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#41
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Sounds like a fairly stable situation as long as the Aztecs are capable of being top dogs - meaning, as long as they're the strongest in the area, they can get away with this. Once they're not, someone will try to take that position. But not so much resentment of being their subjects as wanting to be the ones collecting tribute instead. |
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#42
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Also, why was anyone willing to leave the side of the Aztecs if what you say is true? |
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#43
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![]() Now the one group of people I can see possibly conquering the Aztecs would be the Tarascans to the northeast of their Empire. The Aztecs and Tarascans were bitter rivals and had wars every so often, with the Tarascans easily and quickly beating back the several attempts by Montezuma and his predecessors to expand to their territories, often gaining land themselves. Once Montezuma is dead either through natural causes or murdered and his son in law Atlixcatzin succeeds to the throne, others have mentioned that there might be a rival contender or two to the throne, supported by the nobility. Tzuiangua, the leader of the Tarascan state, would not die due to the outbreak of smallpox due to the delayed arrival of the Europeans, and he would be in charge, instead of his young, naive son Tzintzicha Tangaxoan. War can be expected.
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#44
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Oh I don't know, because they saw the Spaniards as a means to liberate themselves from Aztec hegemony and perhaps impose their own rule. It was the intention of the Tlaxcallan leadership who wanted to take over the entire empire for themselves but Cortes did not let that happen.
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#45
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Conquest was waged for tribute. They were a hegemonical empire, just like every other empire in Mesoamerica. They wouldn't qualify for a nation-state in any case since they weren't one nationality, the Aztec empire was properly known as the Triple Alliance, which was the alliance between Tenochtitlan, Texcoco, and Tlacopan. All three of them were composed of different tribes, the Mexica, Acolhua, and Tepaneca. Sometimes people revolted over issues like deciding they didn't want to pay more tribute, but that wasn't often since the threat of force was enough to keep them in line. That, and they conquered a fair number of non-Nahua peoples.
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Redux of the Winner of the 2011 Turtledove Award for Best Continuing Ancient TL: The Count of Years -How the Maya survive the Collapse and Conquest |
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#46
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Redux of the Winner of the 2011 Turtledove Award for Best Continuing Ancient TL: The Count of Years -How the Maya survive the Collapse and Conquest |
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#47
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#48
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Name one specifically that could, if you can.
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#49
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I don't know much on Mesoamerica, but I think it's telling that it takes a new element, a foreign element with strange powers - for people to say "Hey, these guys might be a good chance to rock the boat." OTL, that is.
Not just a nomadic invader. |
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#50
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The people of Mesoamerica, not just the Aztecs, had a rather negative view of the people living to the far northern parts of Mexico. They viewed them the same way as the Greeks and Romans referred to the Gauls and Germanic tribes, barbarians.
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#51
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@Cuauhtemoc: Yeah, a bit funny how Chichimec sounds like dog-people, how much of a coincidence is that? Though it was massive hypocrisy on the part of the Mexica, to be sure.
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Redux of the Winner of the 2011 Turtledove Award for Best Continuing Ancient TL: The Count of Years -How the Maya survive the Collapse and Conquest |
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#52
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You mean, disregarding the large number of tough, combat-orieted tribes in the Sonoran who would notice a wealthy land with subjects itching to revolt?
Seriously, don’t underestimate the Chichimecs. The Aztecs came from the north as well. Point being, a distraction for the Aztecs is a chance for rebellion for the provinces sick of giving tribute to a bloated system. Last edited by Winnabago; March 16th, 2012 at 12:40 AM.. |
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#53
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Without numbers and a lack of organization, that doesn't amount to much.
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#54
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Unless you’re the Aztecs. Then, it amounts to a lot.
Seriously, never underestimate warlike tribesmen. If ancient-tech history has one lesson, that would be it. |
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#55
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And so far, we don't have anything particularly convincing on that being the case. The subjects of the Aztecs aren't thrilled at being at not being the ones in charge. That doesn't mean they're looking for a chance to rebel, since the people who would be itching to rebel are also the people the Aztecs are recruiting - meaning, they have no reason to mind, they're high and mighty in the current system. Obviously this doesn't mean it couldn't happen, just that it would take more than just warlike tribesmen showing up to make it happen. |
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#56
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If the ones itching to rebel are getting recruited into the Aztec bureaucracy (presumably built around moving tribute from the provinces to the Aztec core) isn’t that a bit of a bad plan to have when the Aztec government’s appeasement of the Tenochtitlan masses depends upon those tributes?
Assuming what you’ve said is true, you’ve made a nation on a perpetual, ever-more-precarious tipping point as the capital’s population grows, even assuming no Chicamec invasion. No amount of acculturation can defeat individual optimization. My prediction: Raiders show up. The Aztecs call for troops, only a few come, the rest defending their towns or calling out for corn and sacrifices. Everybody realizes at once that the Aztecs have no power. The end. |
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#57
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#58
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So raiders show up, they may inflict some damage or they may be beaten off, and the system continues because they've done nothing to shake it up. |
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#59
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Point being, a Chichimec invasion wouldn't be a distraction for the Aztecs. It'd be a minor incident some governor on the frontier heard about the neighboring states dealing with before he decided whether it was noticeable enough to tell someone from the Valley about. It's like saying a spark of drug violence in Alaska would signal the doom of the USA.
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Redux of the Winner of the 2011 Turtledove Award for Best Continuing Ancient TL: The Count of Years -How the Maya survive the Collapse and Conquest |
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#60
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@9 Fanged Hummingbird: It would most definitely spell the downfall of the USA if the president not only had little control over the states, but the states were also desirous of rebellion. It’s like saying a Mongol invasion of China is impossible, if most of the Chinese provinces want an excuse to rebel against China and the Chinese government is highly complacent. |
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