- Source: Mixtec
The Mixtecs (), or Mixtecos, are Indigenous Mesoamerican peoples of Mexico inhabiting the region known as La Mixteca of Oaxaca and Puebla as well as La Montaña Region and Costa Chica Regions of the state of Guerrero. The Mixtec culture was the main Mixtec civilization, which lasted from around 1500 BCE until being conquered by the Spanish in 1523.
The Mixtec region is generally divided into three subregions based on geography: the Mixteca Alta (Upper Mixtec or Ñuu Savi Sukun), the Mixteca Baja (Lower Mixtec or Ñuu I'ni), and the Mixteca Costa (Coastal Mixtec or Ñuu Andivi). The Alta is drier with higher elevations, while the Baja is lower in elevation, hot but dry, and the Coasta is also low in elevation but much more humid and tropical. The Alta has seen the most study by archaeologists, with evidence for human settlement going back to the Archaic and Early Formative periods. The first urbanized sites emerged here. Long considered to be part of the larger Mixteca region, groups living in the Baja were probably more culturally related to neighboring peoples in Eastern Guerrero than they were to the Mixtecs of the Alta. They even had their own hieroglyphic writing system called ñuiñe. The Costa only came under control of the Mixtecs during the military campaigns of the Mixtec cultural hero Eight Deer Jaguar Claw. Originally from Tilantongo in the Alta, Eight Deer and his armies conquered several major and minor kingdoms on their way to the coast, establishing the capital of Tututepec in the Lower Río Verde valley. Previously, the Costa had been primarily occupied by the Chatinos.
In pre-Columbian times, some Mixtec kingdoms competed and allied with each other and with Zapotec kingdoms in the Central Valleys. Like the rest of the indigenous peoples of Mexico, the Mixtecs were conquered by the Spanish invaders and their indigenous allies in the 16th century. Pre-Columbian Mixtecs numbered around 1.5 million. Today there are approximately 800,000 Mixtec people in Mexico, and there are also large populations in the United States. The Mixtec languages form a major branch of the Oto-Manguean language family.
Nomenclature and etymology
The term Mixtec (Mixteco in Spanish) comes from the Nahuatl word mixtecah [miʃˈtekaʔ], "cloud people". There are many names that the Mixtecs have for naming themselves: ñuù savi, nayívi savi, ñuù davi, nayivi davi. etc. All these denominations can be translated as 'the land of the rain'. The historic homeland of Mixtec people is La Mixteca, called in Mixtec language Ñuu Savi, Ñuu Djau, Ñuu Davi, etc., depending on the local variant. They call their language sa'an davi, da'an davi or tu'un savi.
Overview
In pre-Columbian times, the Mixtec were one of the major civilizations of Mesoamerica. Important ancient centers of the Mixtec include the ancient capital of Tilantongo, as well as the sites of Achiutla, Cuilapan, Huajuapan, Mitla, Tlaxiaco, Tututepec, Juxtlahuaca, and Yucuñudahui. The Mixtecs also made major constructions at the ancient city of Monte Albán (which had originated as a Zapotec city before the Mixtecs gained control of it). The work of Mixtec artisans who produced work in stone, wood, and metal was well regarded throughout ancient Mesoamerica.
According to West, "the Mixtec of Oaxaca...were the foremost goldsmiths of Mesoamerica," which included the "lost-wax casting of gold and its alloys."
At the height of the Aztec Empire, many indigenous people in Oaxaca, including the Mixtecs and Zapotecs, would suffer under at the hands of the Aztecs. In the 1450s, Mixtecs would be weakened after the Aztec armies crossed the mountains into the Valley of Oaxaca with the intention of extending their hegemony. Aztec forces triumphed over the Mixtecs in 1458. In 1486, the Aztecs established a fort on the hill of Huaxyácac (now called El Fortín), overlooking the present city of Oaxaca, which allowed the Aztecs to enforce tribute collection from the Mixtecs and Zapotecs. However, not all Mixtec towns became vassals. The Mixtecs put up some resistance to Spanish forces led by Pedro de Alvarado. However, they would be subdued by the Spanish and their central Mexican allies led by Francisco de Orozco in 1521. Upon Orozco's arrival to the Valley of Oaxaca on November 25, 1521, the Mixtecs would be peacefully submit to Spanish rule, though some resistance would continue in Antequera before ending by the end of 1521.
Mixtecs have migrated to various parts of both Mexico and the United States. In recent years a large exodus of indigenous peoples from Oaxaca, such as the Zapotec and Triqui, has seen them emerge as one of the most numerous groups of Amerindians in the United States. As of 2011, an estimated 150,000 Mixteco people were living in California, and 25,000 to 30,000 in New York City. Large Mixtec communities exist in the border cities of Tijuana, Baja California, San Diego, California and Tucson, Arizona. Mixtec communities are generally described as transnational or trans-border because of their ability to maintain and reaffirm social ties between their native homelands and diasporic communities. (See: Mixtec transnational migration.)
Mixtecs in the colonial era
There is considerable documentation in the Mixtec (Ñudzahui) native language for the colonial era, which has been studied as part of the New Philology. Mixtec documentation indicates parallels between many indigenous social and political structures with those in the Nahua areas, but published research on the Mixtecs does not primarily focus on economic matters. There is considerable Mixtec documentation for land issues, but sparse for market activity, perhaps because indigenous cabildos did not regulate commerce or mediate economic disputes except for land. Long-distance trade existed in the prehispanic era and continued in indigenous hands in the early colonial. In the second half of the colonial period, there were bilingual Mixtec merchants, dealing in both Spanish and indigenous goods, who operated regionally. However, in the Mixteca “by the eighteenth century, commerce was dominated by Spaniards in all but the most local venues of exchange, involving the sale of agricultural commodities and indigenous crafts or the resale of imported goods.”.
Despite the development of a local exchange economy, many Spaniards with economic interests in Oaxaca, including “[s]ome of the Mixteca priests, merchants, and landowners maintained permanent residence in Puebla, and labor for the obrajes (textile workshops) of the city of Puebla in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries was sometimes recruited from peasant villages in the Mixteca." There is evidence of community litigation against Mixtec caciques who leased land to Spaniards and the growth of individually contracted wage labor. Mixtec documentation from the late eighteenth century indicates that "most caciques were simply well-to-do investors in Spanish-style enterprises"; some married non-Indians; and in the late colonial era had little claim to hereditary authority.
Geography
The Mixtec area, both historically and currently, corresponds roughly to the western half of the state of Oaxaca, with some Mixtec communities extending into the neighboring state of Puebla to the north-west and also the state of Guerrero. The Mixtec people and their homelands are often subdivided into three geographic areas: The Mixteca Alta or Highland Mixtec living in the mountains in, around, and to the west of the Valley of Oaxaca; the Mixteca Baja or Lowland Mixtec living to the north and west of these highlands, and the Mixteca de la Costa or Coastal Mixtec living in the southern plains and the coast of the Pacific Ocean. For most of Mixtec history, the Mixteca Alta was the dominant political force, with the capitals of the Mixtec nation located in the central highlands. The valley of Oaxaca itself was often a disputed border region, sometimes dominated by the Mixtec and sometimes by their neighbors to the east, the Zapotec.
An ancient Coixtlahuaca Basin cave site known as the Colossal Natural Bridge is an important sacred place for the Mixtec.
Mixtec rulers
= In Mixteca Costa
=Acatepec, Yucu Yoo
1090-1097: Lady 6 Monkey War Quexquemitl (usurper, deposed),
Sub-rulers Lord 3 Aligator and Lord 1 Movement
1097-1115: Lord 8 Deer Jaguar Claw (usurper)
Tututepec, Yucu Dzaa
?: Nizainzo Huidzo
c.357: Mzatzin
1084-1097: Lord 8 Deer Jaguar Claw (usurper)
to Tilantongo
Zacatepec, Yucu Chatuta
1120-?: Lord 11 Jaguar Tlaloc Fire Wall
= In Mixteca Alta
=Achiutla, Ñuu Ndecu
Pedernales-Achiutla dynasty
?: Lord 11 Flower Cloud Xicolli, with Lady 13 Wind Cloud Hair (siblings and spouses, children of Lord 4 Wind, King of Nuu Yuchi)
?: Lord 10 Aligator Digging Stick (father-in-law of Lord 2 Wind, King of Tlaxiaco)
?: Lord 8 Wind Smoked Claw (brother-in-law of Lord 12 Deer, King of Tlaxiaco)
?: Lord 7 Movement Blood Shedding Rain (son-in-law of 11 Wind, King of Tlaxiaco)
?: Lord 9 Wind Sun Fire Serpent
?: Lord 10 Aligator Jaguar with Claws like Flints (son of the previous)
Water Rubber Ball (Chacahua? Manialtepec?)
?: Lord 9 Serpent (deposed)
?-1115: Lord 8 Deer Jaguar Claw (usurper)
Andua
c.887: Lord 12 Vulture Golden Eagle
?: Lord 3 Monkey Mexican Jaguar
Bulto de Xipe/Huachino
?: Lord 10 Movement
?: Lord 12 Lizard
?-1101: Lord 11 Wind Blood Jaguar (son of the previous)
To Tilantongo (1101-1115) and Nuu Yuchi (1115-1164)
?: Lord 6 Vulture Jaguar with Knife (son of Lord 9 Rain of Tlaxiaco)
Chalcatongo, Nuu Ndaya
?: Lord 8 Aligator Bloody Coyote
?: Lord 3 Dog (son-in-law of Lord 8 Alligator, in the settlement of Santa Catarina Yuxia, Yuu Usa)
?: Lord 13 Jaguar War Beard (descendant)
Cholula
?: Lord 1 Lizard Serpent-Decorated Shield, with Lady 11 Serpent Jewel Mouth (wife)
c.1096: Lord 4 Jaguar Night Face
Hill of the Mask
Jaltepec, Añute
Juquila, Nuu Sitoho
?: Lord 1 Death Sun Serpent, with Lady 11 Serpent Flower Quetzal Feathers (wife)
"Monkey"
?: Lord 7 Grass Bloody Jaguar
Mitlatongo, Dzandaya
?: Lord 1 Monkey
Flower Mountain, Yucu Ita
?: Lord 11 Jaguar
Broken Mountain
?: Lady 1 Death
Place of Flints/Pedernales, Nuu Yuchi
Quetzal
?: Lord 4 Stone Face with Quetzal Feathers
Río de la Serpiente
?: Lord 3 Eagle
San Pedro Cántaros, Nuu Naha
Teozacoalco dynasty
?: Lord 1 House Jaguar Sky Assassin (son of Lord 8 Rabbit, King of Teozacoalco)
?: Lord 6 Death Sun Rain (descendant, brother-in-law of Lord 6 Deer, King of Teozacoalco)
?: Lord 3 Dog (son of the previous)
?: Lord 3 Monkey (grandson of the previous)
Place of the Drum (Soyaltepec) (?)
?: Lord 4 Jaguar Serpent War Snare
Suchixtlán, Chiyo Yuhu
Teita
?: Lord 10 Rabbit Heart
?: Lord 13 Jaguar War Eagle
Teozacoalco, Chiyo Cahnu
Tilantongo, Ñuu Tnoo
Tlaxiaco, Ndisi Nuu
Totomihuacan
?: Lord 5 Eagle
Tula (Toltec)
c.1096: Lord 4 Jaguar Night Face
Deep Valley
?: Lord 12 Dog Eagle, with Lady 5 Lizard Pulque-Zacate Vase (wife)
Yanhuitlán
c.1320: Lord 6 Water Multicolored Feathers
c.1500?: Lady 1 Flower Jaguar Quexquemitl, with Lord 8 Death Fire Serpent (husband; son of Lord 10 Rain, King of Teozacualco)
Zaachila, Tocuisi (Zapotec)
= In Mixteca Baja
=Acatlan
?: Lord 1 Rain
?: Lord 9 Reed (son of the previous)
?: Lord 6 Deer (son of the previous)
?: Lord 4 Dog (son of the previous)
?: Lord 8 Flint (son of the previous)
?: Lord 8 Alligator (son of the previous)
?: Lord 7 Monkey (son of the previous)
?: Lord 8 Movement (son of the previous)
?: Lord 9 Flint (son of the previous)
?: Lord 6 Water (son of the previous)
?: Lord 4 Eagle (son of the previous)
?: Lord 10 Reed (son of the previous)
?: Lord 4 Flower (son of the previous)
?: Lord 4 House (son of the previous)
?-1519/20: Unknown (son of the previous)
To the Spanish
Chila
?: Lord 10 Flint
?: Lord 4 Deer (son of the previous)
?: Lord 1 Eagle (son of the previous)
?: Lord 13 Dog (son of the previous)
?: Lord 13 Reed (son of the previous)
?: Lord 2 Monkey (son of the previous)
?: Lord 10 Monkey (son of the previous)
?: Lord 10 Movement (son of the previous)
?: Lord 3 House (son of the previous)
?: Lord 8 Wind (son of the previous)
?: Lord 6 Rabbit (son of the previous)
?: Lord 13 Death (son of the previous)
?: Lord 1 House (son of the previous)
?: Lord 5 Monkey (son of the previous)
?-1519/20: Lord 4 Dog (son of the previous)
To the Spanish
Language, codices, and artwork
The Mixtecan languages (in their many variants) were estimated to be spoken by about 300,000 people at the end of the 20th century, although the majority of Mixtec speakers also had at least a working knowledge of the Spanish language. Some Mixtecan languages are called by names other than Mixtec, particularly Cuicatec (Cuicateco), and Triqui (or Trique).
The Mixtec are well known in the anthropological world for their Codices or phonetic pictures in which they wrote their history and genealogies in deerskin in the "fold-book" form. The best-known story of the Mixtec Codices is that of Lord Eight Deer, named after the day in which he was born, whose personal name is Jaguar Claw, and whose epic history is related in several codices, including the Codex Bodley and Codex Zouche-Nuttall. He successfully conquered and united most of the Mixteca region.
They were also known for their exceptional mastery of jewelry and mosaic, among which gold and turquoise figure prominently. Products by Mixtec goldsmiths formed an important part of the tribute the Mixtecs paid to the Aztecs during parts of their history. Turquoise mosaic masks also played an important role in both political and religious functions. These masks were used as gifts to form political alliances, in ceremonies during which the wearer of the mask impersonated a god, and were fixed to funerary bundles that were seen as oracles.
References
= Further reading
=Kevin Terraciano (2004). The Mixtecs of Colonial Oaxaca: Nudzahui History, Sixteenth Through Eighteenth Centuries. Stanford University Press. ISBN 978-0804751049.
Pérez Jiménez, Gabina Aurora; Jansen, Marteen (2010). The Mixtec Pictorial Manuscripts - Time, Agency and Memory in Ancient Mexico. ISBN 978-90-04-19358-1.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
External links
Media related to Mixtec at Wikimedia Commons
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Mixtek
- Codex Colombino
- Kode Morse
- Angka Romawi
- Alfabet Latin
- Aksara Sunda
- Teotihuacan
- Aksara Han
- Aksara Pallawa
- Katakana
- Mixtec
- Mixtec culture
- Mixtec languages
- Mixtec writing
- Silacayoapan Mixtec
- Apoala Mixtec
- Ixtayutla Mixtec
- Mixtec Group
- Estetla Mixtec
- Cuatzoquitengo Mixtec