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The American Kingdoms
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The American Kingdoms

Feb 23, 2016

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The American Kingdoms. Review of the Eastern Hemisphere. Now, let’s look at Central America. Christopher Columbus and Amerigo Vespucci called America a new world because they had never seen it before. . I’m still mad over that “America” thing. Whiner. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: The American Kingdoms

The American Kingdoms

Page 2: The American Kingdoms

Review of the Eastern Hemisphere

Page 3: The American Kingdoms

Now, let’s look at Central America.

Page 4: The American Kingdoms

Christopher Columbus and Amerigo Vespucci called America a new world because they had never seen it before.

Whiner.

I’m still mad over that “America”

thing.

Page 5: The American Kingdoms

The Native Americans that had been living there for thousands of years are sometimes still called Indians because Columbus

called them that, thinking he had landed in India.

Page 6: The American Kingdoms

Central America had its own empires during the Middle Ages – and those empires fought wars with each other,

just like the empires over in Europe and Asia!

Page 7: The American Kingdoms

The first great empire of Central America was the Mayan Empire.

Page 8: The American Kingdoms

The Mayans built great cities at the time Rome was falling apart, but not all Mayans lived in them. Only the most powerful people

– kings, noblemen, and governors – lived in the cities.

Page 9: The American Kingdoms

The less important people, such as farmers and craftsmen, lived in the jungles, and only came to the

city to trade and worship the gods.

Page 10: The American Kingdoms

The Mayans built great stone pyramids with temples on the top and steps that led all the way to them.

Page 11: The American Kingdoms

When the kings were babies, their mothers would tie pieces of wood tightly around their heads. The wood made their skulls grow up into a peak. A king’s

mother would also tie a little toy to the front of her baby hair, so the baby would develop crossed eyes looking at it.

Page 12: The American Kingdoms

To make the king appear more godly, he would file his teeth into points and paint his face. He would also pierce a body part to let

blood out before a battle, as a door for the gods.

Page 13: The American Kingdoms

The Mayans practiced human sacrifices to the gods to help with crops, battles, and fertility.

Page 14: The American Kingdoms

Mayan games were just as bloody. You did NOT want to be a loser!

Page 15: The American Kingdoms

Eventually, the Mayan cities grew too big for the grounds around to support them. There wasn’t enough food, and hurricanes and earthquakes swept across the Yucatan Peninsula, destroying the

cities.

Page 16: The American Kingdoms

By the time Columbus arrived, the Mayans were only small tribes living in the jungle, and the Aztecs had

become the greatest nation in Central America.

Page 17: The American Kingdoms

We don’t know where the Aztecs came from, but as they wandered through the Central America, they fought battle after battle, and forced conquered tribes to give them food, money,

and soldiers.

Page 18: The American Kingdoms

When an Aztec priest saw an eagle on a cactus holding a snake, the priest declared it was a sign that they

should build their capital city there.

Page 19: The American Kingdoms

After MANY land improvements of moving dirt, piling mud and plants, and driving down poles into the swampy ground, the city of

Tenochtitlan was built.

Say it with me, foolish children:

teh NOCH teet lan

Page 20: The American Kingdoms

Canals were created with rocks and stone so people could go from one place to

another by canoe.

Page 21: The American Kingdoms

Although some Aztecs grew tomatoes, corn, squash, and beans on the outskirts of town, many learned how to grow crops on

floating mats covered with soil.

Page 22: The American Kingdoms

The Aztecs also learned how to make chocolate!

Page 23: The American Kingdoms

The Aztecs sacrificed humans much like the Mayans, only they did it even moreso. Sometimes a thousand men, women, and children were sacrificed in a day!

Page 24: The American Kingdoms

They believed the blood would nourish their gods, such as Quetzalcoatl.

Page 25: The American Kingdoms

When the Spanish and Portuguese explorers landed in Central America, they met the flourishing Aztecs and the scattered Mayans. But when they traveled

south, down to the continent of South America, they found another great civilization: The Incas.

Page 26: The American Kingdoms

Like the Mayans, the Incas believed that their king was descended from the sun god.

Page 27: The American Kingdoms

The Incas told a story about how their civilization came from help from the gods.

Page 28: The American Kingdoms

Cuzco was the capital city of the Incan Empire.

Page 29: The American Kingdoms

Cuzco is in the shape of a Puma, an animal sacred to the Incas.

Page 30: The American Kingdoms

The Incas didn’t learn to write, and they didn’t keep historical records, but we do know that Huayan Capac became king in 1493 – a year after Columbus first landed in the Americas.

Page 31: The American Kingdoms

He ruled over a vast expanse of land, built roads, encouraged trading, and sent messages via a

complicated code of knots in ropes, called quipus.

Page 32: The American Kingdoms

When Huayna Capac died, he divided his empire between his two sons. One ruled the north, and the other ruled the south. Soon, these two brothers began to fight with each other, and when the Spanish came, they found a

weakened kingdom – and destroyed it.