Cooperation and tensions in multiethnic corporate societies using Teotihuacan, Central Mexico, as a case study

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Linda R Manzanilla

Abstract

In this paper, I address the case of a corporate society in Central Mexico. After volcanic eruptions triggered population displacements in the southern Basin of Mexico during the first and fourth centuries A.D., Teotihuacan became a multiethnic settlement. Groups from different backgrounds settled primarily on the periphery of the metropolis; nevertheless, around the core, intermediate elites actively fostered the movement of sumptuary goods and the arrival of workers from diverse homelands for a range of specialized tasks. Some of these skilled craftsmen acquired status and perhaps economic power as a result of the dynamic competition among neighborhoods to display the most lavish sumptuary goods, as well as to manufacture specific symbols of identity that distinguished one neighborhood from another, such as elaborate garments and headdresses. Cotton attire worn by the Teotihuacan elite may have been one of the goods that granted economic importance to neighborhood centers such as Teopancazco, a compound that displayed strong ties to the Gulf Coast where cotton cloth was made. The ruling elite controlled raw materials that came from afar whereas the intermediate elite may have been more active in providing other sumptuary good...Continue Reading

References

Aug 8, 2014·PloS One·Brenda A Álvarez-SandovalRafael Montiel

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Citations

Oct 16, 2015·Philosophical Transactions. Series A, Mathematical, Physical, and Engineering Sciences·Douglas J Kennett, Norbert Marwan
Jul 8, 2015·Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America·Linda R Manzanilla
Jul 31, 2021·American Journal of Physical Anthropology·Abigail Meza-PeñalozaChristopher Morehart

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