2
   

The Mexicans

 
 
edgarblythe
 
  1  
Reply Mon 23 Aug, 2004 04:36 pm
Thank you.
0 Replies
 
edgarblythe
 
  1  
Reply Thu 26 Aug, 2004 08:38 pm
Guadalajara

History of Guadalajara

The Guadalajara word comes from the Arab word "Wad-al-hidjara", that means "river that runs between stones". It took his name from the native city of Nuño Beltrán de Guzmán, conqueror of this earth, that, looking for a greater and important kingdom that the one of Courteous Hernán, was ventured conquering the North of Mexico and the South of the United States. Guadalajara had to be founded four times; first one was based in Nochistlán, today municipality of the State of Zacatecas, in 1535; to the following year it was transferred the town of Tonalá. The third Guadalajara was founded on 1539, after a great battle between natives and Spaniards in the hill of Mixtón where the famous Spanish Pedro de Alvarado was killed.

Later, Doña Beatriz Hernandez lead to 64 families to the Valley of Atemajac and to a side of the River San Juan de God she founded the definitive Guadalajara the 14 of February of 1542, under real certificate of Carlos V, in the lot where today is the Degollado Theater.

This city was capital of the kingdom of the New Galicia, the one that dominated today until which is San Francisco, California.

Guadalajara became State Capital of Jalisco the 27 of May of 1824.

The 14 of February of 1542 settled the first City council of the present Guadalajara and its Majesty, the Emperor Carlos V of Germany and I of Spain, granted the title to him of City and it granted his shield to him of arms, that until these days represents Guadalajara
0 Replies
 
drom et reve
 
  1  
Reply Fri 3 Sep, 2004 03:26 pm
Enjoying this thread again, and pushing it up.

0 Replies
 
panzade
 
  1  
Reply Fri 3 Sep, 2004 04:13 pm
A wondeful thread...
0 Replies
 
edgarblythe
 
  1  
Reply Fri 3 Sep, 2004 05:02 pm
Not finished yet, just haven't had the time.
0 Replies
 
ossobuco
 
  1  
Reply Fri 3 Sep, 2004 10:07 pm
Listening too, she who gave all her books on Mexico to the Venice High library. Hmmm, wonder how they fared..
0 Replies
 
edgarblythe
 
  1  
Reply Fri 3 Sep, 2004 10:11 pm
History The term, Aztec, is a startlingly imprecise term to describe the culture that dominated the Valley of Mexico in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. Properly speaking, all the Nahua-speaking peoples in the Valley of Mexico were Aztecs, while the culture that dominated the area was a tribe of the Mexica (pronounced "me-shee-ka") called the Tenochca ("te-noch-ka"). At the time of the European conquest, they called themselves either "Tenochca" or "Toltec," which was the name assumed by the bearers of the Classic Mesoamerican culture. The earliest we know about the Mexica is that they migrated from the north into the Valley of Mexico as early as the twelfth century AD, well after the close of the Classic Period in Mesoamerica. They were a subject and abject people, forced to live on the worst lands in the valley. They adopted the cultural patterns (called Mixteca-Pueblo) that originated in the culture of Teotihuacán, so the urban culture they built in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries is essentially a continuation of Teotihuacán culture.

As stated in the section on the Toltecs, the peoples of Mesoamerica distinguished between two types of people: the Toltec (which means "craftsman"), who continued Classic urban culture, and the Chichimec, or wild people, who settled Mesoamerica from the north. The Mexica were, then, originally Chichimec when they migrated into Mexico, but eventually became Toltecs proper.

The history of the Tenochca is among the best preserved of the Mesoamericans. They date the beginning of their history to 1168 and their origins to an island in the middle of a lake north of the Valley of Mexico. Their god, Huitzilopochtli, commanded them on a journey to the south and they arrived in the Valley of Mexico in 1248. According to their history, the Tenochca were originally peaceful, but their Chichimec ways, especially their practice of human sacrifice, revolted other peoples who banded together and crushed their tribe. In 1300, the Tenochcas became vassals of the town of Culhuacan; some escaped to settle on an island in the middle of the lake. The town they founded was Tenochtitlan, or "place of the Tenochcas."


Tenochtitlan Ruins, Mexico City
Relations between the Tenochcas and Culhuacan became bitter after the Tenochcas sacrificed a daughter of the king of Culhuacan; so enraged were the Culhuacans that they drove all the Tenochcas from the mainland to the island. There, the Tenochcas who had lived in Culhuacan taught urban culture and architecture to the peoples on the island and the Tenochcas began to build a city. The city of Tenochtitlan is founded, then, sometime between 1300 and 1375.

The Tenochcas slowly became more powerful and militarily more skilled, so much so that they became allies of choice in the constant conflicts between the various peoples of the area. The Tenochcas finally won their freedom under Itzacoatl (1428-1440), and they began to build their city, Tenochtitlan, with great fervor. Under Itzacoatl, they built temples, roads, a causeway linking the city to the mainland, and they established their government and religious hierarchy. Itzacoatl and the chief who followed him Mocteuzma I (1440-1469) undertook wars of conquest throughout the Valley of Mexico and the southern regions of Vera Cruz, Guerrero, and Puebla. As a result, Tenochtitlan grew dramatically: not only did the city increase in size, precipitating the need for an aqueduct system to bring water from the mainland, it grew culturally as well as the Tenochcas assimilated the gods of the region into their religion.


A succession of kings followed Mocteuzma I until the accession of Mocteuzma II in 1502; despite a half century of successful growth and conquest, Tenochca culture and society began to click to read more
0 Replies
 
edgarblythe
 
  1  
Reply Sat 4 Sep, 2004 08:20 am
0 Replies
 
ossobuco
 
  1  
Reply Sat 4 Sep, 2004 06:20 pm
That's interesting to me. I still have my teotehuacan colima souvenier dancing dogs, sold from what I remember as a card table right at the pyramids. I put the plastic bag with them in it down at the airport on my way home and clopped off the head of one of them. Glued it back on when I got home to LA. The statue sits on my office shelf now.

I have a selection of views on wal-mart, mostly on the neg but not all on the neg side. Will post back later.
0 Replies
 
edgarblythe
 
  1  
Reply Sun 12 Sep, 2004 11:20 am
This information from the La Paz city website:


The Sea of Cortés is home for countless species of marine plants and animals, forming such a unique ecosystem that it was baptized by Jacques Cousteau as "The Aquarium of the World." Dotted with underwater mountains and canyons, the Sea of Cortés circulates huge amounts of nutrient-enriched water, producing seasonally heavy plankton blooms which in turn contribute to the massive diversity of tropical and pelagic fish found throughout its waters.
In addition to the Gray Whale calving migration to the three major warm-water lagoons, the Sea of Cortés hosts resident pods of various species of sea mammals including Sperm whales, Orcas, Humpback whales, Blue whales and Fin whales, often visible while sailing in these rich waters. Sea lion colonies and transient gigantic pods of dolphins lure thousands of watersports enthusiasts who congregate in La Paz, attracted by the opportunity of interacting with these friendly creatures. Giant mantas, massive whale sharks and impressive numbers of sharks, especially hammerheads, have made La Paz shine among the best worldwide scuba diving destinations. There are more than 25 first-class dive spots around the many islands surrounding the bay of La Paz, Espíritu Santo, San José and Cerralvo.
The surrounding desert is an intriguing, unique and extremely beautiful ecosystem full of endless surprises. Over centuries, its flora and fauna evolved endemic characteristics due to their relative isolation. Strange looking valleys of sentinel-like cardon, primitive cirios, elephant trees and thorny chollas make for some of the 4,000 different plants that form the spiny green carpet on the sandy earth. Many resident birds and migratory species are found here as they winter and pass by on their migration to southern locations. Hawks, wrens, woodpeckers, the great roadrunner, the Xantus Hummingbird and the Gray Thrasher are common sights. Desert Bighorn, foxes, coyotes, pumas, desert mice and squirrels are abundant.
Thousands of years ago, a primitive tribe of hunters and gatherers created countless rupestrian paintings in caves and gorges depicting life size human figures, hunting scenes, families, animals and even what appear to be extraterrestrials. The largest concentration of this spectacular prehistoric art is found in the Sierra de San Francisco and Guadalupe, however, hiking through the numerous ravines and streambeds of the south allows visitors to discover many of these astonishing sites near La Paz.
Just south of the city, at the edge of the Tropic of Cancer, stands the Sierra de la Laguna. This mountainous mass, declared a biosphere reserve in June of 1994, rises to an altitude of almost 2,200 meters, encompassing an extraordinary Darwinian paradise of birds and endemic plants. Its climate and vegetation change dramatically relative to the elevation. From sea level to 400 meters, the xerophilous brushwood prevails; from 400 to 1,200 meters, the driest of the semi-arid climates predominates, with the characteristic semi-deciduous forest, scattered with plants not found in other parts of the peninsula. From 1,200 meters to the highest peaks, the temperate climate and the abundance of rainfall favor the undisputed kingdom of pines and piñon-oaks. As you ascend the sierras, the landscape transforms radically, with sudden streams flowing into crystalline pools.
0 Replies
 
fbaezer
 
  1  
Reply Fri 15 Oct, 2004 06:12 pm
A bit about Wal-Mart and Teotihuacan.

Although Wal-Mart is, in many senses, a despicable company, I saw today pictures of the construction site, and the allegations of the self-proclaimed defenders of our heritage are absurd.

The store is being built in the the town of Teotihuacán. Not in the outskirts. Not right next to the ruins.

So, in a few months you may climb the Piramid of the Sun and, if the day is clear and you look towards the town, a couple of miles away, you may find the sign of an American chain store. Big deal.
0 Replies
 
ossobuco
 
  1  
Reply Fri 15 Oct, 2004 07:17 pm
Okay, then.

Well, WalMart may present problems to purveyors within the town of Teotehuacan, but more as it does in the usual sense in many towns, presenting as it does one stop shopping (etc., not to get into a litany of WalMart offenses), rather than as an infringement on the major temples.
0 Replies
 
InfraBlue
 
  1  
Reply Fri 15 Oct, 2004 08:19 pm
The Solomon R. Guggenhiem Museum in New York is featuring an exhibit of Aztec art through February.

Guggenheim Museum The Aztec Empire October 15, 2004-February 13, 2005
0 Replies
 
 

Related Topics

How a Spoon Can Save a Woman’s Life - Discussion by tsarstepan
Well this is weird. - Discussion by izzythepush
Please Don't Feed our Bums - Discussion by Linkat
Woman crashes car while shaving her vagina - Discussion by Robert Gentel
Genie gets sued! - Discussion by Reyn
Humans Marrying Animals - Discussion by vinsan
Prawo Jazdy: Ireland's worst driver - Discussion by Robert Gentel
octoplet mom outrage! - Discussion by dirrtydozen22
 
  1. Forums
  2. » The Mexicans
  3. » Page 6
Copyright © 2024 MadLab, LLC :: Terms of Service :: Privacy Policy :: Page generated in 0.04 seconds on 05/17/2024 at 05:10:44