Tenochtitlan: The Aztec Capital That Shocked the Spanish — Fexingo History
When the Spanish first saw Tenochtitlan in 1519, they compared it to Venice. But the city's canals were far more than a picturesque curiosity—they were the circulatory system of an empire. In this episode, Lucas and Luna paddle through the network of artificial waterways that connected island-city neighborhoods, transported food from floating chinampas, moved armies, and handled sewage. We look at the albarradón dike system that kept freshwater separate from salt, the acalco boatyards that built thousands of canoes, and the daily traffic of macehualtin paddling produce to Tlatelolco's market. How did a city on a lake manage waste, floods, and transportation without wheels? The answer lies in the ingenious hydraulic engineering of the Mexica, from the aqueduct from Chapultepec to the canoe highways that made Tenochtitlan the most connected city in the pre-Columbian Americas. #Tenochtitlan #AztecCanals #Chinampas #Mesoamerica #HydraulicEngineering #Acalco #Albarradon #Chapultepec #Tlatelolco #Mexica #BernalDiaz #FlorentineCodex #Canoes #LakeTexcoco #PreColumbian #UrbanPlanning #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]
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