- or city-state, in the
Valley of Mexico. Its inhabitants,
known as the
Tlatelolca, were part of the Mexica, a Nahuatl-speaking
people who
arrived in what...
-
where the
Tlatelolcas waited,
ready for war. Here, then, the
second battle commenced. The
Tenochcas proved deadly,
pushing the
Tlatelolcas backwards into...
-
Nueva España. Pomar's
major work
includes an
account of the
Aztecs and
Tlatelolcas Relación de Juan
Bautista Pomar completed in 1582. He
interviewed aged...
-
eighty days of
warfare against the Spanish. Of all the Nahuas, only
Tlatelolcas remained loyal, and the
surviving Tenochcas looked for
refuge in Tlatelolco...
-
Tzilacatzin was a
Tlatelolca warrior. A
member of the
Otomi or
Otontin warrior class, he
became famous as a hero
during the fall of Tenochtitlan. In an...
- Look up
tlatelolca in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
Tlatelolco may
refer to:
Tlatelolco (altepetl), a pre-Columbian
Aztec citystate Tlatelolco (archaeological...
- and
Sergio López Alonso. “Algunos
datos sobre la
funeraria entre los
tlatelolcas prehispánicos”. B.B.A.A. Boletín Bibliográfico de Antropología Americana...
-
against Jaltepec and
Cuatzontlan (see below), he made
negotiations with the
Tlatelolca to
obtain the
weapons and
resources needed. As a
result of
these negotiations...
- Tlatelolco. Cortés sent
emissaries to
negotiate with the
Tlatelolcas to join his side, but the
Tlatelolcas remained loyal to the Aztecs.
Throughout the siege...
-
their new home
Tlatelolco ("Place of the
Spherical Earth Mound"), the
Tlatelolca were to
become Tenochtitlan's
persistent rivals in the
Valley of Mexico...