Top Banner
MEXICO
28

Tenochtitlan Capital of the Aztec Civilization.

Dec 23, 2015

Download

Documents

Kellie Dennis
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Tenochtitlan Capital of the Aztec Civilization.

MEXICO

Page 2: Tenochtitlan Capital of the Aztec Civilization.
Page 3: Tenochtitlan Capital of the Aztec Civilization.

TenochtitlanCapital of the Aztec Civilization

Page 4: Tenochtitlan Capital of the Aztec Civilization.
Page 5: Tenochtitlan Capital of the Aztec Civilization.

THE AZTECS & THE SPANISH

Aztecs• Rose in the Valley of Mexico in 1200 AD• From deserts of northern Mexico• Built their capital of Tenochtitlan

Tenochtitlan • City of beautiful temples, gardens & lakes,• The Aztecs practiced human sacrifice in their temples• Destroyed by the Spanish and Cortes • Built Mexico city over its ruins

Page 6: Tenochtitlan Capital of the Aztec Civilization.

NATIVE AMERICANS AND THE SPANISH CONQUEST

Natives: Toltecs, Maya, Aztecs…

Spanish conquest lead to the downfall of the Aztecs

1519 : Hernando Cortez landed on the coast of Mexico

1521 : Cortes and his men conquered the Aztecs

1519 1521

Page 7: Tenochtitlan Capital of the Aztec Civilization.

• Spanish brought language and catholic religion

• Mexico’s native heritage remains strong in spite of diffusion

• Name origin : name comes from Mexica (older name for Aztecs)

• Mestizo population = people of mixed Spanish and Native American heritage

THE AZTECS & THE SPANISH

Page 8: Tenochtitlan Capital of the Aztec Civilization.

COLONIALISM & INDEPENDENCE

Conflict between native people and settlers from Spain

• Blending of Spanish and Indian cultures

• Greatly affected Mexico’s development

Page 9: Tenochtitlan Capital of the Aztec Civilization.

A MEETING OF CULTURES

The culture of Mexico is a blend of Spanish influences with original native cultures

Page 10: Tenochtitlan Capital of the Aztec Civilization.

COLONY & COUNTRY

1821: Mexico declares independence from Spain.

Mid 19th century : Benito Juarez led a reform moment and became president of México.

1917 : New constitution was adopted = redistributed half of Mexico to peasants

1821 Mid 1800s 1917

Page 11: Tenochtitlan Capital of the Aztec Civilization.

1858 1876 1910

Benito Juarez • Served 5 terms from 1858 to 1872• Worked for separation of church and state• Better education opportunities • Even distribution of land. • Took land from rich and gave to peasants

Porfirio Dias• Served 2 terms, 1876-1880 and 1884-1911• Successor of Benito Juarez• Dishonest politician • Brought about a civil war and a revolution led by Francisco Madero, Pancho Villa and Emiliano Zapata in 1910.

LEADERS

Page 12: Tenochtitlan Capital of the Aztec Civilization.

ONE PARTY RULE1929 : New party = institutional revolutionary party (PRI)• Helped introduce democracy • Maintain political stability• Continued redistribution lands to peasants

1929 2000 2000+

2000 : Vicente Fox was elected president

For the first time in 71 yrs PRI did not control Mexico

2000 election = Mexico was gradually becoming democratic

Page 13: Tenochtitlan Capital of the Aztec Civilization.

ECONOMICS: CITIES AND FACTORIES

2 economic challenges :• Close gap between rich and poor• Develop a modern industrial economy

Mexico has traditionally been an agricultural society, although industrialization started in the mid 20th century

Page 14: Tenochtitlan Capital of the Aztec Civilization.

POPULATION & CITIES

Movement to cities• More job opportunity• More pay• Help reduce gap between rich and poor

1970: population 52 million2000: double that of 1970 at 109 million

Page 15: Tenochtitlan Capital of the Aztec Civilization.

OIL & MANUFACTURING

• Large oil reserves along Gulf of Mexico• Oil = Positive step to industrialization• Helped finance development

• Manufacturing: Most important part of economic development. The factories are located north near the U.S. border

• Maquiladoras: Factories in Mexico that assemble imported materials in to finished goods.

Page 16: Tenochtitlan Capital of the Aztec Civilization.

NAFTA = North American Free Trade Agreement

• Mexico, US, Canada

• Created huge zone of cooperation on trade

• Imported tariffs on imported goods are slowly being reduced

NAFTA

Page 17: Tenochtitlan Capital of the Aztec Civilization.

MEXICAN LIFE TODAY!

Big challenges: Jobs, Emigration & Education

EMIGRATION• Due to rapidly growing population & government policies • In search of work• Separates families

WORK AND SCHOOL • 85 % of school age kids attend school today

Page 18: Tenochtitlan Capital of the Aztec Civilization.

Mexico City Is the largest city in the world (19 million inhabitants)

Page 19: Tenochtitlan Capital of the Aztec Civilization.

It is the cultural capital of Mexico as well as the political capital.

Page 20: Tenochtitlan Capital of the Aztec Civilization.

Felipe Calderon is the current President of Mexico

Page 21: Tenochtitlan Capital of the Aztec Civilization.

Guadalajara Mexico is the 2nd biggest city.

Page 22: Tenochtitlan Capital of the Aztec Civilization.

Monterrey Mexico, largest city in Northern Mexico

Page 23: Tenochtitlan Capital of the Aztec Civilization.

Monterrey is an important industrial and business center.

Page 24: Tenochtitlan Capital of the Aztec Civilization.
Page 25: Tenochtitlan Capital of the Aztec Civilization.

Ciudad JuarezLarge city that borders El Paso

Page 26: Tenochtitlan Capital of the Aztec Civilization.

Tijuana MexicoIs a large border town next to San Diego

Page 27: Tenochtitlan Capital of the Aztec Civilization.
Page 28: Tenochtitlan Capital of the Aztec Civilization.