Tula
was the capital city of the Toltec Indian Empire. The ruins
can still be found
forty miles northwest of present day Mexico City which is
located on the northern edge of Mesoamerica.
It is situated in the Mexican
state of Hidalgo and is placed near the modern town of Tula de Allende.
The
area is in the Valley of Aahuac or what is now called the Valley of Mexico.
It is one of the most arid regions where little can be grown, with the
exception of maguey,
an intrinsic supplier of needles, sap
and other products used by the Toltecs.
In addition, the city is located on a
natural promontory with steep slopes surrounding the city on three sides.
The city rose to power after the
collapse of Teotihuacan to take control of the basin of Mexico
at
approximately 968 AD. Even though the city attempted to fill the political
shoes of Teotihuacan,
the evidence shows that the city was much smaller. The
city is laid out on a grid pattern
with a ceremonial core and surrounded by
pyramids.
The city was organized into
households which are approximately 1,970 feet (600 meters) square.
Inside of
these formal households were square or rectangular flat-roofed houses which
were grouped into as many as five dwellings which all shared a shrine.
The
city ruins are characterized by giant stone warriors placed at the temples
by the Toltecs.
It's maximum size and power was
achieved between 950 and 1150 AD and its largest population was between
40,000 and 60,000 people. Its largest
geographic size was between 13 and 16 square kilometers.
There is much archeological evidence
that shows that Tula had lost much of its power and
was at least partially abandoned by
the year 1200 AD.
Many experts think this phenomenon
occurred due to a drought and famine which ravaged the city.
With the collapse of the city, the
temples and pyramids of Tula were razed by other Indian tribes.
Author: Michelle McCann