Sacrifice Played A Role In Aztec Civilization

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Imagine twenty thousand acres of farmland spread across eighty thousand miles of land that was claimed by an ancient civilization. The Aztecs are an ancient civilization that started around 1350. They claimed their land in modern mexico and had an estimated eighty thousand square miles of land. Their capital was an island called Tenochtitlan. Agriculture should be focused on because it was vital to everyday life and the contraptions they made were brilliant. Sacrifice played a role in aztec life but it had no real significance on the survival of their civilization. First, agriculture was vital to their lives. In paragraph 1 of Document B, Stearns states “Approximately twenty thousand acres of chinampas were constructed and the yield from them was high. Four corn crops per year were possible.” With this amount of food they would be able to feed many aztec people for a long time and they would not have …show more content…
Their sacrifices did not help then in anyway that was close to what agriculture did. All sacrifice did was take up time they could've used for something of more importance than throwing dead bodies down stairs. They could've used the space all the rituals and temples took up and replace them with houses or barracks. There also were many other civilizations that worshiped many gods just like the aztecs did and nothing they did made them any better than the other civilizations. In conclusion, historians should focus on the aztecs agriculture. Their agriculture was very important to their everyday lives and the inventions they made to make their agriculture happen were brilliant. The aztecs sacred temples for sacrifice only took up space and the rituals did took up precious time they can not get back. Historians have no good reason to focus on the aztecs sacrifices when there are many other civilizations that do the exact same