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MAJOR ARCHAEOLOGICAL SITES: PreClassic to PostClassic
TZINTZÚNTZAN (circa A.D. 1300-1525)
Throughout the PostClassic period, various West Mexican
societies enriched themselves on the vibrant desert and
coastal trade that extended from the American Southwest
to the Valley of México, Oaxaca, and beyond. Around A.D.
1300, the Tarascans emerged to dominate much of the
region. Erecting a capital at Tzintzúntzan along the
banks of Lake Patzcuaro, they embarked on a program of
military expansion that enabled them to monopolize
exchange in such essentials as precious metals, feathers
and turquoise and to control a territory of over 45,000
square miles (72,000 square kilometers).
While sharing in the Tolteca-Chichimeca culture of their
eastern and southern contemporaries, the Tarascans were
also uniquely possessed of South American influences in
customs and dress that had resulted from over a
millenium of intermittent trade with Ecuadorian peoples.
It was through West México that the most sophisticated
metallurgical techniques were first introduced from
South America, and no one excelled at its production
better than the Tarascan coppersmiths who created
masterpieces of intricate design. In 1480, the Tarascans
had begun to move eastward where they encountered a new
foe, the vanguard of a new Aztec state with expansionist
ambitions equal to their own. Emboldened by their
successes in the region, an Aztec army proceeded far
beyond the extent of their supply lines and were set
upon by the Tarascans in such numbers that they were
totally annihilated. It was later remembered as the
greatest single military defeat ever suffered by the
Aztec Empire of the Triple Alliance up to the time of
the Spanish Conquest.

Tzintzúntzan was constructed on a terraced slope
overlooking the northern arm of Lake Patzcuaro where
fishing was, and still is, a predominant industry in the
region. Tzintzúntzan's main platform was surmounted by
five circular structures called yécatas. Each was
surmounted by a wooden temple with a thatched roof
dedicated to the sun god Curicaueri and his brothers.
Click on Image for more detail.
http://www.famsi.org/research/pohl/sites/tzintzuntzan.html

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