Mexican History & Culture Section 2.2

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Mexican History & Culture Section 2.2

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Mexican History & Culture Section 2.2. History and Culture. The Big Idea Native American cultures and Spanish colonization shaped Mexican history and culture. Main Ideas Early cultures of Mexico included the Olmec, the Maya, and the Aztec. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Mexican History & Culture Section 2.2

Page 1: Mexican History & Culture Section 2.2

Mexican History & Culture

Section 2.2

Page 2: Mexican History & Culture Section 2.2

History and Culture

The Big Idea

Native American cultures and Spanish colonization shaped Mexican history and culture.

Main Ideas

• Early cultures of Mexico included the Olmec, the Maya, and the Aztec.

• Mexico’s period as a Spanish colony and its struggles since independence have shaped its culture.

• Spanish and native cultures have influenced Mexico’s customs and traditions today.

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Main Idea 1:Early cultures of Mexico included the Olmec,

the Maya, and the Aztec.

• People came to Mexico many thousands of years ago.

• As early as 5,000 years ago, they were growing beans, peppers, squash, and domesticated corn.

• Farming allowed people to build the first settlements in America.

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Three Civilizations

Olmec

• Lived in small villages by about 1500 BC

• Settled in the southern coast of the Gulf of Mexico

• Built temples and giant statues

Maya

• Built big cities in Mexico and Central America between AD 250 and 900

• Built stone temples

• Developed a calendar

• Kept written records that do not reveal the reason for their collapse

Aztec

• Moved in from the north

• Built a great capital on an island in 1325

• Established an empire, a land with different territories and peoples under one ruler

• Obtained new lands, taxes, and captives to sacrifice through war

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Main Idea 2: Mexico’s period as a Spanish colony and its struggles since independence have shaped

its culture.

• Despite great size and power, the Aztec empire did not last long after Hernán Cortés arrived with 600 Spanish soldiers.

• The Spanish had better weapons and horses.

• The Spanish brought new diseases, such as smallpox, which killed many Aztecs.

• Cortés conquered the empire by 1521.

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Colonial Times

Culture

• After the conquest, the separate peoples and cultures mixed.

• Mestizos are people of mixed European and American Indian ancestry.

• Mulattoes are people of mixed European and African descent.

• Africans and American Indians also intermarried.

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Colonial Times

Religion

• The Roman Catholic Church had great influence.

• The church ruled over large areas of northern Mexico.

• The church established missions, or church outposts.

• Priests learned native languages and converted the American Indians to Catholicism.

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Colonial Times Economy

• The Spaniards searched for gold and silver.

• The American Indians and the enslaved Africans labored in the mines.

• As a result, many died from overwork and disease.

• The Spanish monarch granted haciendas, or huge expanses of farm or ranch land, to some Spanish people who became wealthy.

• Peasants, usually Indians, lived and worked on haciendas.

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Independence• Spain ruled Mexico for 300

years.

• Miguel Hidalgo, a Catholic priest, led the revolt against Spain.

• Hidalgo was killed in 1811, but Mexico won independence in 1821.

Independence and Later Struggles

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Later Struggles• Texas broke away from Mexico

fifteen years after independence.

• During the resulting Mexican-American War, Mexico lost nearly half of its territory.

• In the mid-1800s, Benito Juárez helped Mexico survive a French invasion and reduced the privileges of the church and army.

• In the early 1900s, hacienda owners and foreign companies had much influence.

• The Mexican Revolution, 1910-1920, resulted in land reform.

Independence and Later Struggles

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Later Struggles• Texas broke away from Mexico

fifteen years after independence.

• During the resulting Mexican-American War, Mexico lost nearly half of its territory.

• In the mid-1800s, Benito Juárez helped Mexico survive a French invasion and reduced the privileges of the church and army.

• In the early 1900s, hacienda owners and foreign companies had much influence.

• The Mexican Revolution, 1910-1920, resulted in land reform.

Independence and Later Struggles

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Page 20: Mexican History & Culture Section 2.2

Later Struggles• Texas broke away from Mexico

fifteen years after independence.

• During the resulting Mexican-American War, Mexico lost nearly half of its territory.

• In the mid-1800s, Benito Juárez helped Mexico survive a French invasion and reduced the privileges of the church and army.

• In the early 1900s, hacienda owners and foreign companies had much influence.

• The Mexican Revolution, 1910-1920, resulted in land reform.

Independence and Later Struggles

Page 21: Mexican History & Culture Section 2.2
Page 22: Mexican History & Culture Section 2.2

Later Struggles• Texas broke away from Mexico

fifteen years after independence.

• During the resulting Mexican-American War, Mexico lost nearly half of its territory.

• In the mid-1800s, Benito Juárez helped Mexico survive a French invasion and reduced the privileges of the church and army.

• In the early 1900s, hacienda owners and foreign companies had much influence.

• The Mexican Revolution, 1910-1920, resulted in land reform.

Independence and Later Struggles

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Page 24: Mexican History & Culture Section 2.2

Main Idea 3:Spanish and native cultures have influenced

Mexico’s customs and traditions today.

• Many people speak an American Indian language that ties them to their ethnic group.

• These languages identify a person as Indian.

Spanish• Most Mexicans speak Spanish.

• About 90 percent of Mexicans are Roman Catholic.

AmericanIndian

• Mexicans have unique practices that result from the mixing of cultures.

• For example, Mexicans celebrate the Day of the Dead to remember dead ancestors.

• This holiday is held on All Souls’ Day, but reflects native customs and beliefs.

Spanishand

AmericanIndian

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