Some of the earliest Mesoamerican cultures
included the Olmecs, the Mayas, and the Aztecs.
The Olmecs lived near the Gulf of Mexico, in “swampy, lowland river
valleys.” Water drains made out of
stone, hieroglyphic writings, and a calendar, were a few of their
achievements. The Mayas lived in the
Yucatan Peninsula of Mexico today. Their
priests were extremely good mathematicians and astronomers. They developed a system of mathematics with
20 as the base, accurate calendars, and were the first Native Americans that
developed a writing system. The Aztecs
lived in Central Mexico. They were a
very advance civilization with a network of canals, bridges, and causeways. Some of their achievements included
chinampas, artificial floating islands used for farming, and a calendar.
The Olmecs, the Mayas, and the Aztecs, all
considered religion very important; the Olmecs, with their human body/jaguar
face, god, the Mayas with their rain god, Chac, and the Aztecs, with their sun
god, Huitzilopochtli. All three of them
believed that their gods controlled their crops, and that they must please
these gods in order to prevent any natural disaster. The Mayas and Aztecs even preformed human
sacrifices, to keep their gods pleased.
The Aztecs used the male prisoners of war for this practice. All three of these Mesoamerican people had
some art form such as jade carvings, figurines, carved stone murals, pottery,
etc., on which these gods were depicted.
Two other similarities between these three civilizations is the use of a
calendar, which they used to predict eclipses, schedule religious ceremonies,
and determine when to plant/harvest crops, and go off to war, (more so the Mayas and the Aztecs), and they
all had some form of writing system. The
governmental structures of the three civilizations were different; the Olmecs
had some sort of division of labor, the Mayas had city-states and kingdoms,
linked by political ties, culture, and trade, which were not unified into a
single empire, and the Aztecs had a huge empire whose people were organized
into a hierarchy, with an emperor at the top.
Another major difference between them was their farming methods. The Olmecs used the slash-and-burn farming
method, in which they would clear the land by the cutting down and burning of
trees, this would then enrich the soil.
After awhile the soil would become exhausted, and the whole process
would be executed on a fresh piece of land.
The Mayas also used this method, but they mainly farmed on plots that
were surrounded by canals. The Aztecs on
the other hand had little farming land, so they made, chinampas, artificial
floating islands, made out of mud on rafts, which they farmed on.
Three of the earliest Mesoamerican
cultures, the Olmecs, the Mayas, and the Aztecs, had many similarities, and
also some differences. They all lived in
different locations, had different forms of government, used different farming
methods, and each group worshiped a different god. However, all of the groups thought that
religion was extremely important, and that they must keep their god pleased or
trouble would come their way. Similar
achievements included a calendar and some form of a writing system.
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