
Urbanization And Religion In Ancient Central Mexico Examines The Ways In Which Urbanization And Religion Intersected In Pre-columbian Central Mexico, With A Primary Focus On The Later Formative Period And The Transition To The Classic Period. The Major Societal Transformations Of This Interval Occurred Approximately Two-thousand Years Ago And Over A Millennium Before Mexico's Best Known Early Civilization, The Aztecs. David M. Carballo Presents A Synthesis Of Data From Regional Archaeological Projects And Key Sites Such As Teotihuacan And Cuicuilco, While Relying On His Own Excavations At The Site Of La Laguna As The Central Case Study. A Principal Argument Is That Cities And States Developed Hand In Hand With Elements Of A Religious Tradition Of Remarkable Endurance And That These Processes Were Fundamentally Entangled. Prevalent Religious Beliefs And Ritual Practices Created A Cultural Logic For Urbanism, And As Populations Urbanized They Became Socially Integrated And Differentiated Following This Logic. Nevertheless, Religion Was Used Differently Over Time And By Groups And Individuals Across The Spectra Of Urbanity And Social Status. The Book Provides A Materially Informed History Of Religion, With The Temporal Depth That Archaeology Can Provide, And An Archaeology Of Cities That Considers Religion Seriously As A Generative Force In Societal Change.
This work investigates the symbiotic relationship between the development of urban centers and the evolution of religious practices in pre-Columbian Central Mexico. David M. Carballo, an archaeologist specializing in Mesoamerican societies, utilizes a synthesis of regional data and his own excavations at La Laguna to argue that religious traditions provided the cultural framework necessary for urban growth. He posits that the integration and differentiation of urban populations were fundamentally shaped by these enduring ritual practices.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts recognize this text as a significant contribution to the study of Mesoamerican urbanism and the material history of religion. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose and the author's rigorous application of archaeological data to support his theoretical arguments.
Page Count:
304
Publication Date:
2015-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190251077
ISBN-13:
9780190251079
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