ABSTRACT

What visitor to Mexico City, unaware of its pre-Hispanic history, could imagine that right under a Christian Church may still lie the remains of the sinister tzompantli, the Aztecs' altar of skulls? Professor Jorge Hardoy poses this question and many more in his comprehensive summary of the ancient cities where Latin America's peoples lived before the Spaniards arrived in the sixteenth century.

Because Aztec Tenochtitlan, today Mexico City, and Inca Cuzco represent the culmination of the two most advanced civilizations encountered by the Spainsh conquistadors, the author explores these cities end-to-end. He also studies such older civic memorial centers as Teotichuacan, Tula, Monte Alban, Uxmal, Chichen Itza, Tikal, Palenque, Tiahuanaco, Chan Chan, Pachacamac, Machu Picchu, and lesser know sites, most virtually, if not totally, abandoned centuries before the Conquest. Such inclusive coverage makes for a lively discussion of some fifteen hundred years of urban life as immortalized in the architecture, art, and crafts of long vanished civilizations. There is an extensive bibliography, many photographs, maps, charts and city plans showing urban layouts of temples, which tell much about the life of the inhabitants.

His book shows that while new findings come to light each year, so much buried history lies waiting to be found that archaology will always be an ever unfolding drama.

This book was first published in 1973.

chapter 1|33 pages

The Origins of American Civilizations

chapter 2|40 pages

The Urban Evolution of Teotihuacán

chapter 4|28 pages

The Aztecs

chapter 5|54 pages

Tenochtitlán

chapter 6|38 pages

The Maya

chapter 7|48 pages

Did the Maya Build Cities?

chapter 9|31 pages

Tiahuanaco and the Urbanistic Period

chapter 10|38 pages

The Chimú Kingdom

chapter 11|29 pages

The Inca

chapter 12|34 pages

The Inca Society — Cuzco

chapter 13|37 pages

The Inca City