Urbanization of Daily Life at Teotihuacan

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  • Опубликовано: 2 окт 2024
  • Urbanization and Daily Life at Teotihuacan is the second session in a three-part lecture series with archaeologists, art historians, and curators who have worked extensively on the site and whose artifacts can be seen in Teotihuacan: City of Water, City of Fire.
    David M. Carballo (Director of Archeology Program, Boston University) and Michael E. Smith (Professor of Anthropology, School of Human Evolution and Social Change at Arizona State University) will each present 30-minute lectures on their research and provide insight to the daily lives of those living at Teotihuacan.
    --
    Dr. Michael E. Smith, Ph.D., is Professor of Archaeology at Arizona State University and Director of the ASU Teotihuacan Research Laboratory in Mexico. A renowned expert on the Aztecs, Mesoamerican cultures, and ancient cities, Smith has published 13 books and over 150 scholarly articles and has directed several excavation projects in Mexico. His prize-winning book, At Home with the Aztecs: An Archaeologist Uncovers their Daily Life (2016), communicates the excitement of archaeology in Mexico for a broad audience. He is now writing, Urban Life in the Distant Past: Archaeology and Comparative Urbanism.
    David Carballo is Associate Professor of Anthropology and Director of the Archaeology Program at Boston University. He has conducted fieldwork in Mexico, Belize, Honduras, Peru, and the US with research interests in issues such as urbanism, households, political organization, and religious traditions. Recent books include Urbanization and Religion in Ancient Central Mexico and Cooperation and Collective Action: Archaeological Perspectives. He is currently involved in two active research projects at Teotihuacan at Tlajinga in the city's periphery and at Plaza of the Columns in the city center.
    For more information:
    www.phxart.org/...
    Facebook: / phxart
    Instagram: / phxart

Комментарии • 14

  • @ThomasSmith-os4zc
    @ThomasSmith-os4zc 3 года назад +2

    Some of the Almenas look like the Universal Mexican Year Sign.

    • @davefrapart
      @davefrapart 2 года назад +1

      Almecs look like Africans to me,which is more than likely what early Egyptians looked like

    • @DC_R
      @DC_R Год назад

      ​@@davefrapart *Olmecs

  • @diegoleon6422
    @diegoleon6422 Год назад

    Jacal=Shack 😮

  • @jon-marcyaden6265
    @jon-marcyaden6265 2 года назад

    Excellent lecture. Where the first half of this symposium, with Sugiyama and Gomez?

  • @conniead5206
    @conniead5206 3 года назад

    Looks like a Thomas Bros. book map. Surprising about how it seemed close to what we think of as egalitarian. Something I don’t expect in a capital or large city.

  • @Shorts-Trending1video
    @Shorts-Trending1video 3 года назад

    Hii

  • @trevonstewart3636
    @trevonstewart3636 3 года назад

    The first guy was super funny

  • @Paul-vk3gh
    @Paul-vk3gh Год назад

    Teotihuacan had a middle class?? Weird. Wonder what that's like.

  • @averageflatchestenjoyer
    @averageflatchestenjoyer 2 года назад

    The first guy was hilarious, great stuff