and more sacrifices were required • By the time the Spanish arrived, the Aztec may have been sacrificing as many as 10,000 people each year

  12. Aztec Collapse • Believing that the Spanish under Hernán Cortés were gods, and fearing that the Spanish had allied themselves with the Aztec’s enemies, the Aztec allowed them to enter the capital • Cortés betrayed the hospitality of Aztec emperor Moctezuma and conquered the city in 1521

  13. Pre-Incan South America • The Chavin: developed the ability to work gold; domesticated the llama • The Mochica: developed advanced ceramic pottery and irrigation systems • The Nazca: laid out strange patterns of white stone on the Nazca Desert floor which can only be seen from the air

  14. The Incan Civilization • 1438 – 1533 • Founded by the first Sapa Inca (or emperor), the king of the city-state of Cuzco, Pachacuti. • The Inca quickly came to rule nearly the entire Pacific coast of South America

  15. Incan Government • Ruled by the Sapa Inca, whom the Inca believed was divine (a god) • Political and religious leader of the Inca • He owned everything and everyone in the empire • His government used local governors and bureaucracy to maintain control • Excellent road system and a trained, professional army allowed quick response to any threat or rebellion

  16. Incan Advances • Built and maintained an extensive network of roads (12,000 miles), bridges, and tunnels • Developed system of record keeping called quipu; quipu were knotted strings of different lengths and colors • Had communication stations along roads to send runners from station to station with messages very rapidly • Large cities of Machu Pichu and Cuzco (the capital) • Used terraces to allow farming on mountainsides • Accomplished surgeons, using antiseptics and anesthesia

  17. The Quipu System

  18. Incan City of Machu Pichu

  19. Incan Collapse • Spanish conquistadors led by Francisco Pizarro took advantage of a recent civil war and a smallpox epidemic in the Incan Empire to attack • Captured and killed the last Sapa Inca, Atahualpa, even after the Incan people agreed to pay a massive ransom for his release

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