388_1

Post on 17-Jan-2015

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A 20-slide-long Powerpoint presentation that you can download for free. Aimed at teachers in schools where Mexicolore has made a team presentation, the sequence can be used independently or, ideally, as follow-up to one of Mexicolore's in-school workshops.

Transcript of 388_1

Graciela’s familyCan you spot Graciela and Ian?

The ‘petate’In the codex picture, a couple are getting married on the petate; the old folk round about them

are giving them plenty of advice for the future! Petates are still used today in Mexico…

More info: aztecs.org: aztefacts: a people's bed

TenochtitlanA city of up to 250,000 people – 5 times the size of London in those days!

Can you see the 3 main causeways linking the city to the mainland?And the volcanoes of Iztaccíhuatl (left) and Popocatépetl (right)?

The Year ‘One-Flint’In the codex picture, the Aztecs are leaving their mythical homeland of Aztlán; can you spot

the year sign? Their tribal god Huitzilopochtli is in the mountain glyph on the right.

More info: aztecs.org: aztefacts: who were the Mexica?

Mexico vs UKMexico is 8 times the size of the United Kingdom and

15 times the size of England on its own…

More info: aztecs.org: aztec life: 'Tiger Top'

The Aztecs used all 5 of the basic ways to make clothes…

The ‘Quechquémitl’

The

National

Emblem

By law it appears on

every Mexican coin. ‘Estados

Unidos Mexicanos’ means The

United States of Mexico

More info: aztecs.org: aztec life: 'Tiger Top'

The Aztecs used all 5 of the basic ways to make clothes…

Traditional baby-carrying baskets

More info: aztecs.org: aztec artefacts: baby basket

Aztec load carriers: using the ‘tumpline’ they regularly carried over 20 kilos each and travelled over 20 kilometres to the

next post – as part of a relay system

The traditional corn/maize pancake

Making chocolate the traditional way; the

whisk is called a ‘molinillo’ in Mexico

More info:-aztecs.org: aztec life: Blood of the gods

Freshly made, organic chewing gum: the real

thing!

More info:-aztecs.org: aztec artefacts: tzictli

Sticky chicle – strictly ‘tzictli’!

An Aztec ‘death bundle’. This was clearly a rich person,

buried with everything from jewellery to a jaguar skin…

More info:-aztecs.org: aztec life: a bundle of death

The Aztecs had two calendars: one based on the sun, for farmers; the other, based on the moon, for priests. The

same date in both calendars only came round once every 52 years – a ‘bundle of years’, a bit like our ‘century’

The Aztecs believed in giving before receiving: by offering human flesh to their gods they hoped to receive food from the earth in return; by offering human blood, they hoped to

receive rain and fresh water to drink; by offering human hearts they hoped to receive heat, light and energy from

the sun, so life would be able to carry on…

The Aztecs called their

poetry ‘flower-songs’.

The more beautiful the

song or poem, the more

beautiful the flower (above

the large speech scroll)

We don’t know for

sure which Aztec god is in the centre

of the ‘Sunstone’: it could be the

sun god Tonatiuh, or it could be the earth

lord,Tlaltecuhtli

The glyph for ‘movement’ at the heart

of the Sunstone