Taríacuri's legacy : the prehispanic Tarascan state

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Taríacuri's legacy : the prehispanic Tarascan state

by Helen Perlstein Pollard ; introduction by Shirley Gorenstein

(The civilization of the American Indian series, v. 209)

University of Oklahoma Press, c1993

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. [245]-262) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

In this text, Helen Perlstein Pollard draws upon ethnohistoric documentation, ecological data and archaeological research, including her own recent work in the region, to provide a comprehensive overview of the Tarascan state, one of the two great political powers the Spanish encountered when they arrived in Mexico in the early 16th century. The Tarascans dominated western Mexico - in a state founded, according to legend, by the mythical Tariacuri - as fully as the Aztecs dominated the central Valley of Mexico, but until recently they have been little studied and poorly understood. There are several reasons for this neglect: Spanish chroniclers recognised but did not focus on the Tarascans, who were far from the heart of the Spanish administration in Central Mexico. In more recent years, however, the Tarascan state has become a subject of growing interest, and in the last decades, the work of Helen Perlstein Pollard in particular has revealed much about this remarkable civilisation. Pollard's survey of Tzintzantzun has led her to identify specialised zones and to define the urban character of this central administrative city, as well as its economic, political, ecological, social, ideological and cultural relationship to other parts of the Tarascan state. She emphasises the importance of metallurgy, in particular, as a marker of elite social status and a major source of wealth for the ruling dynasty. Placing the Tarascan state in the larger context of Mesoamerica, Pollard shows one complex and brilliant variant of archaic civilisations.

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