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Pueblos Within Pueblos Tlaxilacalli Communities In Acolhuacan Mexico Ca 12721692 Benjamin Johnson

  • SKU: BELL-49482804
Pueblos Within Pueblos Tlaxilacalli Communities In Acolhuacan Mexico Ca 12721692 Benjamin Johnson
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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Pueblos Within Pueblos Tlaxilacalli Communities In Acolhuacan Mexico Ca 12721692 Benjamin Johnson instant download after payment.

Publisher: University Press of Colorado
File Extension: PDF
File size: 7.83 MB
Pages: 253
Author: Benjamin Johnson
ISBN: 9781607326908, 1607326906
Language: English
Year: 2017

Product desciption

Pueblos Within Pueblos Tlaxilacalli Communities In Acolhuacan Mexico Ca 12721692 Benjamin Johnson by Benjamin Johnson 9781607326908, 1607326906 instant download after payment.

Focusing on the specific case of Acolhuacan in the eastern Basin of Mexico, Pueblos within Pueblos is the first book to systematically analyze tlaxilacalli history over nearly four centuries, beginning with their rise at the dawn of the Aztec empire through their transformation into the “pueblos” of mid-colonial New Spain. Even before the rise of the Aztecs, commoners in pre-Hispanic central Mexico set the groundwork for a new style of imperial expansion. Breaking free of earlier centralizing patterns of settlement, they spread out across onetime hinterlands and founded new and surprisingly autonomous local communities called, almost interchangeably, tlaxilacalli or calpolli.
Tlaxilacalli were commoner-administered communities that coevolved with the Acolhua empire and structured its articulation and basic functioning. They later formed the administrative backbone of both the Aztec and Spanish empires in northern Mesoamerica and often grew into full and functioning existence before their affiliated altepetl, or sovereign local polities. Tlaxilacalli resembled other central Mexican communities but expressed a local Acolhua administrative culture in their exacting patterns of hierarchy. As semiautonomous units, they could rearrange according to geopolitical shifts and even catalyze changes, as during the rapid additive growth of both the Aztec Triple Alliance and Hispanic New Spain. They were more successful than almost any other central Mexican institution in metabolizing external disruptions (new gods, new economies, demographic emergencies), and they fostered a surprising level of local allegiance, despite their structural inequality. Indeed, by 1692 they were declaring their local administrative independence from the once-sovereign altepetl. Administration through community, and community through administration—this was the primal two-step of the long-lived Acolhua tlaxilacalli, at once colonial and colonialist.

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