Tlaxcala (Nahua state) explained

Conventional Long Name:Confederacy of Tlaxcala
Common Name:Tlaxcala
Status:Confederation
Era:Post Classic /Early Modern
Year Start:1348
Event Start:The Tlaxcalla People Migrate to Central Mexico
Year End:1520
Event End:Spanish conquest of the Aztec Empire
P1:Tepeticpac
Flag P1:JeroglificodeTepeticpac.jpg
P2:Ocotelolco
Flag P2:JeroglificodeOcotelulco.jpg
P3:Tizatlan
Flag P3:JeroglificodeTizatlan.jpg
P4:Quiahuiztlan
Flag P4:JeroglificodeQuiahuiztlan.jpg
S1:New Spain
Flag S1:Flag of Cross of Burgundy.svg
Flag Border:no
Flag Type:Battle vexilloid worn by Tlaxcalan warriors who fought alongside the Spanish (Lienzo de Tlaxcala)
Flag Size:65px
Image Map Caption:Tlaxcala was surrounded by the Aztec Empire in 1519.
Capital:Tlaxcala
Common Languages:Nahuatl (Official)
Government Type:Confederation
Title Leader:Tlatoani of Tlaxcala
Leader1:Culhuatecuhtli
Year Leader1:1348
Stat Year1:1348
Religion:Tlaxcaltecan religion
Stat Pop1:?
Stat Year2:early 15th century
Stat Pop2:650,000
Stat Year3:1519
Stat Pop3:300,000
Currency:Quachtli, Cacao
Today:Tlaxcala, Mexico

Tlaxcala (Tlaxcallān pronounced as /nci/ 'place of maize tortillas') was a pre-Columbian city and state in central Mexico.

During the Spanish conquest of the Aztec Empire, the Tlaxcaltecs allied with the Spanish Empire against their hated enemies, the Aztecs, supplying a large contingent for and sometimes most of the Spanish-led army that eventually destroyed the Aztec Empire.

Tlaxcala was completely surrounded by Aztec lands, leading to the intermittent so called "flower war" between the Aztecs and the Tlaxcalans, fighting for their independence, as the Aztecs wanted to absorb them into the empire.

History

The Tlaxcalans arrived in Central Mexico during the Late Postclassic. They first settled near Texcoco in the valley of Mexico, between the settlement of Cohuatlinchan and the shore of Lake Texcoco.[1] After some years the Tlaxcallans were driven out of the valley of Mexico and moved to the east, splitting into three groups along the way. While one group continued north towards the modern state of Hidalgo and another remained in the vicinity of Texcoco, a third group arrived in the modern valley of Tlaxcala, where they established the city of Tepetícpac Texcallan under the leadership of Culhuatecuhtli Quanex.

Over the subsequent years, the Tlaxcallan state expanded with the foundations of Ocotelulco and Tizatlán. The fourth major settlement, Quiahuiztlan, was founded by members of the Tlaxcallan group that had initially remained in the valley of Mexico.

List of Tlatoque of the Tlaxcallan Altepemeh!Tepeticpac!Ocotelolco!Tizatlan!Quiahuiztlan
Señor de Aztahua de Tizatlan
CuitlixcatlXayacamach
TlahuexolotzinMaxixcatlCitlapopocaizin
Lorenzo Maxixcatl

Government

Ancient Tlaxcala was a republic ruled by a council of between 50 and 200 chief political officials (teuctli [sg.], teteuctin [pl.]).[2] [3] [4] These officials gained their positions through service to the state, usually in warfare, and as a result came from both the noble (pilli) and commoner (macehualli) classes.

Contact with conquistadors

Tlaxcala was never conquered by the Aztec empire, but was engaged in a state of perpetual war, the so-called flower wars or garland wars.

Conquistador Bernal Díaz del Castillo describes the first battle between the Spanish force and the Tlaxcalteca as surprisingly difficult. He writes that they probably would not have survived, had not Xicotencatl the Elder, and Maxixcatzin, persuaded Xicotencatl the Younger – the Tlaxcallan warleader – that it would be better to ally with the newcomers than to kill them.[5]

Xicohtencatl the Younger was later condemned by the Tlaxcaltecan ruling council and hanged by Cortés for desertion in April 1521 during the siege of Tenochtitlan.

Due to protracted warfare between the Aztecs and the Tlaxcala, the Tlaxcala were eager to exact revenge, and soon became loyal allies of the Spanish. Even after the Spanish were expelled from Tenochtitlan, the Tlaxcala continued to support their conquest. Tlaxcala also assisted the Spanish in the conquest of Guatemala.[6]

As a result of their alliance with the Spaniards, Tlaxcala had Spanish; Castilian: [[Hidalgo (nobility)|hidalgo]] privileged status within Spanish colonial Mexico as confirmed in the Royal Writ of the Foundation of the City of Tlaxcala, Mexico. After the Spanish conquered Tenochtitlan and the rest of Mexico, Tlaxcala was allowed to survive and preserve its pre-Columbian culture. In addition, as a reward to the Tlaxcalans unyielding loyalty to the Spanish, the city and its inhabitants largely escaped the pillaging and destruction following the Spanish conquest. The Tlaxcalans gave further assistance in the Mixtón War.

Following the Spanish Conquest, Tlaxcala was divided into four fiefdoms (Spanish; Castilian: [[señorío]]s) by the Spanish corregidor Gómez de Santillán in 1545 (26 years after the Conquest). These fiefdoms were Ocotelolco, Quiahuiztlan, Tepeticpac, and Tizatlan. At this time, four great houses or lineages emerged and claimed hereditary rights to each fiefdom and created fictitious genealogies extending back into the pre-Columbian era to justify their claims.[7]

During the colonial period, Tlaxcala's "part in the conquest of the Aztec 'empire,' her favored treatment by the Spanish crown, her unique talent for propaganda and litigation, her astonishing enterprise" gave the small state an important place in Mexican history.[8]

In the 16th and 17th centuries Tlaxcala settlers went to live in new northern colonies to protect Mexico from the Chichimecas.[9]

See also

Sources

Bibliography

External links

19.4289°N -98.1608°W

Notes and References

  1. Aurelio López Corral . etal . 2016. La República de Tlaxcallan. Arqueología Mexicana. 139. 42–53.
  2. Egalitarian Ideology and Political Power in Prehispanic Central Mexico: The Case of Tlaxcallan . 25766992 . Fargher . Lane F. . Blanton . Richard E. . Espinoza . Verenice Y. Heredia . Latin American Antiquity . 2010 . 21 . 3 . 227–251 . 10.7183/1045-6635.21.3.227 .
  3. Graeber, David and Wengrow, David "The Dawn of Everything, A New History of Humanity" (New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2021), pp. 346–358
  4. Tlaxcallan: The archaeology of an ancient republic in the New World . 10.1017/S0003598X0006751X . 2011 . Fargher . Lane F. . Blanton . Richard E. . Espinoza . Verenice Y. Heredia . Millhauser . John . Xiuhtecutli . Nezahualcoyotl . Overholtzer . Lisa . Antiquity . 85 . 327 . 172–186 .
  5. Diaz, B., 1963, The Conquest of New Spain, London: Penguin Books,
  6. Restall and Asselbergs 2007, pp. 79–81.
  7. Gibson, 1952.
  8. Simpson . Leslie Byrd . Tlaxcala in the Sixteenth Century by Charles Gibson . JSTOR . Pacific Historical Review . 4491989 . 29 September 2021.
  9. Web site: Schmal . John P. . 2019-09-12 . Indigenous Tlaxcala: The Allies of the Spaniards . 2022-12-28 . Indigenous Mexico . en-US.