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You are here : AllRefer.com > Reference > Encyclopedia > Mesoamerican Indigenous Peoples > TeotihuacAn
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TeotihuacAn, Mesoamerican Indigenous Peoples

Related Category: Mesoamerican Indigenous Peoples

TeotihuacAn[tAOtEwAkAn´] Pronunciation Key, ancient commercial and religious center in the central valley of Mexico, c.30 mi (48 km) NE of Mexico City. Once thought to be the great religious center of the Toltec, it is now held to be the relic of an earlier civilization. TeotihuacAn is the largest (c.7 sq mi/18.1 sq km) and most impressive urban site of ancient America. The Pyramid of the Sun, the tallest in Mexico, is 216 ft (65 m) high and covers approximately 10 acres (4 hectares) at the base; it dominates the symmetrical ground plan laid out in grid fashion along major thoroughfares, including the city's central axis : the Street of the Dead. Other buildings along this axis include the Pyramid of the Moon; the Citadel containing the Temple of Quetzalcoatl, so called because of its carvings of feathered serpents; the Temple of Agriculture; and the Quetzalpapalotl Palace. The earliest cultural horizon at TeotihuacAn dates to c.100 B.C. The culture flourished from about A.D. 300 to 900, undergoing tremendous expansion. Excavations have revealed large chambered structures resembling communal dwellings. The people of TeotihuacAn brought sculpture, the art of carving exquisitely stylized stone masks, ceramic manufacture and decoration, and mural painting on walls to a high degree of refinement. The designs show a strong concern for cosmological matters, indicating the existence of a complex religious system. Recent archaeological work at the site, as well as elsewhere in Mexico, has revealed that TeotihuacAn was a commercial as well as a religious center. Craft specialization is evident in various parts of the city, and TeotihuacAn influence is seen in such far-off places as the Guatemala highlands, the Maya lowlands, and the valley of Oaxaca. One portion of the city seems to have been colonized by a group from Oaxaca who retained their ethnic identity. The political organization of TeotihuacAn and its sphere of influence are unknown.

See R. F. Millon et al., ed., Pyramid of the Sun at TeotihuacAn (1965) and Urbanization at TeotihuacAn (1973); E. Pasztory, The Murals of Tepantitla, TeotihuacAn (1976).



The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia Copyright © 2009, Columbia University Press.
Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.



Topics that might be of interest to you:

CopAn
El TajIn
pre-Columbian art and architecture
Quetzalcoatl
Toltec

Related Categories:

Social Sciences and the Law > Anthropology and Archaeology
History > Latin America and the Caribbean


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