Mexico: From the Olmecs to the AztecsMichael D. Coe's Mexico has long been recognized as the most readable and authoritative introduction to the region's ancient civilizations. This companion to his best-selling The Maya has now been completely revised by Professor Coe and Rex Koontz. The sixth edition includes new developments in the birth of agriculture and writing, both of which were independently invented here. Fresh insights into the metropolis of Teotihuacan reveal a world of palaces and warrior cults brought down by social revolts. A spectacular new find in the center of the Aztec capital, just unearthed, gives us a privileged glimpse into the funerary rites of the most powerful monarch in North America at the time. |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 33
Page 41
... village - farming life . In the Old World this event first occurred , along the hilly flanks of Mesopotamia , as early as the tenth millen- nium before Christ , not very much later than the first experimentation with plant and animal ...
... village - farming life . In the Old World this event first occurred , along the hilly flanks of Mesopotamia , as early as the tenth millen- nium before Christ , not very much later than the first experimentation with plant and animal ...
Page 44
... village . Furthermore , there was a marked degree of social differentiation in the goods accompanying burials : high - status individuals tended to have burial offerings like mirrors , cut shell , jade labrets and earspools , and above ...
... village . Furthermore , there was a marked degree of social differentiation in the goods accompanying burials : high - status individuals tended to have burial offerings like mirrors , cut shell , jade labrets and earspools , and above ...
Page 49
... village was established directly on the sands of a beach fronting an arm of the great lake . Protected from the chill winds of winter by the slopes of a nearby hill , the farmers drew suste- nance from the products of their fields and ...
... village was established directly on the sands of a beach fronting an arm of the great lake . Protected from the chill winds of winter by the slopes of a nearby hill , the farmers drew suste- nance from the products of their fields and ...
Common terms and phrases
ancient Mexico archaeological archaeologists Archaic Aztec ball court building burial Cacaxtla capital carved cave central Mexico ceramic Chiapas Chich'en Itza Cholula civilization Classic period Classic Veracruz clay complex Conquest Cortés decoration deity domestication eagle Early Preclassic El Tajín elite empire Epiclassic excavations Feathered Serpent female figure figurines goddess gods Gulf Coast highlands Huitzilopochtli human important jade jaguar known La Venta lake land Late Preclassic period Long Count lowlands maize Maya area Mesoamerica Mexican Mexico City Middle Preclassic Mixtec Monte Albán monumental Motecuhzoma murals Nahuatl native Oaxaca obsidian painted palace plants population pottery probably Puebla Pyramid Quetzalcoatl rain region ritual ruler San Lorenzo sculpture Spaniards Spanish Stela stone style Tajín Tarascan Tehuacan Temple Tenochtitlan teosinte Teotihuacan Tezcatlipoca Tlaloc Tlatilco Toltec tombs Tula turquoise Valley of Mexico Venta Veracruz village warriors World Xochicalco Zapotec