Social Studies: Ancient Americas: Maya, Aztec, and Inca
Compare three major civilizations of Mesoamerica and South America
Social Studies: Ancient Americas: Maya, Aztec, and Inca
Compare three major civilizations of Mesoamerica and South America
Social Studies - Grade 6-8
- 1
Identify the main region where each civilization developed: Maya, Aztec, and Inca.
Think about Mesoamerica for the Maya and Aztec, and the Andes for the Inca.
The Maya developed in parts of southern Mexico and Central America, including the Yucatán Peninsula, Guatemala, Belize, Honduras, and El Salvador. The Aztec developed in central Mexico, especially around Lake Texcoco. The Inca developed along the Andes Mountains in western South America. - 2
Explain how geography affected Inca farming in the Andes Mountains.
Focus on mountains, steep slopes, and farming solutions.
Geography affected Inca farming because the Andes had steep mountain slopes and limited flat land. The Inca built terraces to create level farming areas, reduce erosion, and grow crops such as potatoes and maize. - 3
The Maya are known for advanced achievements in writing, mathematics, and astronomy. Choose one achievement and explain why it was important.
One important Maya achievement was their writing system, which used glyphs to record history, religion, and royal events. This was important because it allowed the Maya to preserve information and communicate complex ideas across generations. - 4
Describe the Aztec capital city of Tenochtitlan and explain why it impressed many visitors.
Include both its location and features of the city.
Tenochtitlan was a large city built on an island in Lake Texcoco. It impressed visitors because it had temples, markets, causeways, canals, and organized neighborhoods, making it one of the largest and most complex cities in the world at the time. - 5
Compare the governments of the Aztec and Inca empires. Name one similarity and one difference.
Think about rulers, conquered peoples, tribute, and government control.
One similarity is that both the Aztec and Inca empires had powerful rulers who controlled large territories. One difference is that the Inca government was highly centralized with officials managing labor, roads, and storehouses, while the Aztec empire often allowed conquered city-states to keep local leaders if they paid tribute. - 6
What was tribute in the Aztec Empire, and why was it important?
Tribute was goods or services that conquered peoples were required to give to the Aztec rulers. It was important because it provided food, cloth, precious materials, and other resources that supported the capital and the empire. - 7
Explain how the Inca road system helped the empire stay connected.
Think about communication, transportation, and control of a large empire.
The Inca road system helped connect distant parts of the empire across mountains, deserts, and valleys. It allowed messengers, armies, officials, and goods to move more efficiently, which helped the government maintain control. - 8
The Maya city-states were not united under one single empire. Explain what a city-state is and how this shaped Maya politics.
A city-state is like a small independent country centered around a city.
A city-state is an independent city with its own government and surrounding territory. Maya politics were shaped by city-states because different Maya cities had their own rulers, formed alliances, competed for trade, and sometimes fought wars with one another. - 9
List two crops that were important in the ancient Americas and explain how agriculture supported civilization.
Maize and potatoes were two important crops in the ancient Americas. Agriculture supported civilization by providing a stable food supply, which allowed people to build cities, specialize in different jobs, and support rulers, priests, artists, and soldiers. - 10
Read the statement: The environment influenced the way ancient American civilizations built their societies. Give one example from the Maya, Aztec, or Inca to support this statement.
Use a specific example, not just a general statement.
One example is the Inca use of terraces in the Andes Mountains. Because they lived in a mountainous environment, they built flat steps into hillsides so they could farm more land and protect soil from washing away. - 11
Compare Maya and Aztec religious life. Give one shared feature and one feature that could differ from place to place.
A shared feature was that both Maya and Aztec religion included many gods connected to nature, agriculture, and the sky. A feature that could differ was the specific rituals, gods, and temple practices in different Maya city-states or Aztec-controlled areas. - 12
What were quipus, and how did the Inca use them?
A quipu was not an alphabetic writing system, but it helped record information.
Quipus were recording devices made of knotted strings. The Inca used them to keep track of information such as population, taxes, labor duties, stored goods, and other government records. - 13
Create a three-column comparison chart in words. Include one fact each about the Maya, Aztec, and Inca related to location, government, or achievement.
Make sure each civilization gets its own fact.
A correct response should include one accurate fact for each civilization. For example, the Maya lived in southern Mexico and Central America and developed writing and calendars. The Aztec ruled an empire from Tenochtitlan in central Mexico. The Inca ruled a large empire in the Andes and built roads and terraces. - 14
Explain why markets were important in cities such as Tenochtitlan.
Markets were important because they allowed people to buy, sell, and trade goods such as food, cloth, tools, pottery, and luxury items. They also helped connect people from different regions and supported the city economy. - 15
Historians use artifacts, architecture, documents, and oral traditions to learn about ancient civilizations. Choose one type of evidence and explain what it can teach us about the Maya, Aztec, or Inca.
Choose one type of evidence and connect it to a specific civilization.
Architecture can teach historians about how ancient people built cities, organized society, and practiced religion. For example, Maya temples can show the importance of religion, rulers, astronomy, and public ceremonies in Maya city-states.