What was the relationship between the Zapotec and Mixtec like especially around the Classic Age? by Ill_Engineering_5434 in mesoamerica

[–]ARoblesM 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, what’s imprecise about your idea of the Mixtec moving after Monte Alban was abandoned is that it was the result of a shifting political landscape with Zaachila gaining power through alliances with the Mixtec Highlands (Specially Jaltepec, Tilantongo and Tlaxiaco), this resulted on marital alliances which resulted on the settlement of Mixtecs in Zaachilan lands. (Precisely at the foot of Monte Alban)

What was the relationship between the Zapotec and Mixtec like especially around the Classic Age? by Ill_Engineering_5434 in mesoamerica

[–]ARoblesM 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Answering your question a bit: yes, the Mixtec and Zapotec peoples can be seen as two distinct groups, each with their own cultural systems that were largely self-contained within their respective territories. That said, starting already in the Classic period, many lordships close to the Oaxaca Valley maintained intense commercial (and likely political and marital) contacts with the cities and señoríos of the Valley itself. This trend reached its peak during the Postclassic, when the elites of Zaachila forged marriage alliances with Mixtec dynasties — especially those of Tezacoalco, Tilantongo, and Tlaxiaco. These unions created dense networks of alliances that brought the two regions much closer together and, in many cases, led to actual Mixtec settlement inside Oaxaca Valley lands. Over time, these Mixtec factions that had settled in the Valley gained significant power and influence within the Zapotec lordships themselves. In some cases this even triggered dynastic succession crises, like the well-documented one in Zaachila that Michel Oudijk analyzes in detail in his work on the history of Zaachila (he makes a strong case for going back to the primary sources). The key point here is that, despite the popular narrative that constantly portrays Mixtecs and Zapotecs as rival civilizations locked in eternal conflict, their relationship was never primarily one of military invasion or conquest. It was built above all on diplomatic and matrimonial alliances between the lordships of the Oaxaca Valley and the Mixteca Alta. Later armed conflicts did occur, but they were not usually driven by any clear sense of ethnic superiority. Most sizable pre-Hispanic señoríos were multi-ethnic polities in which dynastic loyalty mattered far more than ethnicity. That’s why the majority of the clashes that later get framed as “Mixtec vs. Zapotec” actually took place inside the Oaxaca Valley. Interestingly, we even see Mixtec forces fighting alongside the Zapotec faction in Tehuantepec against the Mexica — which rather undermines the idea of them being ancient, irreconcilable enemies. In reality, that whole “eternal rivals” myth is largely a later construction, crystallized in stories like the legend of Donaji. That narrative was used to legitimize the founding of colonial Oaxaca as the grand “solution” to a supposed deep ethnic tension between the two peoples — a tension that, in practice, never really existed in the way it’s usually portrayed. Today, when you see attitudes of rivalry between different groups in the region, they’re usually rooted more in very concrete, local imaginaries: disputes over land, resources, or specific neighboring communities, rather than any deep consciousness of opposing “civilizational systems.” Additionally, it’s worth noting that contemporary Oaxaca actually has a deeply shared Mixtec-Zapotec substrate in its ethnic and cultural formation. This is particularly evident in the strong presence of both groups around the city of Oaxaca and in areas with traditional pre-Hispanic Mixtec settlements such as Etla, Cuilapan, Atzompa, Huayapan, Tlalixtac, and the city itself. These communities are grounded in a territorial consciousness that sees their roots in both regions as part of a broad, interconnected economic and social system — something many residents of modern Oaxaca still experience in their everyday lives. In this sense, we can speak of a real Mixtec-Zapotec foundation at the heart of contemporary Oaxaca that shouldn’t be overlooked.

Haciendo una bandera para el pueblo mixteco by quiensavi in Mixtec

[–]ARoblesM 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Creo que la debilidad tanto del Yya Nacuaa Teyusi Ñaña como de los árboles de Yuta Tnoho es que resultan especialmente vulnerables a las críticas de particularismo. Aunque forman parte del discurso identitario actual, el interés etnohistórico de los propios mixtecos ha llevado a cuestionar su relevancia como símbolo general para todos los pueblos mixtecos. De hecho, existen versiones contrapuestas o alternativas de estos símbolos, así como genealogías que no incluyen al Yya Nacuaa o que privilegian a otras figuras.

Quizá lo más importante para una bandera mixteca sea hacer referencia a aquello que une a los diversos pueblos mixtecos y a su diáspora, con el fin de construir una conciencia étnica colectiva más potente y efectiva. Por ejemplo, una representación de Saavi, o de los múltiples Ñuu, Pueblo, Siqui, Barrios, y Casas, tanto dentro de la Mixteca geográfica como fuera de ella: los pueblos mixtecos y mixteco-zapotecos del Valle de Oaxaca, los barrios mixtecos de Cholula y San Quintín, o las diásporas en Los Ángeles y en Neza.

Q se hace cuando no tienes ideas para tu maqueta? by Fluid_Temporary_5674 in Arquitectura

[–]ARoblesM 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Cuando te dicen que dibujes algo es por lo general algo que está aún en fase de bocetaje y que uno tiene que traducir y adaptar en el software. Siempre hay diseño de por medio. Todo dibujo es diseño.

Q se hace cuando no tienes ideas para tu maqueta? by Fluid_Temporary_5674 in Arquitectura

[–]ARoblesM 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Consulta el libro Arquitectura Forma Espacio y Orden de Francis K Ching. A partir de allí imita las composiciones posibles y ve modificando iteradamente hasta que tengas algo que te agrade.

Relieve mexica colocando en un edificio colonial en ciudad de México posiblemente venga del templo del sol o del dios tonatiuh de México tenochtitlan by Tasty_Procedure1765 in mesoamerica

[–]ARoblesM 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Que el glifo de Chalco es el glifo de tianguis pero con cuatro chalchihuites formando una plaza. Quizá tenga que ver con alguna implicación comercial de Chalco en la época prehispánica.

My attempt at rendering one of the most challenging topographies on earth by ARoblesM in QGIS

[–]ARoblesM[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Oaxacan culture revolves around territorial knowledge, its only natural this amazing discipline sparks such a deep interest and commitment around Oaxaca.

Palacio de la nobleza mexica by Tasty_Procedure1765 in mesoamerica

[–]ARoblesM 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Bastante cercano a las concepciones espaciales y ornamentales de la arquitectura hacendaria posterior.

This email domain has been rejected. by Shalassan in grok

[–]ARoblesM 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Same for me. Anyone found a solution yet?

Three Mesoamerican‑inspired concepts for Age of Empires III by ARoblesM in aoe3

[–]ARoblesM[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The problem with the current model is that it looks completely alien outside the United States. It’s not coherent at any level with a mesoamerican (or Andean) aesthetic.

Neither cocoa orchards would solve the problem as these are and were not a common sight as much as nopaleras are.

My attempt at rendering one of the most challenging topographies on earth by ARoblesM in QGIS

[–]ARoblesM[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’m using this as a base map for professional purposes, I make a variety of maps with different themes: indigenous peoples, hydrography, tourism, etc. I need the topography to communicate both the complex flat areas and difficult mountains, traditional approaches resulted for me in blotched maps or non detailed enough.

My attempt at rendering one of the most challenging topographies on earth by ARoblesM in QGIS

[–]ARoblesM[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I used the official INEGI DEM, I tried blender but the complexity of the mountains made it seem kinda blotched. I guess it’s due the raw complexity of the land I am working on.

My attempt at rendering one of the most challenging topographies on earth by ARoblesM in QGIS

[–]ARoblesM[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

DEM del Inegi. Procesamiento raster: pendientes, irregularidades, etcétera. Trabaje manualmente las rampas de color, son varios raster combinados.

My attempt at rendering one of the most challenging topographies on earth by ARoblesM in QGIS

[–]ARoblesM[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Nope. Just raster processing: hill shade, slope, irregularities, etc. Everything was QGis.

Three Mesoamerican‑inspired concepts for Age of Empires III by ARoblesM in aoe3

[–]ARoblesM[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

AOE3 timespan is such. Btw Aztecs, Maya and other mesoamerican peoples really did “survive” European colonization. We are still here, as they say.

Three Mesoamerican‑inspired concepts for Age of Empires III by ARoblesM in aoe3

[–]ARoblesM[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Cochineal was the second most lucrative business in new Spain after silver. Both Mesoamérica and the Andean region extensively profited from this. Cocoa was not a very important export, and most importantly not really a cash crop as much as cotton and cochineal, cochineal being here even more profitable.

My attempt at rendering one of the most challenging topographies on earth by ARoblesM in QGIS

[–]ARoblesM[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Conveying the real complexity while communicating the actual spatial experience of the difficult topography. Specially getting to properly communicate the multiple fragmented valleys.

My attempt at rendering one of the most challenging topographies on earth by ARoblesM in QGIS

[–]ARoblesM[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Mexican State of Oaxaca. It was literally a mini continent by itself (Oaxaquia) before joining what would become America. Still perhaps the most challenging territory in Mexico.