9:27 "Who taught the clay to lie." may be a metaphor to show how convincing the statues were that they looked alive even tho they were lifeless mud. Therefore the clay lied it is alive.
My parents are from Nicaragua and the Nahua presence here is amazing. Historians and scholars believe that the Nahua of Nicaragua are descended from Tollan’s Toltecs. The evidence to support this theory is astonishing, such as the Nicarao’s expertise in medicine, the timeframe of the Nicarao’s migration to Nicaragua after the fall of Tollan lines up almost perfectly. In fact it’s taught in high academia that the Nicarao are Toltecs who simply migrated south after the fall of Tollan. Great video.
Not just Nicaragua the Pipil people of El salvador too! A form of Nahuatl is even still spoken there as the southern most form of Nahua language far outside the original scope that's born and spoken in Mexico, it's the southern most because the language is now considered extinct in Nicaragua. However we also have the legend of Topiltzin establishing a population in El Salvador before moving onto Nicaragua during his exodus. Another thing is not only was he believed to take on the name of Queztalcoatl but was also believed to be an incarnation of the deity to his people, which may explain the rivalry between him and Tezcotlipoca in myth if it may have also been grounded in historical events. A king that detested human sacrifice where rival and later groups would glorify the practice.
@@MysticDojo Nawat isn't extinct from nicaragua, there're small pockets of speakers in the central and northwest of the country. It's estimated that there's 100 native speakers left and more speakers that blend nawat-spanish together mixed.
@@KaiserWilbur oh rip than I guess you better go and correct the academic sources cause they also say it went extinct in the region by the 19th century.
In 2022 I am 73, California native . In 5-6th grade I did a school report on the Toltec. That was about 1958. I was fascinated by the advanced civilization . Thank you for this very interesting YT video .
The Toltecs "teaching the clay to lie" means objects they would make look so good it's deceiving to their eyes, they look so good they can't believe what they see, like the clay is lying to them. It's a really powerful, albeit convoluted, way to compliment their work.
@@yanina.korolko yeah and that sounds less cryptic too.. my compliments to you. (People speak in English as if they know what they are saying... 'convoluted' is included and 'complement' is lost. :).
I tried to interest our city council in putting a skull rack downtown, next to the kiddie splash park, but they had already spent all the money on a second ball court.🙄 We'd have to raise the funds ourselves. So if anyone wants their name on a paver ($50) or pillar ($200) of the new skull rack, we are taking donations.
As someone who enjoyed studied Classics in college, I love learning about the amazing histories, languages, and cultures of the Americas. Too often are they overlooked, and you’re doing an amazing job highlighting them and sharing their stories. Thank you for the amazing content!
The mere fact that European Mediterranean culture is singularly referred to as "The Classics", in complete disregard for the rest of the planet, goes to show the bias. I too am deeply appreciative of these detailed looks into Mesoamerican culture.
Same here, I love learning about all the many different cultures that the Americas have had from Thousands of years ago. There are so many unknown people/cultures who are not talked about at all today. One of those cultures that fascinate me is the Pre-Olnec culture of Monte Alto, Guatemala. They predate the Olmec and science now are saying that the Pre-Olnec people were probably the first to know the properties of magnetism about 800-1,000 years before the Greeks and Chinese.
@@AncientAmericas so none has any idea at all, I mean at all...the more I look at these ancient stuffs, the more I come to think that specialists also have no clue of what they translate, and the chaos and missmatches of artifacts with dna, how much people moved in the past, how much humans lie about themsleves and about the enemies well...no clue at all. I see the good intention in many of you with these works, and for real, much respect, at least your version is not the classic unilineal kind of narrative..but I quit with the "official historical record", kudos to you for putting so much info together, a lot of work, but for me, it only serves to improve that no clue, there is no way to trust any historical record, we can only take what may be convenient for sleeping better. nice vid as I say. thanks for keeping the doors opened to other views and providing all possible proposals.
@@bobwilson7684 archaeology always has room for error. If you think the evidence is being misinterpreted, you should present your own ideas. An outsider's perspective can be a valuable thing.
My mothers side of the family is from a town near Tula, Hidalgo. My grandmother was indigenous and only spoke Otomi until she moved to Mexico City in her late teens. I am very proud of our origins, thank you for making this video. ❤
Not really. Not when you consult the sources. It only became problematic when archaeologists declared Tula Xicocotitla as the only Tollan. Creating a cognitive dissonance when presented with anything else.
You don't have to be an empire to have a big impact. City states like Athens and Sparta had massive historical and cultural impacts. Toltec's were heavily influential in a similar way despite not being an empire level power.
@@Carewolf but their lasting influence is arguably the immaterial philosophical and scientific concepts that they left behind. It could be similar in this region, where the Toltec's are regarded as highly developed in culture and knowledge, just as the Greek's were in Ancient Europe.
@@Wyckoff_ape those "immaterial" influences were the schools, languages, ideas left behind of the culture when the state fell not the complete death of the people and culture...
Hi swabcraft, carewolf and others, I just thought I’d opine a few tidbits on this blessed controversy. Firstly I’d say that Athens did intentionally embark on an imperial agenda, citing the mighty Thucydides as an early historian on the partickulars. Whether Sparta ever shared that agenda I would be far less certain of. That they resented opposed or even feared in a rather manly sort of way, naturally, the various consequences the Athenian ambitions could impose on Sparta and its allies is fairly apparently why they matched or opposed is probably clearer to say Athenian military forces doesn’t mean that Sparta itself wanted or coveted the same things that Athens did. As a sidebar I’d add at this point that as Thucydides often describes, whether it is fair to generalize that ‘the Athenians’ desired an empire is very debatable (npi), but after the debates the voting etc certain policies were acted upon to advance the imperialist agenda and the rest of em had to suck it up. (Sound familiar??) So probably lots of ppl reading this already know this and I apologize if I sound pretentious or good forbid, misinformed about things that happened way back when . Since it’s all just a preamble to discussing,…? Hang on a sec I gotta review here a bit!!
I'm from Hidalgo and my city is very close to Tula. I went to Tula and Teotihuacan when i was about 6 years old but haven't had the chance to go back to truly appreciate everything and experience it once more since I live in the US. Lately I've experienced a renewed desire to learn more about my ancestry. I kind of felt disgusted and sad when I realized I knew much more about other cultures and civilizations from foreign places but knew almost nothing about my own ancient culture and roots so I appreciate the level of detail in your video. Thank you.
you shouldn’t feel bad about that. All you can know, is what you’ve been taught. And the further along we go it seems like we find out much of it isn’t true
Topiltzin seems very similar to King Arthur. Nowadays, we're pretty sure that Arthur was a real person or conglomeration of people (personally, I think he was Riothamus), but the legends got so crazy that we end up with things like Le Morte d'Arthur. Seems to me that the same thing happened here with him.
Yes, sounds possible, something on the lines of a historical fact that got over exaggerated. Also kind of reminds me of the protestant reformation, a popular ideology that spread without a central empire to enforce it.
People act like propaganda was a 20th century invention! Despite that, your theory and the preponderance of evidence around the world suggests otherwise.
This is a great video but I'd like to add one thing that went unmentioned. In western El Salvador we have a group of Nahua people that claim descendance from Tollan. The common story we hear there is that they were part of the nobility who left Mexico (giving them the name pipil) during the socio religious conflict between Quetzalcoatl and Tezcatlipoca. How this went down and when these nobles left is uncertain but the linguistic split happened about the same time as this event. Anyways just thought that was cool. Also Ce Acatl Topiltzin Quetzalcoatl is such a great name. One warrior/Reed, our prince, Quetzalcoatl. The ancestors went hard with that one.
I actually came across the pipil in my research because they have their own accounts of topiltzin. It's really interesting how far those accounts are spread.
@@AncientAmericas Have you learned about Xoconoxco (near Tapachula, Chiapas, near the Guatemala border)? It was populated by Nahuatl speakers and had a significant impact on regional trade and culture in the post-Classic/pre-conquest era, in a region dominated by speakers of languages very different from Central Mexico.
@@AncientAmericas Actually Xoconochco wasn't a Nahuatl-speaking region, nor a Mayan one; but a Mixe-Zoquean one, and the dominant language of the region was Tapachultec, a language from a very ancient family which may have been spoken by the Tenocelome.
I learn so much from your videos, i’m Mexican myself and I’ve always took pride in my Aztec heritage! Can you make a video about Aztlan and the origins of the Nahua peoples, thx in advance ❤
Thank you! We'll definitely get to the Aztecs in due time. To be completely honest though, I like covering more obscure topics that don't get as much attention.
Am positive am part Toltec my grandmother was indigenous and tall AF. From Jalisco México. And meeting other Indigenous people from the same area they have Bright yellow eyes as well. And darker skin. The Toltec bloodline still exist
@@expendablewater7474 One thing I absolutely love about the Nahua people is how far they extended, they settled as far south as northern Costa Rica. Historians claim that the Nahua people of Nicaragua, El Salvador and Costa Rica are descendants of Toltecs, they’re known as the Pipil-Nicarao. They know this cause of the Pipil-Nicarao’s expertise in medicine, the Nahuatl dialect the Toltecs spoke is also the exact same the Pipils and the Nicarao spoke, and the religious and political similarities are identical to the Toltecs. In addition the timeframe of the Nahua migrations in Central America after the collapse of Tollan is well timed
@@AncientAmericas maybe something about the origins of nahua peoples in general and when they became a distinct group from other Uto-Aztecan Language Speakers would be nice
I've always studied the Ancient Near East, and however fascinating that history is, i am VERY far removed from it. I live in the Americas, among MesoAmercan people, and am beginning to find their History every bit as fascinating as our Eurasian. Your Channel is a great help!
I like the idea that they were legendary for their craftsmanship and more abstract "refinement" among the mesoamericans, like sparta was to the romans for their militarism and well, spartanic lifestyle & upbringing, maybe based on real facts or more a kind of transgenerational flanderisation. And in that way maybe became an ideal to emulate. Maybe like "rome" after the fall of the west-roman empire.
I love the timing. I've had Toltecs on my mind for a while now and was looking for some good literature on the topic or any good, reliable, and interesting materials and... there you are! Fantastic work, as always! Thank you! (Second time watching!)
Great video as always! Great to find videos in English, I understand Spanish well, but grew up speaking both languages, my English is better growing up in Texas so is nice being able to paint a clearer picture. My fathers is from Guanajuato and have otomi history, and he still made metates when he was young with his grandmother in Comonfort GTO. Love the subject not just exclusive to Aztec (Mexica) or Maya history!
Nice that you know your ancestry my family is from Romita Guanajuato and A small ranch outside of Penjamo Guanajuato. Since that area was the borders of the Tarascan and Aztec borders we really don’t know what tribe/s we descend from. The Otomi were also very present in the region like you said.
@@davo1924 very cool. well thats just the last language my dads grandmother and other people on the Rancho still spoke and still kinda know. My uncle taught me a few words, but he said they weren't taught that language as children but they heard it spoken amongst the adults.. He grew up just outside San Miguel de Allende on el rancho del rincon. I've seen other information that says the borders and the frontiers of those nations as well as the Toltec, were protected by various Otomies. But thats a whole other subject because they're a very complex and deep rooted and often forgot part of Mexico history. He told me that and I'm probably just spelling it as it sounds but Te keesh que di, meant buen dia. I wish I could pick their brains a little more often.
I appreciate the way you don’t overstate the facts, or attempt to draw too many conclusions from what is limited evidence. Sometimes we just don’t know all of our history and questions have to go unanswered.
thanks for the new video dude!... I found this channel about 4 months ago. watched ALL you videos(some twice) in a fortnight and now the wait between videos is just long enough to almost forget, and then here we go!!!. the toltecs at last!! love the work dude. there's no one explains the americas better than you!
It genuinely rules that it took a half century of research looking into where this legendary city could possibly be until one really really smart guy realized it was likely at the place that had the same name effectively. I hope he was with his beloved cat when he figured this out.
@@alfotiosacaramde9631 I didn't have any trouble with it. Also, someone who uses entirely the wrong word, 'does' instead of 'is', kinda has no right to criticise someone's writing and grammar. Especially since you forgot the punctuation at the end yourself.
I am deeply impressed that you are still able to think and speak coherently after delving into such a debated and distorted quasi-history as such remnants may be after so many have mucked about in what ideas may, or may not be, Toltec. You have a strong mind!
WOW another episode already? As always, the effort you put into these videos is greatly appreciated. And good to see you partnering more with Aztlan Historian, it makes me smile thinking about all of the good indigenous history content coming out lately
Conspiracies, political indoctrination and all sorts of horrible biases are something we need to counter whenever possible, and I love to make my little contribution to that effort. Greetings
Yes! I second that! The cultures of the US Northwest into the Canadian southwest are amazing, with fascinating and illuminating values, like the potlatch. Theirs are my favorite arts (except for the Bella Coola, in truth, which creeps me out), the totem poles, the way they track their heritage (reminds me of the Aboriginals of Australia), their social structures, their reverence for the spirit world. I hope you do!
Thank you! Assuming no catastrophes happen, there will be a PNW episode next year. If you have any good books or articles, please feel free to share with me.
Your comment about the ancient world being brightly painted is a good reminder (19:24). I found the relief featured at that time stamp to be difficult to discern the shapes and details. It would be beneficial to substitute a high contrast grayscale or researcher’s shape outline over these images so that they’re easier to understand. I appreciate all the work you put into each video and the opportunity to learn about the peoples of the Americas. It is a great service to everyone who discovers your videos.
That "teaching the clay to lie" quote was a very cool way to express sculptural mastery and artistry with the material. I know very little about ancient Mesoamerica, so thank you very much for this video! I enjoy the long videos to listen to and your excellent content. God be with you out there everybody! ✝️ :)
Last week I visited the Calixtlahuaca archeological area and museum. The museum director gave us a tour and made reference to “the actual Tollan from the myths, which is not Tula”. This is hardly the first time I hear that from Mexican archeologists and museum guides. There is a belief that the “real Tollan” was not Tula and either has not been found, it was only a myth, or it was actually a mountain that can be seen from Tula that inspired the shape of the new Basilica of Guadalupe.
@@AncientAmericas I don’t know. She was talking about the Matlatzincas and their Mexica influence, and then she brought it up. I don’t remember the context. Yours is the best analysis about the Toltecs I have heard so far! I’d love if you talked about the Matlatzincas. I had never heard of them until I moved to the Toluca valley and started visiting their archeological sites of in Malinalco, Teotenango and Calixtlahuaca on the weekends. Also the Otomis and Mazahuas. 😁 Greetings from Metepec
@@arenasnefi Got it. The Matlatzincas are an interesting group that don't get much attention. I hadn't heard about them until earlier this year. I'd like to get around to them someday.
I have a theory of why there were so many ball courts there in Tula. Maybe, like the Romans with Gladiator schools, they had areas where they trained captured warriors to play the game before heading to the large arena to be sacrificed. Though it could also be that the smaller courts weren't meant for ritual use, and were used like we would use a tennis / basketball court today.
Thank you for tackling a complex topic. Something to keep in mind is that Teotihuacan was a multicultural/multiethnic/multilingual metro before its collapse, so were the city-states that emerged after. And the "Anahuac" really extends much further North/Northeast than most researchers showcase. Trade networks were extensive into Texas/New Mexico/Mississippi (eg; with Puebloans, Coahuiltecan, Caddo) as they were into the Yucatan. Influences went both ways. More than likely Tula was destroyed by Chichimecan raiders. They did the same to other North MX civilizations like the Huastecs (a Mayan civ) which is why these places were not as elaborately built. We may have to look at Topiltzin as an Alexander-figure in Mesoamerica, leaving behind "civilization" and influence in his wake that mixed with local states. There were also other groups that competed or traded with the Toltecs, such as Huastecs, Otomi, and Totonacs. Which is possibly why they were not a massive Empire, but it made the balance a bit more equal, yet some say some of these other groups may also have raided Tula. I believe the connection with "The Four Agreements" philosophy (despite other influences) is that Don Miguel was taught by Huichol (Wixakira) curanderos, whom are descendants of the Guachichiles, the largest of the Chichimecan groups. Curanderos are healers (hence the Toltec connection- medicine/wisdom). My great grandmother was also a Curandera, but we are predominantly Coahuiltecan, though we have DNA from across all Mexican/Nahua regions. We are similar or related to the Chichimecan and historically practiced the Mitote and Peyote ceremony. This is shown in the Shaman rock art in the lower Pecos of West Texas, which some archeologists believe is some of the oldest "Toltec" origins found in the Americas. The rock art is similar to ancient art found at Huapalcalco and other Toltec regions. Overall, Mesoamerica was highly diverse throughout; ethnically, linguistically, and culturally, but there was a lot of overlap, mixing, and trading, which led to many places flourishing for a time.
Sorry I'm not used to comment here. Thanks for the video! It was a very instructive one and also brought me back some childhood memories. I'll likely be on the minority side here, but I'm pretty sure (no proof, no doubt) that Topiltzin Quetzalcoatl is a historized or euhemerized mythic figure. Two elements lead me to that suspicion: 1) *both* his and his opponent's name are ones of Nahua gods. 2) He disappears as the morning star - a trait of the god Quetzalcoatl. Of course I have no way to prove this, and would have to take a look a the sources, but it seems to me a clear case of historized foundation myth in which traits of historical/legendary people and some ethnographical knowledge of past societies were incorporated into an originally mythical tale (compare Romulus in Rome). But all this may just be some crazy perception of mine. Thanks again!
@@AncientAmericas I do hope you get to their astronomical/astrological science. It really is mindblowing, both in its development, its precision, and its social and spiritusl application. There's something very quirky about having the orbit of Venus, and its phases, as the primary religious focus. Deep.
@@AncientAmericas I will be holding my breath! A friend wrote a program/book called "Aztec" (at least, that was the name of the computer program) that had some superb delineations for the day signs. Very easy reading. There are two bits, a couple of which you referred to, like 1 Reed (the name of Bruce's publishing company, actually) and 9 something, Rain, maybe? But he got the two parts mixed up, according to the people I met from that part of the world. And they all knew their signs! One fellow, from Nicaragua, volunteered his sign, which he translated as the Wanderer, when I expressed amazement at all the countries in which he'd lived. Your videos are SO well done. And getting better and better!
My grandpa was from a Nahua Nicarao community in the Tola municipality which is named after Tollan. While growing up he'd tell my siblings and I about the oral history of our ancestors who migrated from Mexico to Nicaragua in the pre-columbian era. And to add the cherry on top my DNA test traced alot of my Native American ancestry back to Mexico. As a subscriber thank you so much for the history lesson, can't wait to see more 🇳🇮👍
Seems like Tollan is their version of "Lee/Leigh" a clearing in the woods, as in Berkeley, Avonlea. In fact "wick" is a farm outside of the Burg (town with walls around it) like Brunswick "Braunschweig" Brown's Oulying Farm. The fertile spot where the food comes from and society is centered.
Great and informational video as always! I learned a lot about the Toltec history! I now understand what you mean on how troublesome it is to be pinned. Thank you for all the work you put into making the video! That was a really good voice describing the Toltecs btw.
Yey! you mentioned Nicoya. I was born about 6hrs from there, in San José. Costa Rica. I'd love you to make an episode (better a series, ha) about indigenous cultures of Costa Rica. It lends itself to be super interesting, being geographically a narrow point of encounter, like a bridge, between the North and the South of America.
A timeline of the Americas compilation video would be great to see how cultures and civilizations developed simultaneously throughout the hemisphere. Recent evidence suggests we've been on the continents for much longer than previously maintained by western eurocentric archaeologists. I'd be really interested in watching a video that starts at the earliest evidence of human habitation and that travels through time and illustrates the development of various technologies, agricultural practices, architectural styles, etc.
Just a nitpick: There's no actual "return of the Quetzalcoatl" story that Cortez exploited. I'm really surprised you actually mentioned that myth. The video is still very well made however, can't wait for the next one!
Thank you! Yeah, I debated including that in the episode but it's so well known by the public I thought I'd mention it in passing. There's a lot of debate about whether or not it was actually a thing at contact which (again) depends.on how much you trust the sources. Personally, it strikes me as a later invention. Someday when we get to the conquest, I'll go into it in much more detail.
@@AncientAmericas Your replies are the most stimulating and educational that I've run across on the internet. It feels that we're all in a class or on a great field trip with you!
I wonder if it’s kind of like a Mesoamerican Sparta situation. Like Tula, Sparta was relatively small but had a reputation for having great warriors which made it punch above its weight class. It never grew a large population and was culturally lacking relative to its neighbors, but had such a military reputation that it was revered by later militaristic empires to be much more than it really was. Just like how later Rome treated Sparta like a curiosity.
As always, this video was extremely well done. The uncertainty about who and what the Toltecs were is an honest, truthful accounting of what might be the case with this civilization while acknowledging the substantial uncertainties involved.
would you mind doing a video on the cassava, mandioca or yuca in the future? would love to hear about more of the great crops that fueled this cultures. Thanks a lot for this videos.
@@AncientAmericas If you want to know more about the spirit cave mummy check out ask a morticians video on mummys she does a really good job covering the subject
Spot on perspective. I’ve read these ever changing narrative for 50 years and visited some of the sites. I’m a limited guy, but still, I came away deeply confused, and perhaps misled.
I’ve always wondered if the word “Toltec” was just a title for groups of similar Mesoamerican tribes in central Mexico, similar to how the Huns, Mongols, Khazars, and Altaic peoples where lumped together as “Tartars”, or the many tribes of old Eurasia, particularly the ones in the east (Modern Russia, Kazakhstan, Mongolia, etc.)
I was drawn to this because I have a tarot deck with the Toltec as the theme. I hadn't ever heard of it (until I found the deck, and it was interesting to me, and I had never heard of a reader using the cards, at least on YT, so I bought it) so thank you for making this video. I haven't put much into researching the culture, since I was researching my Egyptian deck.
As one from the Far east, Toltec legacies in Mesoamerica strongly reminds me of legacies of Zhou dynasty in the Far east. With great help of confucianism, Zhou dynasty of China has been always remembered the greatest dynasty in the entire Chinese history with ideal politics and society which every nation should follow, despite that, in actuality, Zhou dynasty was honestly "meh" of dynasty at the best, which originally began as local power on the edge of Chinese culture at the time and rose its hight as Western Zhou (1046-771 BC), but after moved from its original base, Haojing, on the edge of Chinese world at the time into Luoyi, which is well inside of Chinese heartland at the time as Eastern Zhou (770-256 BC), Zhou spent majority of its era as one heck of miserable dynasty (one of the most miserable in all of Chinese dynasty in fact), where it totally lost grip of majority of its territory and spent its centuries as mere puppet state which few ppl cared... The reason why Confucianism emphasize legacies of Zhou dynasty largely came from nostalgia Confucius personally had on good ol' Western Zhou dynasty, but it is undeniable that legacies of Zhou dynasty left huge impact on the Far east...
History being written by the "victors" is baby's first deep thought. If you're an adult and you're still using that phrase you're either a teenager who's still ignorant but wants to feel intelligent, or you're a neo nazi or neo confederate.
The Mexica barely had contact with the Maya; so for them the Maya legacy would've been seen much like the Franks saw the legacy of the Han Dynasty in China... not much to say or think about that
@@v_enceremos don't go too hard on Michael Coe. He made huge and invaluable contributions to Maya and mesoamerican studies. I always recommend his books even if they are a bit dated by today's standards.
Your videos are incredibly informative! By far the most knowledgable channel on YT regarding mesoamerican history. Do you have a recommended reading list for anyone that wants to dive deeper into this time and geography?
Thank you! The closest thing to a reading list that I have is the bibliography for each episode and you can find that in the description. Is there a specific area and time that fascinates you?
While they were not an actual empire makes me wonder if they had so much influence by being really good diplomats and being really good at intermarrying with the royalty of other kingdoms and city-states in the area. Kind of like Meso-American Habsburgs. If that were the case then makes sense that so many important figures in later civilizations would claim descent. To show the similarities even today most of the remaining royalty in Europe have Habsburg ancestry if you go far back enough even if the blood has been watered down. That includes the British Royal family.
It reminds me of how in Europe, whether ancient Rome or early medieval Britain, everyone wanted to claim descent from Trojan refugees. In Mesoamerica, it was the Toltecs.
I would like to see a video on the history of the Nahua peoples, discussing their origin, their migrations into the core of Mesoamerica, interactions with cultures like Teotihuacan and Toltecs, and their migrations into Central America.
Finally, someone smart will give us an explanation on that complicated "fake Toltec empire" debate. I guess it's _a little_ disappointing there was no Toltec Empire to rule the entirety of Mesoamerica, but we still have other Mesoamerican empires to talk about.
Please do one on Chitza Itza. i was there many moons ago. The place was breathtaking, especially when you stand on the pyramid, close yours and visualize the place in it's glory days. the colors, the smells, the crowded plaza.
@@AncientAmericas it's a hard question to answer but basically I would define it simply as any society that doesnt have complex systems, a state, class stratification, and agriculture in combination. For instance where I'm from the indigenous people's are the abenaki and the haudenosaunee.
always fascinating to watch and learn. And I am typing from a totally ignorant stance. But did go to Chichen Itza when I was 14 and I remember it being awesome.
I can't stop thinking about how ancient king names become god names in civilizations down the road. The stuff of legends throughout the centuries. Can't help but make at least a connection with the Roman kingdom and how those kings have/had some sort of legendary status by the time of Caesar, and we now have doubts about their historical validity...
An impressive capital city is not required to make an empire. The control of commerce, trade, beliefs, technology, information, and many other things, are more important than lavish cities. a) Phoenician traders controlled the Mediterranean commerce with their trading and navigation skills. A commercial empire with a small capital. b) Gengis Kahn used a couple of technologic advances (horse stirrups and composite bows) to conquer the greatest empire ever, but his capital, Karakorum, was unimpressive. c) The English empire required but the strategies and knowledge borrowed/developed from their Portuguese allies. Both managed to control the world's commerce through maritime superiority and by conquering strategically important sites, such as fortified ports, key straits, main trading ports, and safe well located stopover ports to wait for the trade winds. London's size or luxury was irrelevant.
This guy is on the right track. Like he suggests the answer to this question lies deeper in the cultural history. The word tula is at the seed of this. As he said, it means place of the reed. A place where reeds grow means there is a source of water there, a source of sustenance , where game came, and the reeds that grew there could be woven into mats and houses; this was the birthplace of weaving, central life and culture. The ancestors who gave usd this legacy are remembered as the.ones.from the place of the reed, Toltecs; it is so far back in the cultural record, you're not going to find it. These are ideal ancestors. When someone says they are in tullies, they are saying they are in the tall grass, where you , pretty much, are when you go looking for the Toltec.
Let's be thankful we have a decent amount of Aztec cultural knowledge at all, even despite such bias. Also in terms of the Toltecs and figures like Ce Acatl Topiltzin, it just reminds me of the biblical stories of the United Kingdom of Israel under David & Solomon; a legendary golden age that's not well collaborated from the archeological record. If there ever was a historical Mesoamerican priest called Topiltzin, than what survives is probably mostly fabricated via centuries of oral telling.
I mean ig… but that’s like saying “we’re lucky to have anything from the etruscans” like… if your ancestors didn’t destroy history so much maybe you would have more to inherit
@@BingusDingusLingus As far as I know, I don't know any ancestors in family who are Spanish or colonized/conquered Central America or are responsible with burning indigenous books.
Love the videos as always. Lemme help a little with some art history perspective: "taught the clay to lie" is a metaphor for the products of the Toltec's ceramic craftsmanship being so realistic that they don't look like clay, but rather take on the appearance of their subject matter.
"history is seldom kind to history"
that earns a subscribe right there
Thank you!
…except by experience.
9:27 "Who taught the clay to lie." may be a metaphor to show how convincing the statues were that they looked alive even tho they were lifeless mud. Therefore the clay lied it is alive.
Thx for that quote here, I listened to it several times over but couldn’t figure out what the dude was saying!!
My brain went straight to a Sumerian fudging the numbers on a clay tax form.
I was thinking the same thing, about the realism of the statues etc.
There is a story about that ... from Latin American literature.
Can't remember it exactly now.
I’d argue its an architectural reference, probably to building large monuments or structures. Could be totally wrong though…
Thanks for the chance of working with you, my friend! Cenca tlazohcamati!
The honor was mine!
saludos
@@victormedina9154 ¡Saludos hombre! :)
Que significa, "Cenca tlazohcamati"? Apenas voy a empezar el vídeo pero nunca lo avía escuchado
Ome de Mis dos creadormeh favoritos!
My parents are from Nicaragua and the Nahua presence here is amazing. Historians and scholars believe that the Nahua of Nicaragua are descended from Tollan’s Toltecs. The evidence to support this theory is astonishing, such as the Nicarao’s expertise in medicine, the timeframe of the Nicarao’s migration to Nicaragua after the fall of Tollan lines up almost perfectly. In fact it’s taught in high academia that the Nicarao are Toltecs who simply migrated south after the fall of Tollan. Great video.
Thank you!
thats so fascinating!
Not just Nicaragua the Pipil people of El salvador too! A form of Nahuatl is even still spoken there as the southern most form of Nahua language far outside the original scope that's born and spoken in Mexico, it's the southern most because the language is now considered extinct in Nicaragua. However we also have the legend of Topiltzin establishing a population in El Salvador before moving onto Nicaragua during his exodus. Another thing is not only was he believed to take on the name of Queztalcoatl but was also believed to be an incarnation of the deity to his people, which may explain the rivalry between him and Tezcotlipoca in myth if it may have also been grounded in historical events. A king that detested human sacrifice where rival and later groups would glorify the practice.
@@MysticDojo Nawat isn't extinct from nicaragua, there're small pockets of speakers in the central and northwest of the country. It's estimated that there's 100 native speakers left and more speakers that blend nawat-spanish together mixed.
@@KaiserWilbur oh rip than I guess you better go and correct the academic sources cause they also say it went extinct in the region by the 19th century.
In 2022 I am 73, California native . In 5-6th grade I did a school report on the Toltec. That was about 1958. I was fascinated by the advanced civilization .
Thank you for this very interesting YT video .
You're welcome!
The Toltecs "teaching the clay to lie" means objects they would make look so good it's deceiving to their eyes, they look so good they can't believe what they see, like the clay is lying to them. It's a really powerful, albeit convoluted, way to compliment their work.
"teaching the clay to lie" also can mean that what looks like stone is actually made of clay.
@@yanina.korolko yeah and that sounds less cryptic too.. my compliments to you. (People speak in English as if they know what they are saying... 'convoluted' is included and 'complement' is lost. :).
I tried to interest our city council in putting a skull rack downtown, next to the kiddie splash park, but they had already spent all the money on a second ball court.🙄 We'd have to raise the funds ourselves. So if anyone wants their name on a paver ($50) or pillar ($200) of the new skull rack, we are taking donations.
Will it have real skulls ???
@@robertmcgovern8850 🤭 What dark humour!
I can envision someone complaining about the exact same thing 1500 years ago, and it amuses me greatly.
As someone who enjoyed studied Classics in college, I love learning about the amazing histories, languages, and cultures of the Americas. Too often are they overlooked, and you’re doing an amazing job highlighting them and sharing their stories. Thank you for the amazing content!
Thank you!
The mere fact that European Mediterranean culture is singularly referred to as "The Classics", in complete disregard for the rest of the planet, goes to show the bias. I too am deeply appreciative of these detailed looks into Mesoamerican culture.
Same here, I love learning about all the many different cultures that the Americas have had from Thousands of years ago. There are so many unknown people/cultures who are not talked about at all today. One of those cultures that fascinate me is the Pre-Olnec culture of Monte Alto, Guatemala. They predate the Olmec and science now are saying that the Pre-Olnec people were probably the first to know the properties of magnetism about 800-1,000 years before the Greeks and Chinese.
@@AncientAmericas so none has any idea at all, I mean at all...the more I look at these ancient stuffs, the more I come to think that specialists also have no clue of what they translate, and the chaos and missmatches of artifacts with dna, how much people moved in the past, how much humans lie about themsleves and about the enemies well...no clue at all.
I see the good intention in many of you with these works, and for real, much respect, at least your version is not the classic unilineal kind of narrative..but I quit with the "official historical record", kudos to you for putting so much info together, a lot of work, but for me, it only serves to improve that no clue, there is no way to trust any historical record, we can only take what may be convenient for sleeping better.
nice vid as I say. thanks for keeping the doors opened to other views and providing all possible proposals.
@@bobwilson7684 archaeology always has room for error. If you think the evidence is being misinterpreted, you should present your own ideas. An outsider's perspective can be a valuable thing.
This makes me think of Troy, which is a relatively small archeological site, but which had great significance to the Greeks and Romans.
I was thinking of something like Delphi, but this makes more sense
@@SantiagoGarza-bg9wp yeah Troy is specifically cited as where the Romans came from in the Aeneid, so it's kind of a nation building myth.
This is channel consistently publishes some of the highest quality history content on all of RUclips. Thank you for sharing your talent with us
Thanks!
My mothers side of the family is from a town near Tula, Hidalgo. My grandmother was indigenous and only spoke Otomi until she moved to Mexico City in her late teens. I am very proud of our origins, thank you for making this video. ❤
Now THIS is how you lay down the history of ancient Mesoamerica
I just binge watched all of your videos for past 3 days and couldn't get enough of them, that upload is a godsend, amazing content!
Hooray for good timing!
The Toltecs have always been "problematic." Great show! You did a wonderful job synthesizing the material. Mil gracias.
Gracias!
Does that not feel threatening to you? One day it may result in Mexico Explained. :P
@@oisnowy5368 ha ha
Not really. Not when you consult the sources. It only became problematic when archaeologists declared Tula Xicocotitla as the only Tollan. Creating a cognitive dissonance when presented with anything else.
This is one of the only Historical channels on RUclips that talks about Pre Colombian American history, happy I’m a Patreon!
I'm happy you're a patron too!
You don't have to be an empire to have a big impact. City states like Athens and Sparta had massive historical and cultural impacts. Toltec's were heavily influential in a similar way despite not being an empire level power.
Athens had a maretime empire though
And Hellenic influence in general was greatly spread by Alexander the Great, and the massive empire he created.
@@Carewolf but their lasting influence is arguably the immaterial philosophical and scientific concepts that they left behind. It could be similar in this region, where the Toltec's are regarded as highly developed in culture and knowledge, just as the Greek's were in Ancient Europe.
@@Wyckoff_ape those "immaterial" influences were the schools, languages, ideas left behind of the culture when the state fell not the complete death of the people and culture...
Hi swabcraft, carewolf and others, I just thought I’d opine a few tidbits on this blessed controversy. Firstly I’d say that Athens did intentionally embark on an imperial agenda, citing the mighty Thucydides as an early historian on the partickulars. Whether Sparta ever shared that agenda I would be far less certain of. That they resented opposed or even feared in a rather manly sort of way, naturally, the various consequences the Athenian ambitions could impose on Sparta and its allies is fairly apparently why they matched or opposed is probably clearer to say Athenian military forces doesn’t mean that Sparta itself wanted or coveted the same things that Athens did.
As a sidebar I’d add at this point that as Thucydides often describes, whether it is fair to generalize that ‘the Athenians’ desired an empire is very debatable (npi), but after the debates the voting etc certain policies were acted upon to advance the imperialist agenda and the rest of em had to suck it up. (Sound familiar??)
So probably lots of ppl reading this already know this and I apologize if I sound pretentious or good forbid, misinformed about things that happened way back when
.
Since it’s all just a preamble to discussing,…? Hang on a sec I gotta review here a bit!!
I'm from Hidalgo and my city is very close to Tula. I went to Tula and Teotihuacan when i was about 6 years old but haven't had the chance to go back to truly appreciate everything and experience it once more since I live in the US.
Lately I've experienced a renewed desire to learn more about my ancestry. I kind of felt disgusted and sad when I realized I knew much more about other cultures and civilizations from foreign places but knew almost nothing about my own ancient culture and roots so I appreciate the level of detail in your video. Thank you.
you shouldn’t feel bad about that. All you can know, is what you’ve been taught. And the further along we go it seems like we find out much of it isn’t true
I love when any history content discusses the sources involved
Topiltzin seems very similar to King Arthur. Nowadays, we're pretty sure that Arthur was a real person or conglomeration of people (personally, I think he was Riothamus), but the legends got so crazy that we end up with things like Le Morte d'Arthur. Seems to
me that the same thing happened here with him.
Yes, sounds possible, something on the lines of a historical fact that got over exaggerated. Also kind of reminds me of the protestant reformation, a popular ideology that spread without a central empire to enforce it.
I can totally see that
People act like propaganda was a 20th century invention! Despite that, your theory and the preponderance of evidence around the world suggests otherwise.
There's a clear mythic basis to Arthur's stories even at the start. When a hero gets deified that identifies them with earlier cultural narratives.
@The Legate Haha, I read that and immediate thought of what happened to Chuck Norris 20ish years old :P
Thanks, Ancient Americas 🕊 I enjoyed all the alliterative moments 🤗
I've said it before and I'll say it again, thank you for the time and effort you put into these videos. I look forward to more from you.
You're welcome!
Just when I had finished rewatching all of your videos, here you arrive with another. Thank you.
You're welcome!
This is a great video but I'd like to add one thing that went unmentioned. In western El Salvador we have a group of Nahua people that claim descendance from Tollan. The common story we hear there is that they were part of the nobility who left Mexico (giving them the name pipil) during the socio religious conflict between Quetzalcoatl and Tezcatlipoca. How this went down and when these nobles left is uncertain but the linguistic split happened about the same time as this event. Anyways just thought that was cool. Also Ce Acatl Topiltzin Quetzalcoatl is such a great name. One warrior/Reed, our prince, Quetzalcoatl. The ancestors went hard with that one.
I actually came across the pipil in my research because they have their own accounts of topiltzin. It's really interesting how far those accounts are spread.
@@AncientAmericas Have you learned about Xoconoxco (near Tapachula, Chiapas, near the Guatemala border)? It was populated by Nahuatl speakers and had a significant impact on regional trade and culture in the post-Classic/pre-conquest era, in a region dominated by speakers of languages very different from Central Mexico.
@@habitualforeigner Yes I have and it is a really interesting area. There's also some Maya presence in that area as well if I'm not mistaken.
@@AncientAmericas Actually Xoconochco wasn't a Nahuatl-speaking region, nor a Mayan one; but a Mixe-Zoquean one, and the dominant language of the region was Tapachultec, a language from a very ancient family which may have been spoken by the Tenocelome.
@@AztlanHistorian I stand corrected! Thank you for clarifying.
I learn so much from your videos, i’m Mexican myself and I’ve always took pride in my Aztec heritage! Can you make a video about Aztlan and the origins of the Nahua peoples, thx in advance ❤
Thank you! We'll definitely get to the Aztecs in due time. To be completely honest though, I like covering more obscure topics that don't get as much attention.
Am positive am part Toltec my grandmother was indigenous and tall AF. From Jalisco México. And meeting other Indigenous people from the same area they have Bright yellow eyes as well. And darker skin. The Toltec bloodline still exist
@@expendablewater7474 One thing I absolutely love about the Nahua people is how far they extended, they settled as far south as northern Costa Rica. Historians claim that the Nahua people of Nicaragua, El Salvador and Costa Rica are descendants of Toltecs, they’re known as the Pipil-Nicarao. They know this cause of the Pipil-Nicarao’s expertise in medicine, the Nahuatl dialect the Toltecs spoke is also the exact same the Pipils and the Nicarao spoke, and the religious and political similarities are identical to the Toltecs. In addition the timeframe of the Nahua migrations in Central America after the collapse of Tollan is well timed
Fall of Civilizations has a great doc on the Aztecs in the meantime :)
I learned more from it than I ever did in school
@@AncientAmericas maybe something about the origins of nahua peoples in general and when they became a distinct group from other Uto-Aztecan Language Speakers would be nice
I've always studied the Ancient Near East, and however fascinating that history is, i am VERY far removed from it. I live in the Americas, among MesoAmercan people, and am beginning to find their History every bit as fascinating as our Eurasian. Your Channel is a great help!
Seeing one of your new videos ready to watch makes getting off work even better.
Your early videos were awesome, and you just keep getting better and better! Thanks for all the work you put in!!
Thank you! Nice to see that I've learned a thing or two along the way.
Seeing a new video of yours pop into my feed always makes my day!
Ahhh!😊. You have made my day again!!! Gratitude!!!!
I like the idea that they were legendary for their craftsmanship and more abstract "refinement" among the mesoamericans, like sparta was to the romans for their militarism and well, spartanic lifestyle & upbringing, maybe based on real facts or more a kind of transgenerational flanderisation. And in that way maybe became an ideal to emulate. Maybe like "rome" after the fall of the west-roman empire.
I was recommended this video today and discovered two awesome channels for the price of one. Thank you!
You're welcome!
I love the timing. I've had Toltecs on my mind for a while now and was looking for some good literature on the topic or any good, reliable, and interesting materials and... there you are! Fantastic work, as always! Thank you! (Second time watching!)
Thank you! If you want more material check out the bibliography for each episode. You can find it in each video's description.
Toltecs Until The Fall Of Tula by Nigel Davies is an excellent book, synthesizes a lot of the known and written material really well
So much Riqueza Cultural. Thanks for these videos. There's still Nahua speakers in El Salvador. I am a Lenca from border El Salvador/Honduras.
Great video as always! Great to find videos in English, I understand Spanish well, but grew up speaking both languages, my English is better growing up in Texas so is nice being able to paint a clearer picture. My fathers is from Guanajuato and have otomi history, and he still made metates when he was young with his grandmother in Comonfort GTO.
Love the subject not just exclusive to Aztec (Mexica) or Maya history!
Nice that you know your ancestry my family is from Romita Guanajuato and A small ranch outside of Penjamo Guanajuato. Since that area was the borders of the Tarascan and Aztec borders we really don’t know what tribe/s we descend from. The Otomi were also very present in the region like you said.
@@davo1924 very cool. well thats just the last language my dads grandmother and other people on the Rancho still spoke and still kinda know. My uncle taught me a few words, but he said they weren't taught that language as children but they heard it spoken amongst the adults.. He grew up just outside San Miguel de Allende on el rancho del rincon. I've seen other information that says the borders and the frontiers of those nations as well as the Toltec, were protected by various Otomies. But thats a whole other subject because they're a very complex and deep rooted and often forgot part of Mexico history.
He told me that and I'm probably just spelling it as it sounds but Te keesh que di, meant buen dia. I wish I could pick their brains a little more often.
I appreciate the way you don’t overstate the facts, or attempt to draw too many conclusions from what is limited evidence. Sometimes we just don’t know all of our history and questions have to go unanswered.
Thank you!
I think that teaching the clay to lie was a reference to their sculptures being so good they looked real.
I think that's a great interpretation.
@@AncientAmericas thanks
You folks delivered! Youve got no idea how much i needed this visualization. Cant wait for more regions!
Thank you!
Your videos are amazing. The history of the Americas is so interesting.
Thank you!
thanks for the new video dude!...
I found this channel about 4 months ago.
watched ALL you videos(some twice) in a fortnight and now the wait between videos is just long enough to almost forget, and then here we go!!!.
the toltecs at last!!
love the work dude. there's no one explains the americas better than you!
Thank you!
Love your videos I use them to refresh what I’ve learnt from my college archeology classes
If you want a much better archaeology refresher, check out Nate Fossaaen's channel, ruclips.net/channel/UCPtpx23uFPZQAHK7Ou_yvlQ
It genuinely rules that it took a half century of research looking into where this legendary city could possibly be until one really really smart guy realized it was likely at the place that had the same name effectively. I hope he was with his beloved cat when he figured this out.
Sometimes the answer is too obvious to consider.
Does punctuation forbidden for you? This mess is completely unclear, it's impossible to quickly read your sentences
@@alfotiosacaramde9631 I didn't have any trouble with it. Also, someone who uses entirely the wrong word, 'does' instead of 'is', kinda has no right to criticise someone's writing and grammar. Especially since you forgot the punctuation at the end yourself.
@@alfotiosacaramde9631 dig a hole
@@alfotiosacaramde9631 You are just bad at reading comprehension, you illiterate moron. There's some punctuation, numbnuts.
I am deeply impressed that you are still able to think and speak coherently after delving into such a debated and distorted quasi-history as such remnants may be after so many have mucked about in what ideas may, or may not be, Toltec.
You have a strong mind!
I almost went mad writing this episode. It was a grind.
@@AncientAmericas That makes sense. Good job!
I love content like this, weighing the evidence we have and looking at it in different ways. Top notch stuff
Thank you!
WOW another episode already? As always, the effort you put into these videos is greatly appreciated. And good to see you partnering more with Aztlan Historian, it makes me smile thinking about all of the good indigenous history content coming out lately
Here's hoping!
Well it's better than reality Tv🤷♀️🤦🏻♀️🤮
Conspiracies, political indoctrination and all sorts of horrible biases are something we need to counter whenever possible, and I love to make my little contribution to that effort. Greetings
Love your channel! I'd love to hear an episode about the Haida or other Pacific Northwest Coast cultures!
Yes! I second that! The cultures of the US Northwest into the Canadian southwest are amazing, with fascinating and illuminating values, like the potlatch. Theirs are my favorite arts (except for the Bella Coola, in truth, which creeps me out), the totem poles, the way they track their heritage (reminds me of the Aboriginals of Australia), their social structures, their reverence for the spirit world. I hope you do!
Thank you! Assuming no catastrophes happen, there will be a PNW episode next year. If you have any good books or articles, please feel free to share with me.
@@AncientAmericas If the weather holds, I will try to excavate them!
Your comment about the ancient world being brightly painted is a good reminder (19:24). I found the relief featured at that time stamp to be difficult to discern the shapes and details. It would be beneficial to substitute a high contrast grayscale or researcher’s shape outline over these images so that they’re easier to understand. I appreciate all the work you put into each video and the opportunity to learn about the peoples of the Americas. It is a great service to everyone who discovers your videos.
Thank you! Sorry about that photo being tough to see. I'll try to be more mindful.
The tools they used to construct mighty structures could be considered Toltec Tall Tech.
Look what we got here! A comedian!
Rooftops !
A courtesy of *_'TOLTEC'_* , get your licence, now...
No wonder their city was burned down...
Yeah, but noone of their roofs endured to see the day of modern day, so their Technology cinda not good
@@埊 so does roof from any modern town in europe after ww2 ...LMAO
Huh the Talltec empire.
Work was rough, but this video made my day! Thanks for always delivering the goods
Anytime!
Great work as always AA!
Thanks!
That "teaching the clay to lie" quote was a very cool way to express sculptural mastery and artistry with the material. I know very little about ancient Mesoamerica, so thank you very much for this video! I enjoy the long videos to listen to and your excellent content.
God be with you out there everybody! ✝️ :)
Last week I visited the Calixtlahuaca archeological area and museum. The museum director gave us a tour and made reference to “the actual Tollan from the myths, which is not Tula”.
This is hardly the first time I hear that from Mexican archeologists and museum guides. There is a belief that the “real Tollan” was not Tula and either has not been found, it was only a myth, or it was actually a mountain that can be seen from Tula that inspired the shape of the new Basilica of Guadalupe.
There are multiple tollans in history and mythology. It can refer to many different places. Which Tollan was he referring to?
@@AncientAmericas I don’t know. She was talking about the Matlatzincas and their Mexica influence, and then she brought it up. I don’t remember the context.
Yours is the best analysis about the Toltecs I have heard so far!
I’d love if you talked about the Matlatzincas. I had never heard of them until I moved to the Toluca valley and started visiting their archeological sites of in Malinalco, Teotenango and Calixtlahuaca on the weekends. Also the Otomis and Mazahuas. 😁
Greetings from Metepec
@@arenasnefi Got it. The Matlatzincas are an interesting group that don't get much attention. I hadn't heard about them until earlier this year. I'd like to get around to them someday.
I’m very happy to run into this video and your channel. Thank you so very much!
I have a theory of why there were so many ball courts there in Tula. Maybe, like the Romans with Gladiator schools, they had areas where they trained captured warriors to play the game before heading to the large arena to be sacrificed. Though it could also be that the smaller courts weren't meant for ritual use, and were used like we would use a tennis / basketball court today.
Is it at all possible for your mouth to close and you listen for one second?..... oh my god!!!!
Thank you for tackling a complex topic. Something to keep in mind is that Teotihuacan was a multicultural/multiethnic/multilingual metro before its collapse, so were the city-states that emerged after. And the "Anahuac" really extends much further North/Northeast than most researchers showcase. Trade networks were extensive into Texas/New Mexico/Mississippi (eg; with Puebloans, Coahuiltecan, Caddo) as they were into the Yucatan. Influences went both ways. More than likely Tula was destroyed by Chichimecan raiders. They did the same to other North MX civilizations like the Huastecs (a Mayan civ) which is why these places were not as elaborately built. We may have to look at Topiltzin as an Alexander-figure in Mesoamerica, leaving behind "civilization" and influence in his wake that mixed with local states.
There were also other groups that competed or traded with the Toltecs, such as Huastecs, Otomi, and Totonacs. Which is possibly why they were not a massive Empire, but it made the balance a bit more equal, yet some say some of these other groups may also have raided Tula.
I believe the connection with "The Four Agreements" philosophy (despite other influences) is that Don Miguel was taught by Huichol (Wixakira) curanderos, whom are descendants of the Guachichiles, the largest of the Chichimecan groups. Curanderos are healers (hence the Toltec connection- medicine/wisdom). My great grandmother was also a Curandera, but we are predominantly Coahuiltecan, though we have DNA from across all Mexican/Nahua regions. We are similar or related to the Chichimecan and historically practiced the Mitote and Peyote ceremony. This is shown in the Shaman rock art in the lower Pecos of West Texas, which some archeologists believe is some of the oldest "Toltec" origins found in the Americas. The rock art is similar to ancient art found at Huapalcalco and other Toltec regions.
Overall, Mesoamerica was highly diverse throughout; ethnically, linguistically, and culturally, but there was a lot of overlap, mixing, and trading, which led to many places flourishing for a time.
All excellent points! Even today, Mexico is far more diverse than it gets credit for.
Sorry I'm not used to comment here. Thanks for the video! It was a very instructive one and also brought me back some childhood memories.
I'll likely be on the minority side here, but I'm pretty sure (no proof, no doubt) that Topiltzin Quetzalcoatl is a historized or euhemerized mythic figure. Two elements lead me to that suspicion: 1) *both* his and his opponent's name are ones of Nahua gods. 2) He disappears as the morning star - a trait of the god Quetzalcoatl.
Of course I have no way to prove this, and would have to take a look a the sources, but it seems to me a clear case of historized foundation myth in which traits of historical/legendary people and some ethnographical knowledge of past societies were incorporated into an originally mythical tale (compare Romulus in Rome).
But all this may just be some crazy perception of mine. Thanks again!
Thanks! There's a lot of literature you can read on that and it's really fascinating.
@@AncientAmericas I do hope you get to their astronomical/astrological science. It really is mindblowing, both in its development, its precision, and its social and spiritusl application. There's something very quirky about having the orbit of Venus, and its phases, as the primary religious focus. Deep.
@@grovermartin6874 I do need to make an archaeoastronomy episode at some point.
@@AncientAmericas I will be holding my breath! A friend wrote a program/book called "Aztec" (at least, that was the name of the computer program) that had some superb delineations for the day signs. Very easy reading. There are two bits, a couple of which you referred to, like 1 Reed (the name of Bruce's publishing company, actually) and 9 something, Rain, maybe? But he got the two parts mixed up, according to the people I met from that part of the world. And they all knew their signs! One fellow, from Nicaragua, volunteered his sign, which he translated as the Wanderer, when I expressed amazement at all the countries in which he'd lived.
Your videos are SO well done. And getting better and better!
Love that everytime a new life moment happens for me I get a video from you! This time it’s a new job :)
Congratulations! Good luck with the new job!
Excellent content. Tula was contemporary with Chaco in the Southwest.
Thank you! Hoping to cover Chaco Canyon sometime in the near future.
Would love a audio only version on Spotify to listen to while working out ☺️ love the content!
My grandpa was from a Nahua Nicarao community in the Tola municipality which is named after Tollan. While growing up he'd tell my siblings and I about the oral history of our ancestors who migrated from Mexico to Nicaragua in the pre-columbian era. And to add the cherry on top my DNA test traced alot of my Native American ancestry back to Mexico. As a subscriber thank you so much for the history lesson, can't wait to see more 🇳🇮👍
Very interesting! Thank you for sharing!
About halfway through this video, I decided your channel would be worth a subscription. Good stuff!
Thank you Horus!
Seems like Tollan is their version of "Lee/Leigh" a clearing in the woods, as in Berkeley, Avonlea. In fact "wick" is a farm outside of the Burg (town with walls around it) like Brunswick "Braunschweig" Brown's Oulying Farm. The fertile spot where the food comes from and society is centered.
Pues muy buen video, que bonito ver a personas hablando de la historia de las culturas en México con tanto cuidado. Gracias bro.
Excellent video as always! You should do one on the Hopewell Culture or Poverty Point Mounds next!
Thank you! And today is your lucky day because I already made an episode on Poverty Point!
ruclips.net/video/5kwXmjEbav8/видео.html
@@AncientAmericas oh nice! I thought I had already watched all your stuff! But, surprise!
@@AncientAmericas This is exciting!
Great and informational video as always! I learned a lot about the Toltec history! I now understand what you mean on how troublesome it is to be pinned. Thank you for all the work you put into making the video! That was a really good voice describing the Toltecs btw.
Thanks Marcus!
@@AncientAmericas you’re welcome!!!
Yey! you mentioned Nicoya. I was born about 6hrs from there, in San José. Costa Rica. I'd love you to make an episode (better a series, ha) about indigenous cultures of Costa Rica. It lends itself to be super interesting, being geographically a narrow point of encounter, like a bridge, between the North and the South of America.
Thank you! I would definitely like to cover them at some point.
A timeline of the Americas compilation video would be great to see how cultures and civilizations developed simultaneously throughout the hemisphere. Recent evidence suggests we've been on the continents for much longer than previously maintained by western eurocentric archaeologists. I'd be really interested in watching a video that starts at the earliest evidence of human habitation and that travels through time and illustrates the development of various technologies, agricultural practices, architectural styles, etc.
Have you ever did a video on the foods of Central and South America? Again you and Atlas Pro are awesome.
The only food episodes I've done are corn and potatoes. I'll probably do another next year if all goes well.
Your videos are gold standard of western hemisphere history
Thank you!
Just a nitpick: There's no actual "return of the Quetzalcoatl" story that Cortez exploited. I'm really surprised you actually mentioned that myth.
The video is still very well made however, can't wait for the next one!
Thank you! Yeah, I debated including that in the episode but it's so well known by the public I thought I'd mention it in passing. There's a lot of debate about whether or not it was actually a thing at contact which (again) depends.on how much you trust the sources. Personally, it strikes me as a later invention. Someday when we get to the conquest, I'll go into it in much more detail.
@@AncientAmericas Your replies are the most stimulating and educational that I've run across on the internet. It feels that we're all in a class or on a great field trip with you!
Thank you for highlighting the cultural/ideological links between these nations!
I wonder if it’s kind of like a Mesoamerican Sparta situation. Like Tula, Sparta was relatively small but had a reputation for having great warriors which made it punch above its weight class. It never grew a large population and was culturally lacking relative to its neighbors, but had such a military reputation that it was revered by later militaristic empires to be much more than it really was. Just like how later Rome treated Sparta like a curiosity.
That's certainly possible.
Great video!!! Great partnership too haha I love seeing people working together it’s amazing and shows what we can really do.
Thank you!
the two ball courts had to be two different games, or subtleties in the games that we wouldn't see, but would be huge in their culture.
As always, this video was extremely well done. The uncertainty about who and what the Toltecs were is an honest, truthful accounting of what might be the case with this civilization while acknowledging the substantial uncertainties involved.
Thank you!
would you mind doing a video on the cassava, mandioca or yuca in the future? would love to hear about more of the great crops that fueled this cultures. Thanks a lot for this videos.
Would you just listen to me please?... oh my god!!!!!
@@doyouevendab77
What
@@francofazzolari7973 will you please listen to me.. i will say one name
Another superb video. Thank you for all the hard work
Thank you!
As an Iowan i would love to see a video on effigy mounds national monument but i think the spirit cave mummy would be more interesting
I need to get out there and see those someday.
@@AncientAmericas If you want to know more about the spirit cave mummy check out ask a morticians video on mummys she does a really good job covering the subject
Spot on perspective. I’ve read these ever changing narrative for 50 years and visited some of the sites. I’m a limited guy, but still, I came away deeply confused, and perhaps misled.
Oh trust me, writing this episode nearly drove me insane.
I’ve always wondered if the word “Toltec” was just a title for groups of similar Mesoamerican tribes in central Mexico, similar to how the Huns, Mongols, Khazars, and Altaic peoples where lumped together as “Tartars”, or the many tribes of old Eurasia, particularly the ones in the east (Modern Russia, Kazakhstan, Mongolia, etc.)
It's certainly possible.
I was drawn to this because I have a tarot deck with the Toltec as the theme. I hadn't ever heard of it (until I found the deck, and it was interesting to me, and I had never heard of a reader using the cards, at least on YT, so I bought it) so thank you for making this video. I haven't put much into researching the culture, since I was researching my Egyptian deck.
You're welcome!
As one from the Far east, Toltec legacies in Mesoamerica strongly reminds me of legacies of Zhou dynasty in the Far east. With great help of confucianism, Zhou dynasty of China has been always remembered the greatest dynasty in the entire Chinese history with ideal politics and society which every nation should follow, despite that, in actuality, Zhou dynasty was honestly "meh" of dynasty at the best, which originally began as local power on the edge of Chinese culture at the time and rose its hight as Western Zhou (1046-771 BC), but after moved from its original base, Haojing, on the edge of Chinese world at the time into Luoyi, which is well inside of Chinese heartland at the time as Eastern Zhou (770-256 BC), Zhou spent majority of its era as one heck of miserable dynasty (one of the most miserable in all of Chinese dynasty in fact), where it totally lost grip of majority of its territory and spent its centuries as mere puppet state which few ppl cared...
The reason why Confucianism emphasize legacies of Zhou dynasty largely came from nostalgia Confucius personally had on good ol' Western Zhou dynasty, but it is undeniable that legacies of Zhou dynasty left huge impact on the Far east...
Been waiting for this one. Thanks for doing it
You're welcome!
History is written by the victors.
Super video, thank you 👍🏼
History being written by the "victors" is baby's first deep thought. If you're an adult and you're still using that phrase you're either a teenager who's still ignorant but wants to feel intelligent, or you're a neo nazi or neo confederate.
Thanks!
big fan of both of you guys channels. Keep up the good work!
Thank you!
Im surprised Michael Coe didn’t considered the maya as one of those cultures. I wonder what were the mexica’s views on the maya legacy
That's a very good point.
The Mexica barely had contact with the Maya; so for them the Maya legacy would've been seen much like the Franks saw the legacy of the Han Dynasty in China... not much to say or think about that
hes a while old guy, not much u can expect to learn
@@v_enceremos don't go too hard on Michael Coe. He made huge and invaluable contributions to Maya and mesoamerican studies. I always recommend his books even if they are a bit dated by today's standards.
@@AztlanHistorian I wouldn't go *that* far. But yeah, their relations were much less dynamic than people usually think.
This video is just amazing. As Mexican I am really amazing by your work !!
Your videos are incredibly informative! By far the most knowledgable channel on YT regarding mesoamerican history. Do you have a recommended reading list for anyone that wants to dive deeper into this time and geography?
Thank you! The closest thing to a reading list that I have is the bibliography for each episode and you can find that in the description. Is there a specific area and time that fascinates you?
So much amazing detail, great job.
Thank you!
While they were not an actual empire makes me wonder if they had so much influence by being really good diplomats and being really good at intermarrying with the royalty of other kingdoms and city-states in the area. Kind of like Meso-American Habsburgs. If that were the case then makes sense that so many important figures in later civilizations would claim descent. To show the similarities even today most of the remaining royalty in Europe have Habsburg ancestry if you go far back enough even if the blood has been watered down. That includes the British Royal family.
That could definitely be a possibility.
It reminds me of how in Europe, whether ancient Rome or early medieval Britain, everyone wanted to claim descent from Trojan refugees. In Mesoamerica, it was the Toltecs.
I would like to see a video on the history of the Nahua peoples, discussing their origin, their migrations into the core of Mesoamerica, interactions with cultures like Teotihuacan and Toltecs, and their migrations into Central America.
Maybe someday we'll get there!
Finally, someone smart will give us an explanation on that complicated "fake Toltec empire" debate.
I guess it's _a little_ disappointing there was no Toltec Empire to rule the entirety of Mesoamerica, but we still have other Mesoamerican empires to talk about.
Eh, sometimes history isn't quite as exciting as we'd like. Doesn't mean its any less interesting though.
@@AncientAmericas Agree, it was still pretty cool learning about this long gone regional kingdom and the mysteries surrounding it.
Please do one on Chitza Itza. i was there many moons ago. The place was breathtaking, especially when you stand on the pyramid, close yours and visualize the place in it's glory days. the colors, the smells, the crowded plaza.
Chichen Itza is on my list. It will get an episode someday.
this is great stuff! any chance you'll do more on non-civilization societies in the future?
Thanks! What exactly do you mean by non-civilization? Just want to make sure I understand so I can give you a good answer.
@@AncientAmericas it's a hard question to answer but basically I would define it simply as any society that doesnt have complex systems, a state, class stratification, and agriculture in combination. For instance where I'm from the indigenous people's are the abenaki and the haudenosaunee.
always fascinating to watch and learn. And I am typing from a totally ignorant stance. But did go to Chichen Itza when I was 14 and I remember it being awesome.
I can't stop thinking about how ancient king names become god names in civilizations down the road. The stuff of legends throughout the centuries.
Can't help but make at least a connection with the Roman kingdom and how those kings have/had some sort of legendary status by the time of Caesar, and we now have doubts about their historical validity...
In Quetzalcoatl's case, the god predates the king... assuming he was a king and not a high priest. Greetings!
I am glad I came across this channel.😊
An impressive capital city is not required to make an empire. The control of commerce, trade, beliefs, technology, information, and many other things, are more important than lavish cities.
a) Phoenician traders controlled the Mediterranean commerce with their trading and navigation skills. A commercial empire with a small capital.
b) Gengis Kahn used a couple of technologic advances (horse stirrups and composite bows) to conquer the greatest empire ever, but his capital, Karakorum, was unimpressive.
c) The English empire required but the strategies and knowledge borrowed/developed from their Portuguese allies. Both managed to control the world's commerce through maritime superiority and by conquering strategically important sites, such as fortified ports, key straits, main trading ports, and safe well located stopover ports to wait for the trade winds. London's size or luxury was irrelevant.
Exactly! Love the examples you cited!
This guy is on the right track. Like he suggests the answer to this question lies deeper in the cultural history. The word tula is at the seed of this. As he said, it means place of the reed. A place where reeds grow means there is a source of water there, a source of sustenance , where game came, and the reeds that grew there could be woven into mats and houses; this was the birthplace of weaving, central life and culture. The ancestors who gave usd this legacy are remembered as the.ones.from the place of the reed, Toltecs; it is so far back in the cultural record, you're not going to find it. These are ideal ancestors. When someone says they are in tullies, they are saying they are in the tall grass, where you , pretty much, are when you go looking for the Toltec.
Let's be thankful we have a decent amount of Aztec cultural knowledge at all, even despite such bias. Also in terms of the Toltecs and figures like Ce Acatl Topiltzin, it just reminds me of the biblical stories of the United Kingdom of Israel under David & Solomon; a legendary golden age that's not well collaborated from the archeological record. If there ever was a historical Mesoamerican priest called Topiltzin, than what survives is probably mostly fabricated via centuries of oral telling.
I mean ig… but that’s like saying “we’re lucky to have anything from the etruscans” like… if your ancestors didn’t destroy history so much maybe you would have more to inherit
Agreed. You can certainly appreciate the sources we have while also being aware of their limits.
@@BingusDingusLingus
As far as I know, I don't know any ancestors in family who are Spanish or colonized/conquered Central America or are responsible with burning indigenous books.
@@BingusDingusLingus Friendly reminder: both the Aztecs and the Spanish burned books.
Love the videos as always. Lemme help a little with some art history perspective: "taught the clay to lie" is a metaphor for the products of the Toltec's ceramic craftsmanship being so realistic that they don't look like clay, but rather take on the appearance of their subject matter.
Thank you!