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Tenochtitlan

Tenochtitlan,[a] also known as Mexico-Tenochtitlan,[b] was a large Mexican altepetl in what is now the historic center of Mexico City. The exact date of the founding of the city is unclear, but the date 13 March 1325 was chosen in 1925 to celebrate the 600th anniversary of the city.[2] The city was built on an island in what was then Lake Texcoco in the Valley of Mexico. The city was the capital of the expanding Aztec Empire in the 15th century[3] until it was captured by the Tlaxcaltec and the Spanish in 1521.

Not to be confused with Teotihuacan.

Mexico-Tenochtitlan

Monarchy

1325

1428

140,000+[1]

Mexico-Tenochtitlan

Unclear date, declared 13 March 1325

Late Postclassic

Historic Centre of Mexico City and Xochimilco

Cultural: ii, iii, iv, v

412

1987 (11th Session)

At its peak, it was the largest city in the pre-Columbian Americas. It subsequently became a cabecera of the Viceroyalty of New Spain. Today, the ruins of Tenochtitlan are in the historic center of the Mexican capital. The World Heritage Site of Xochimilco contains what remains of the geography (water, boats, floating gardens) of the Mexica capital.


Tenochtitlan was one of two Mexica āltepētl (city-states or polities) on the island, the other being Tlatelolco.

Etymology[edit]

Traditionally, the name Tenochtitlan was thought to come from Nahuatl tetl [ˈtetɬ] ("rock") and nōchtli [ˈnoːtʃtɬi] ("prickly pear") and is often thought to mean, "Among the prickly pears [growing among] rocks." However, one attestation in the late 16th-century manuscript known as "the Bancroft dialogues" suggest the second vowel was short, so that the true etymology remains uncertain.[4] Another view is that the city was named after Tenoch.[3]

List of megalithic sites

List of Mesoamerican pyramids

History of Mexico City

Portrait of Tenochtitlan

Coe, Michael D. (2008). Mexico: From the Olmecs to the Aztecs. New York, New York: Thames & Hudson.

Cohen, Sara E. (March 1972). "How the Aztecs Appraised Montezuma". Society for History Education: The History Teacher. 5 (3): 21–30. :10.2307/491417. JSTOR 491417.

doi

(1969). Five Letters of Cortés to the Emperor. Morris J.Baynard (ed. and trans.).

Cortés, Hernán

(1963) [1632]. The Conquest of New Spain. Penguin Classics. J. M. Cohen (trans.) (sixth printing (1973) ed.). Harmondsworth, England: Penguin Books. ISBN 0-14-044123-9. OCLC 162351797.

Díaz del Castillo, Bernal

(May 2005). "City Size in Late Post-Classic Mesoamerica" (PDF). Journal of Urban History. 31 (4). Beverly Hills, CA: SAGE Publications: 403–434. doi:10.1177/0096144204274396. OCLC 1798556. S2CID 145452272. Retrieved 1 February 2008.

Smith, Michael E.

(1984). La vida cotidiana de los aztecas en visperas de la conquista (in Spanish). Mexico City: Fondo de Cultura Economica.

Soustelle, Jacques

(1992). American Holocaust: Columbus and the conquest of the New World. New York, New York: Oxford University Press.

Stannard, David E.

Walker, Charles (1980). . New York, New York: Crescent Books. ISBN 9780517318256.

Wonders of the Ancient World

Townsend, Camilla. Malintzin's Choices: An Indian Woman in the Conquest of Mexico. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 2006. Print.

by Thomas Kole

A Portrait of Tenochtitlan, 1518