Stylish suburbs: how ancient Mexican metropolis dodged inequality trap
Fragments of pre-Aztec murals recently unearthed on the outskirts of what was once the largest city of the Americas are adding to mounting evidence that even commoners there enjoyed the finer things in life.
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Mural fragments depicting a bird, recently discovered in the Tlajinga neighbourhood of the ancient city of Teotihuacan [Credit: David Carballo/Proyecto Arqueologico Tlajnga (PATT) via Reuters] |
“We’re now finding that life on the periphery was pretty good,” said Boston University archaeologist David Carballo, who discovered brightly-coloured paintings over fine stucco on three buildings he began excavating there in July.
Decorated with flowers and birds that appear to be singing, the murals evoking a paradise found nearly three kilometers (2 miles) from Teotihuacan’s core came as a complete surprise, he said.
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Mural fragments depicting a bird, recently discovered in the Tlajinga neighborhood of the ancient city of Teotihuacan [Credit: David Carballo/Proyecto Arqueologico Tlajnga (PATT) via Reuters] |
The unpublished mural discoveries point to the radically different path charted by Teotihuacan, which thrived from about 100 B.C. to 550 A.D., compared to other ancient civilizations.
At a time when daily life in the biggest contemporary Mayan cities, or ancient Rome and Egypt, was marked by a tiny elite lording over impoverished or enslaved masses, most of Teotihuacan’s estimated 100,000 inhabitants fared far better.
Near where the murals were found in Teotihuacan’s Tlajinga district, Carballo and his colleagues also excavated what would have been a bustling obsidian workshop that likely produced an estimated 200,000 blades during its lifespan.
In the city’s La Ventilla district, another aspect of Teotihuacan’s egalitarian character comes into view: stone, multi-family apartment compounds where over 90% of Teotihuacanos lived.
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A fragmented mural depicting a jaguar is seen on the walls at La Ventilla [Credit: David Carballo/ Proyecto Arqueologico Tlajnga (PATT) via Reuters] |
The compounds boast white lime-plaster floors, built-in drainage systems, open-air courtyards and murals.
Lying 48 km northeast of Mexico City, Teotihuacan has more than 2,000 such compounds, thanks to a century-long building boom that ended around 350 AD.
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Archaeologist Ruben Cabrera points at the remains of mural paintings on the wlls of the Patio of the Jaguars at La Ventilla [Credit: David Carballo/Proyecto Arqueologico Tlajnga (PATT) via Reuters] |
“It wasn’t as pronounced as, say, Rome or other places where there was a dominant group and a dominated group,” he said.
No evidence of slavery has been found there in more than a century of excavations, he noted.
City of Migrants
Arizona State University archaeologist Michael Smith, who leads a research lab at Teotihuacan, previously calculated a measure of wealth for the city based on its house sizes.
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A mural depicting a heart and a sacrificial knife is pictured at the walls of the Plaza of the Chalchihuites at La Ventilla [Credit: David Carballo/Proyecto Arqueologico Tlajnga (PATT) via Reuters] |
“My first reaction was: ‘This is a mistake,’” he said.
Smith, the author of the book “Ten Thousand Years of Inequality,” plans to recalculate the score using a larger data set. While expecting it to rise somewhat, he says it will probably still be far lower than scores for Roman Pompeii or Egyptian Kahun.
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Archaeologists work at a residential compound in the Tlajinga neighbourhood of the ancient city of Teotihuacan [Credit: David Carballo/Proyecto Arqueologico Tlajnga (PATT) via Reuters] |
The average Teotihuacan household had around 200 square meters (2,153 square feet) of living space, roughly the size of a tennis court, while typical Aztec dwellings measured about 25 square meters.
Burial data compiled by Carballo shows that Teotihuacan’s commoners grew to a height similar to elites, with males buried in apartment compounds less than 1 centimeter (0.4 inch) shorter than those interred near the city’s central Moon Pyramid.
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Men work at one of the multi-family apartments at La Ventilla [Credit: David Carballo/ Proyecto Arqueologico Tlajnga (PATT) via Reuters] |
Linda Manzanilla, an archaeologist at Mexico’s National Autonomous University, says the multi-ethnic migrant communities that settled Teotihuacan after two major volcanic eruptions likely needed more communal governance and access to resources.
She first excavated an apartment compound in the mid-1980s on its northeastern fringe where stucco workers lived and had access to luxury goods including mica and fine ceramics.
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Men work at one of the multi-family apartments at La Ventilla [Credit: David Carballo/ Proyecto Arqueologico Tlajnga (PATT) via Reuters] |
About a third of Tlajinga’s residents may have been migrants, earlier digs based on tooth signatures revealed, and foreigner enclaves have been found across Teotihuacan with at least four foreign languages spoken aside from the local tongue, likely a precursor to Aztec Nahuatl or Otomi.
Teotihuacan’s history offers an intriguing counterpoint to modern tensions often stoked by migration.
“We should learn from its more than five-century run,” she said.
Author: David Alire Garcia | Source: Reuters [December 21, 2019]
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