How They Did It - Growing Up Aztec

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  • čas přidán 7. 02. 2019
  • Find out what it was like to grow up as an Aztec kid. You can learn more about the Mesoamericans with our sponsor, The Great Courses Plus. Start your free trial here: ow.ly/Q8BZ30nBBQT
    The Great Courses Plus is currently available to watch through a web browser to almost anyone in the world and optimized for the US, UK, and Australian market. The Great Courses Plus is currently working to both optimize the product globally and accept credit card payments globally.
    Research: Sean Kiskel
    Script: Invicta
    Editing: Invicta
    Artwork: Beverly Johnson
    Music: iCentury
    Bibliography:
    Aguilar-Moreno 2006 Handbook to Life in the Aztec World Oxford. University Press
    Berdan and Anawalt 1997 The Essential Codex Mendoza. U California Press Berkeley
    Duran 1579 Book of the Gods and Rites and the Ancient Calendar Horacasitas and Heyden trans. 1977. U Oklahoma Press
    Sahagun 1569 General History of the Things of New Spain, Book 2: The Ceremonies, Anderson and Dibble 1981 trans. U Utah Press
    Sahagun 1569 General History of the Things of New Spain, Books 4 & 5: The Soothsayers and The Omens, Anderson and Dibble 1979 trans. U Utah Press
    Sahagun 1569 General History of the Things of New Spain, Book 6: Rhetoric and Moral Philosphy, Anderson and Dibble 1969 trans. U Utah Press
    #HowTheyDidIt
    #AztecHistory

Komentáře • 4,3K

  • @InvictaHistory
    @InvictaHistory  Před 5 lety +4950

    I love this kind of everyday history! What other kinds of people would you like to see in a "Growing Up" series?

    • @thompkins6796
      @thompkins6796 Před 5 lety +156

      It's great! Everyday history is where the ancient world comes alive for me because it's about the 99% of a society and not just Great Men and war. Please continue this series! And I would love it if you looked into Australian Aborigines or merchant children.

    • @drawnseeker
      @drawnseeker Před 5 lety +183

      Maybe Growing up in the Empire of Mali or Growing up in Silla Dynasty Korea?

    • @PappiOslo
      @PappiOslo Před 5 lety +78

      Romans!

    • @TheAidiwashere
      @TheAidiwashere Před 5 lety +89

      Vikings

    • @InvictaHistory
      @InvictaHistory  Před 5 lety +65

      @@PappiOslo this is a pretty obvious one that I am very excited to do

  • @LacedWithOreos
    @LacedWithOreos Před 5 lety +12118

    Imagine just being born and you're a shivering, wailing infant and the lady that helped birth you starts going 'life is misery and suffering, you will struggle and it can be very dark' and you're just laying there in her arms like 'babowuhwuu.'??

    • @aceofspades4930
      @aceofspades4930 Před 5 lety +1282

      They did not sugar coat reality even for newborns 😂

    • @r.c.whitaker296
      @r.c.whitaker296 Před 5 lety +89

      Hahaha 😁

    • @chynnavindiola58
      @chynnavindiola58 Před 5 lety +825

      She holds you, looks deep into your eyes "listen kid... Life is gonna suck. Lol"

    • @boring.3486
      @boring.3486 Před 5 lety +232

      I can respect that lol

    • @okestperson6016
      @okestperson6016 Před 5 lety +433

      If the child died during the speech was that seen as the baby being like 'nope I don't want to live like this I'm out'

  • @noxaurum1
    @noxaurum1 Před 5 lety +10477

    "The midwife greeted the infant with a long speech warning of the sorrows and dangers of life."
    metal af

    • @anacy7660
      @anacy7660 Před 4 lety +209

      That'sWhatSheSaid it’s a whole mood tho

    • @MrKanti-yy5ux
      @MrKanti-yy5ux Před 4 lety +348

      Should honestly be a yearly practice on one's birthday. Hey, reminder.

    • @kevinkevin9525
      @kevinkevin9525 Před 4 lety +110

      Your parents didn't do this to you too?

    • @Arendium
      @Arendium Před 3 lety +119

      Honestly mexican are pretty metal

    • @mazapan133
      @mazapan133 Před 3 lety +46

      @@Arendium yo prefiero la madera

  • @anayahjohnson2993
    @anayahjohnson2993 Před 4 lety +6749

    I wish my mother warned me about the hardships of life, even if I was 30 minutes old

    • @valarie22
      @valarie22 Před 4 lety +191

      true! i wouldve told her to just drown me

    • @necromaniaa
      @necromaniaa Před 3 lety +61

      aisha daisuki LMFOSJFODKF ME TOO

    • @therealmistermemer
      @therealmistermemer Před 3 lety +88

      @@valarie22 and thats how the myth of la llorona was created

    • @Barten0071
      @Barten0071 Před 2 lety +109

      Mom: life is pain
      Kid: then why you made me?

    • @NoodleErik
      @NoodleErik Před 2 lety +8

      @@Barten0071 anti natalism...

  • @walmartian
    @walmartian Před 5 lety +7860

    "boys might be named after clothing" i would like you to meet my sons, shoe and pants

    • @dang2320
      @dang2320 Před 5 lety +851

      My son's name is Levi 569 relaxed fit.

    • @Tabby1
      @Tabby1 Před 4 lety +500

      Yes. Wonderful to meet them! Meet my boys Bra, Sock and Jumper.

    • @samaraisnt
      @samaraisnt Před 4 lety +132

      VanDyke and Cordouroy. :)

    • @simmi6348
      @simmi6348 Před 4 lety +271

      "Have anyone seen my son sock??"

    • @panzerschliffehohenzollern4863
      @panzerschliffehohenzollern4863 Před 4 lety +163

      @@simmi6348 Your son socks or your son named sock?

  • @kekzealot3568
    @kekzealot3568 Před 5 lety +5067

    There's no better name for a school than a house of tears

    • @michalinaagiewka6873
      @michalinaagiewka6873 Před 5 lety +212

      I know right??? I laughed so hard when I heard the comparison to the house of youth and how it was much less strict, sounds about right.

    • @Jobe-13
      @Jobe-13 Před 5 lety +13

      Yeah 😂

    • @amethyst_cat9532
      @amethyst_cat9532 Před 5 lety +66

      I mean it’s not inaccurate

    • @t3rror5am
      @t3rror5am Před 5 lety +53

      They loved the truth remember lol and that hold true to this day

    • @Roblox2025
      @Roblox2025 Před 5 lety +17

      House of brain drain

  • @indigo-streak9912
    @indigo-streak9912 Před 5 lety +5601

    Imagine just being a helpless, wailing, newborn baby and some woman you've literally never met and can't even see just lifts you up over her head and says: "Listen kid, life's gonna suck."
    -Beginning of an Aztec

    • @theresahall8206
      @theresahall8206 Před 5 lety +99

      Well life has ups and downs and I doubt they told only the bad.

    • @Arendium
      @Arendium Před 3 lety +86

      At least it was honest.

    • @wolfzmusic9706
      @wolfzmusic9706 Před 3 lety +18

      so annoying when you read comments that are incredibly similar. be original.

    • @moonkingkei5547
      @moonkingkei5547 Před 3 lety +20

      Wolfz Music
      What do you expect? 3.4K people commented on this video, and the video doesn’t exactly cover that many individual topics. It’s only natural to comment on the most outrageous things that the narrator said.

    • @wolfzmusic9706
      @wolfzmusic9706 Před 3 lety +5

      MoonKingKei i think the comment was a copy though. like it was worded incredibly similar to another comment so it just seems like they copied it but changed a word or two

  • @skidadleghostidadle1726
    @skidadleghostidadle1726 Před 4 lety +5045

    concept: a highschool coming of age movie but theyre aztecs

    • @RodrigoMera
      @RodrigoMera Před 4 lety +152

      There is actually a kind of pornographic book called "Aztec" which describes all of this.

    • @bluesummers5051
      @bluesummers5051 Před 4 lety +31

      skidadle ghostidadle I’d pay for that

    • @Monkeyonasuit
      @Monkeyonasuit Před 4 lety +73

      There already is one. It's called Apocalypto

    • @farah4l
      @farah4l Před 3 lety +82

      @@kaistzar2831 nah that was based on the incans

    • @Arendium
      @Arendium Před 3 lety +51

      @@farah4l Mayans*

  • @nayeliwhite242
    @nayeliwhite242 Před 2 lety +1487

    Oh my gosh! Mexican here, when you said they threw their baby teeth into mouse holes, something clicked! In Mexico our "tooth fairy" is called "El Raton" which directly translates to the rat. So it seems this piece of Aztec culture has made it all the way into the 21st century. So cool!

    • @sunrisemellows1600
      @sunrisemellows1600 Před 2 lety +84

      Yes omg!! I remember when I was yonger my grandparents told me El Raton was going to take my teeth that had fallen out and I was terrified haha. I wondered why we never called it the “tooth fairy” but it’s because ours is quite different!!

    • @lucario2188
      @lucario2188 Před 2 lety +33

      No, it translate to the mouse, the rat is female and El raton is male word.

    • @astrolillo
      @astrolillo Před rokem +1

      @@lucario2188 no solo eso un raton es un diferente animal a una rata.. y es el raton perez...pero..whitexicans gonna whitexican

    • @potentialcaroozin2385
      @potentialcaroozin2385 Před rokem +21

      this is the same in honduras haha, but we had maya civilization, im sure it was easy for the idea to have traveled though, proximity and all that.

    • @Jorora
      @Jorora Před rokem +25

      Well our culture is Aztec culture just as much as it’s also Spanish culture so of course it would’ve made it to today. If your look at the foods they ate compare to the foods we eat our dishes have a lot more in common with Aztec dishes. Growing up Mexican you don’t really realize how much of your culture is actually derived from nahua speaking peoples but we are literally called Mexican which is what the Aztecs called themselves, the Mexica

  • @Saikhnaaaaa
    @Saikhnaaaaa Před 5 lety +5322

    Aztec dude: “Congrats on opening up a school! How should we name this fine institution of learning and development?”
    Another Aztec dude: “THE HOUSE OF TEARS!!!”

    • @MaylocBrittinorum
      @MaylocBrittinorum Před 5 lety +439

      Well, it's accurate...

    • @deadeye9439
      @deadeye9439 Před 5 lety +272

      yup that's how college universities are named in Aztec times

    • @DarkwaveMistress
      @DarkwaveMistress Před 5 lety +349

      The ancestors were wise 😂

    • @yaujj65
      @yaujj65 Před 5 lety +112

      The guy who opened the school must be an ex soldier

    • @novvain495
      @novvain495 Před 5 lety +21

      This comment needs more likes

  • @humblesoldier5474
    @humblesoldier5474 Před 5 lety +6366

    Pillow Fights: Boys used Soft Grass filled sacks. Girls used Cactus thorns... One of these things is not like the others.

    • @samantha123d
      @samantha123d Před 5 lety +617

      Respect whamens

    • @disruptivetimes8738
      @disruptivetimes8738 Před 5 lety +377

      Things never change.

    • @dbprice100
      @dbprice100 Před 5 lety +130

      One of these things is not like the others...LOL, good one.

    • @enriquegarcia2790
      @enriquegarcia2790 Před 5 lety +164

      Women are softer and need to be protected more,...... some would say, others would call that "sexiest"...... For some reason.

    • @banned7182
      @banned7182 Před 5 lety +49

      Because they see it as a bad thing which is untrue even though it's ok because we are not equal completely.(my mistake)

  • @andrewvillafuerte5590
    @andrewvillafuerte5590 Před 4 lety +2286

    Here in the Philippines, we also have a belief that if you stepped over a child then their growth will be stunted. To reverse it, you must step over backwards. Maybe we inherited it from Mexican migrants to the Philippines during the Spanish colonization.

    • @meriem7069
      @meriem7069 Před 3 lety +142

      Here in North Africa if you stepped over an adult he might get angry about it and be like : oh man look what you've done now I will not grow up
      And you'll be like : wtf man ?!you're a grown 2 meters tall man !

    • @Emma-lc7cx
      @Emma-lc7cx Před 3 lety +29

      In west africa to

    • @meriem7069
      @meriem7069 Před 3 lety +48

      @@Emma-lc7cx I wonder where did this myth came from and what is its story and how it is common in Africa and South America ?!

    • @kalciumsthename
      @kalciumsthename Před 3 lety +63

      Mexico actually was ordered to 'take care' of Philippines in a way way back when we were still under the Spanish government! So maybe that's what happened.

    • @aysenur6761
      @aysenur6761 Před 3 lety +45

      That's weird... I am an Anatolian and even our elders have that belief, there is also a similar belief of powerful gaze of "some people" which is called "nazar" (evil eye). For example "It has been a strengly tough week, I guess nazar touched me".

  • @christiandennis5451
    @christiandennis5451 Před 4 lety +1188

    Meanwhile,
    Somewhere out there a mouse king watches this video on his throne made of discarded aztec baby teeth.

    • @KR77.2
      @KR77.2 Před 3 lety +47

      Juan Sotelo I guessed that ! I always wondered why we had mice instead of fairies, all in all a nice custom.

    • @user-qw7sx7nn6n
      @user-qw7sx7nn6n Před 3 lety +21

      Many russian kids also believe in mice and not tooth fairies!

    • @Emma-lc7cx
      @Emma-lc7cx Před 3 lety +4

      So does south africa

    • @amaliasilva7518
      @amaliasilva7518 Před 3 lety +8

      I invented a story about an Aztec baby girl called Tecciztli, meaning “snail” for being very calm and slow. She misspelled her grandpa’s name, “Coli”, and instead called him cocolli: “twisted”.

    • @crishell9652
      @crishell9652 Před 2 lety +2

      I'm from the North eastern part of India, we're mostly tribals and I grew up with this 'teeth for mice' tradition as well

  • @OutOfNamesToChoose
    @OutOfNamesToChoose Před 5 lety +6302

    Sounds like the Aztecs had a really high pain tolerance by the time that they were adults

    • @NCXitlali
      @NCXitlali Před 5 lety +450

      That's nothing. The priest were masochistic

    • @anarchism
      @anarchism Před 5 lety +631

      @@NCXitlali they were, may be. but to their culture it was morally important to have people who could stand pain for the good of others. dealing with pain was something sacred for all cultures back then. even christians did it at the same time

    • @Dan-yd4dx
      @Dan-yd4dx Před 5 lety +123

      Kids be brats sometimes, no matter where or when

    • @jshadowhunter
      @jshadowhunter Před 5 lety +198

      Imagine the marshmallowy people we have in today's society getting pricked once on the finger.

    • @NCXitlali
      @NCXitlali Před 5 lety +121

      @@anarchism no, I mean, just imagine when they were high off their asses during battle. Some of them were even able to lop horses head's off. Keep in mind the average height of both the Spanish and Aztecs were around 5"4 during those days.

  • @corki9930
    @corki9930 Před 5 lety +13848

    Is no one else going to mention the really cute artwork done for the children? Like, big props to the artist who did them!

    • @InvictaHistory
      @InvictaHistory  Před 5 lety +1969

      The artist is Beverly Johnson and she does fantastic work

    • @stormelemental13
      @stormelemental13 Před 5 lety +262

      @@InvictaHistory Thanks for letting us know!

    • @LensMega
      @LensMega Před 5 lety +43

      same

    • @dancidchen
      @dancidchen Před 5 lety +71

      @@InvictaHistory looks like disney's Big Hero 6

    • @CarlosGraOca
      @CarlosGraOca Před 5 lety +82

      They're sooo adorable!

  • @samiai8905
    @samiai8905 Před 5 lety +899

    "House of Tears', Yeah that's a good name for a school

    • @Iggy_Plush
      @Iggy_Plush Před 2 lety +10

      The Aztec dude who came up with "house of tears" is a fucking genius

    • @scotandiamapping4549
      @scotandiamapping4549 Před měsícem

      Yes, it is very accurate

  • @ccchk1
    @ccchk1 Před 4 lety +3393

    This is so interesting. Why isnt there a movie with young Aztecs characters. Imagine being able to see the city Tenochtitlan in a movie.

    • @Hi-tv6lx
      @Hi-tv6lx Před 4 lety +210

      I remember I would see Aztec themed movies growing up because my dad would watch them but they were all in Spanish and meant for Mexican/Hispanic viewers.

    • @Arendium
      @Arendium Před 3 lety +84

      Because people here doesn't really care about culture nor art right now.

    • @kthemaster1999
      @kthemaster1999 Před 3 lety +55

      @@Arendium Right now people right now have nothing better to do than culture and art. Especially movies and TV

    • @lol3367
      @lol3367 Před 3 lety +50

      @XDranzer000 its inaccurate as hell, too

    • @BaconMaken
      @BaconMaken Před 3 lety +26

      Disney should get on that. They already made one for the Inca Empire.

  • @haperawehiwehi8661
    @haperawehiwehi8661 Před 5 lety +5670

    I love how nobles and elites were given more punishment than commoners. Nowadays the opposite is true in most developed nations.

    • @arturogonzalez-barrios8206
      @arturogonzalez-barrios8206 Před 5 lety +659

      Drinking was outlawed, unless you were a warrior or an elderly person who had earned it. The punishment to nobles for being drunk in public was execution. Quite harsh, but it's because that is how the elites justified their status, they were "better" in all regards than the commoners.

    • @gustano123
      @gustano123 Před 5 lety +172

      @@arturogonzalez-barrios8206 aristocrats in the original sense of the word, indeed.

    • @donteventry2862
      @donteventry2862 Před 5 lety +44

      In more developed nations there is no school separation (fffinland)

    • @Caio-sw7hh
      @Caio-sw7hh Před 5 lety +164

      in most developed countries elites are treated better than commoners, in developing countries the elites dont even get punishment lol

    • @otakujiji
      @otakujiji Před 5 lety +181

      Many years later, on the same land, Mexican politicians straight up commit crimes and are never punished

  • @yaelthesnail
    @yaelthesnail Před 5 lety +5616

    The Aztecs had an incredibly polite society, which emphasized respect, politeness, conscientiousness, and humility. To the modern person, this may seem at odds with their practice of routine human sacrifice. But we must bear in mind that they didn't commit these acts out of sadism. They genuinely believed, with all their hearts, that the world would end if they did not do it. It's easy for us to judge them harshly, but -- lest we forget -- Europeans at this exact point in time would go on to kill tens or even hundreds of thousands of people as suspected witches. And up to a million people for being Albigensian heretics. Also done in the name of the greater good, by genuinely pious people.

    • @Shinzon23
      @Shinzon23 Před 5 lety +162

      Still doesn't mean I'm shedding a tear that the people they'd been waging war on for sacrifice banded together after the Spanish had done their thing and wiped them out...

    • @yaelthesnail
      @yaelthesnail Před 5 lety +721

      @@Shinzon23 Sure. But we can mourn the loss of their culture and identity.
      The Spanish, as we know, proved to be far harsher overlords than the Aztecs ever were.

    • @DonVigaDeFierro
      @DonVigaDeFierro Před 5 lety +370

      @@Shinzon23 Common myth.
      They were never wiped out at all.
      When the Mexica empire fell. Many of the natives that allied to the Spanish were granted the Crown citizenship and rights.
      They were absorbed into a new society. Their culture was somehow preserved with oral tradition and practices, despite many attempts to extinguish it.

    • @smokeyjoe4884
      @smokeyjoe4884 Před 5 lety +395

      It seems that the Aztec were much more advanced than the Europeans, I mean the Europeans wouldn't wash their babies in fear of disease and would force 12 year olds into marriage.

    • @yaelthesnail
      @yaelthesnail Před 5 lety +399

      @@smokeyjoe4884 They were more advanced in some key ways than Medieval Europeans, to be sure. But not more than the Romans at their peak.
      If the Aztecs had had access to iron and large beasts of burden, they may have even equaled the Romans. But alas, they did not. What they achieved with stone and pure human labor is nothing short of extraordinary, however.

  • @gabriellathewise
    @gabriellathewise Před 3 lety +389

    “The midwife greeted the infant with a long speech warning of the sorrows and dangers of life”
    I see I got my emo-ness from the Aztec part of my heritage

    • @MASTEROFEVIL
      @MASTEROFEVIL Před 2 lety +11

      Same

    • @zimriel
      @zimriel Před 8 měsíci +3

      The joke I heard is that if Mexico ever takes Texas back they'll make Morrissey write the new state anthem :^x

  • @amaliasilva7518
    @amaliasilva7518 Před 3 lety +680

    Wholesome fact: Aztecs believed in Chichihuanauco, a place where Aztec babies went if they died. The Chichihuanauco was a valley with a huge bush with breasts hanging from its branches, so the babies could feed themselves.

    • @MASTEROFEVIL
      @MASTEROFEVIL Před 2 lety +40

      Uh... Okay

    • @kingdmind
      @kingdmind Před 2 lety +48

      Is it coincidental that the word sounds like chihuahua?

    • @elenaravenclaw9276
      @elenaravenclaw9276 Před 2 lety +122

      @@MASTEROFEVIL if you can’t handle something as simple as that you shouldn’t be on here

    • @thelanktheist2626
      @thelanktheist2626 Před 2 lety +93

      That’s very weird… but very sweet.

    • @All_Your_Fandom_Needs
      @All_Your_Fandom_Needs Před 2 lety +28

      @@elenaravenclaw9276 what do you mean? They just simply replied to the comment as a normal person would. Plus the internet is for everyone, what do you mean they shouldn't be here?

  • @dariustiapula
    @dariustiapula Před 5 lety +3074

    A sacrifice a day. Keeps the apocalypse at bay.

  • @LovePinku6
    @LovePinku6 Před 5 lety +1909

    I guess someone stepped over me as a child and never stepped back--

    • @lizzychrome7630
      @lizzychrome7630 Před 5 lety +127

      I'm pretty sure someone stepped ON me. My head, specifically.

    • @mirusama7045
      @mirusama7045 Před 5 lety +40

      What I find surprising is that we have the exact same superstition in Poland. My grandma always forbade my brothers to step over me. Pity they didn't listen 😂

    • @kenishinobi666
      @kenishinobi666 Před 5 lety

      Same

    • @user-gv6ku2bj7p
      @user-gv6ku2bj7p Před 5 lety +6

      That blew my mind because that is an oral tradition in my family (latino) never knew where it came from until now

    • @derranlawston4052
      @derranlawston4052 Před 4 lety +2

      Miru Sama in the US where I live, we say if you step over someone’s LEGS they stop growing

  • @lion2535
    @lion2535 Před 4 lety +1805

    crazy how alot of these customs are still seen in mexico

    • @citlalliir
      @citlalliir Před 4 lety +214

      especially the standards parents have for either children

    • @IsabellaSOrtiz
      @IsabellaSOrtiz Před 4 lety +90

      not really crazy, it's part of them still

    • @we1are1nemesis
      @we1are1nemesis Před 3 lety +119

      we still see other schools as rivals

    • @m.rsoda-can1868
      @m.rsoda-can1868 Před 3 lety +79

      at least they don't use those methods of punishment
      I have never been hit with la CHANKLA but It is probably almost as bad a belt.

    • @lion2535
      @lion2535 Před 3 lety +58

      M.R Soda-Can nah i feared the belt more than la chankla.

  • @hyacinthlover9370
    @hyacinthlover9370 Před 4 lety +895

    1:44 WHAT lmao
    “Hello, my name is Petunia and this is my brother, Shirt.”

    • @Aphelia.
      @Aphelia. Před 4 lety +120

      "and this is my cousin, pants."

    • @Aphelia.
      @Aphelia. Před 4 lety +18

      @ZaqueHunzahua mine is either meaning 'yellow flower' or 'homeland'-- what about yours?

    • @esppupsnkits4560
      @esppupsnkits4560 Před 4 lety +20

      「 Heaphilian 」 mine means farmer

    • @ninjaked1265
      @ninjaked1265 Před 4 lety +33

      My last name means “Dark Invader” and I’m white

    • @VaneyRio
      @VaneyRio Před 4 lety +41

      The most common one is "Xochitl" which means just flower. Or you can go hardcore route and call your child "Cempaxuchitl" which means flower of death.
      Mexican names are badass

  • @gilbertotoledo1421
    @gilbertotoledo1421 Před 5 lety +5020

    I was expecting a great video, but I didn't expect it to blow my mind the way it did. I was born in a rural part of Mexico. When I was born, my grandmother buried my umbilical cord in the middle of a field. I always wondered why, my grandmother always said that you're supposed to, it's tradition. When I saw the umbilical cord thing in the video it blew my mind. I got chills.
    Also the mouse hole thing is still done, though in a modified form. Traditionally the tooth faerie concept doesn't exist in Mexico. Instead we have a tooth mouse. When I was a child, my father told me to make a wish on the tooth and leave the tooth in the trash or outside. From there the tooth would be taken by a mouse who would somehow grant my wish eventually. That last part is really vague on details but that's how it went. My cousins and friends were told very similar things. Also for us the man on the moon is actually a rabbit. Lol

    • @angeliparraguirre7329
      @angeliparraguirre7329 Před 5 lety +197

      That's some good native culture!

    • @abrahamcorona420
      @abrahamcorona420 Před 5 lety +320

      Dude i always found it wired that white people had a fairy and mexicans had a a mouse it all makes sense now

    • @rgw4393
      @rgw4393 Před 5 lety +255

      A tooth mouse is so much less creepy than a tooth fairy

    • @abrahamcorona420
      @abrahamcorona420 Před 5 lety +24

      @@rgw4393 one is tinker bell for kids the other is a mouse we are taught to kill on sight

    • @jorgeo1492
      @jorgeo1492 Před 5 lety +41

      wow that sounds really interesting, de donde eres bro?

  • @chrissomeone2642
    @chrissomeone2642 Před 5 lety +3687

    5:11 you know ur Mexican when ur mom toasts chili and everyone in the house starts coughing

  • @nebeskisrb7765
    @nebeskisrb7765 Před 4 lety +435

    "Stepping over a child will stunt their growth so you must step back to undo the effect"

  • @victreebeloverlord1185
    @victreebeloverlord1185 Před 4 lety +665

    "Any lost teeth would be cast into mouse holes"
    Mice: Yo wth

    • @ember1901
      @ember1901 Před 3 lety +39

      Mice be like this isn't food

    • @_Executor_
      @_Executor_ Před 2 lety +57

      In México we don't have the "tooth fairy", instead we got the "ratón de los dientes."

    • @nikkim7038
      @nikkim7038 Před 2 lety +21

      @@_Executor_ SO THAT’S WHY IT’S CALLED THAT

    • @kity1081
      @kity1081 Před 2 lety +18

      "Dayum this shit crunchy"

    • @theasianboy315
      @theasianboy315 Před 2 lety +3

      That's why Jerry left Mexico and settled in USA

  • @katiekawaii
    @katiekawaii Před 5 lety +505

    "At 7 years old, boys finally put on a dang breechcloth." Hahaha

  • @Morgai-Fly
    @Morgai-Fly Před 5 lety +971

    Stepping over children causing a stunting of growth also seems to be a belief in Bengali culture. It's amazing how strange beliefs can be shared across the world and across ages.

    • @ttuliorancao
      @ttuliorancao Před 5 lety +58

      We have the same superstition here in Brazil

    • @Morgai-Fly
      @Morgai-Fly Před 5 lety +76

      Perhaps it's universal. Either many cultures came up with this strange belief or more impressively, this is a pre-historic belief. I can't imagine people holding the same beliefs for tens of thousands of years (if you believe in the Bering land bridge theory) from a time before the old world had been separated from the new. But if that is the case, it would be incredible.

    • @manooxi327
      @manooxi327 Před 5 lety +16

      in N.Africa as well!

    • @segundonoacco3164
      @segundonoacco3164 Před 5 lety +2

      @@Morgai-Fly Miguel Serrano has awnsers for you, but, you know, his words are nearly illegal for those that rule the world today, so im not going to say much else.

    • @misseli1
      @misseli1 Před 5 lety +15

      zen yatta The bit about ritualistic bathing of newborns reminded me of the infant baptism in certain Churches. Which is interesting considering that (european) Christians did not come into contact with Mesoamericans until the 1400s-1500s

  • @areeortiz
    @areeortiz Před 2 lety +271

    My family has roots from the Mixteca culture in Oaxaca. My great grandmother used to punish my grandfather with the chili pepper’s smoke. He said it felt like suffocating and like he was going to choke. He hated it so much that whenever we needed to cook something that involved roasting hot peppers, he would leave the house and come back after the smoke was gone.

    • @KarlSnarks
      @KarlSnarks Před 10 měsíci +37

      Poor grandpa, got traumatized by the abuse. Interesting that the tradition remained so long after the erradication/genocide of that Aztec culture.

    • @elizabethwarren9612
      @elizabethwarren9612 Před 10 měsíci +13

      I will say that the pepper roasting never went away but it isn't used as punishment anymore it's just to cook salsas and other things but still hurts

    • @jennifermorales19
      @jennifermorales19 Před 9 měsíci +4

      @@elizabethwarren9612 On god. I knew when they came out, I had to open all the windows and get far away from the kitchen as possible lmfaoo. That was rough so I can't imagine how bad it must be to deal with that as a punishment.

    • @elizabethwarren9612
      @elizabethwarren9612 Před 9 měsíci

      @@jennifermorales19 probably as bad as getting burned at the stake

    • @amberj-ly517
      @amberj-ly517 Před 9 měsíci +3

      Wait chili pepper roasting is punishment? 🙃 it happens like every other week at my house cause we make salsa. I guess we became high tolerance passing from generation that at this point; it’s just like oh no chiles are roasting open the windows and doors 😂😂

  • @TheDinosaur900
    @TheDinosaur900 Před 5 lety +251

    Growing up as an Aztec boy seems very similar to growing up as an Spartan child given their mandatory military service starting at a young age. Very intriguing video as always.

    • @Jorora
      @Jorora Před rokem +22

      Well both their cultures were bent on war and conquest so it makes sense they’d develop those sorts of traditions

    • @spencerstevens2175
      @spencerstevens2175 Před 9 měsíci +6

      @@Jorora Spartans were a greek vassal. Hardly conquering anything in their name. The aztecs were also notrious dickheads to their neighbors. Which is why it was so easy for the spanish to take them out with so few spaniards. They just asked the neighboring tribes if they wanted the Aztecs gone and of course they were happy to help!

  • @brycevo
    @brycevo Před 5 lety +1921

    7 Years commando. Wow

    • @An_Ian
      @An_Ian Před 5 lety +99

      They are founding members of the No Pants Society
      or NPS for sort

    • @anthonyfox585
      @anthonyfox585 Před 5 lety +30

      I mean that's pretty much like how I used to be lol

    • @jordandehart6905
      @jordandehart6905 Před 5 lety +28

      My former neighbors kid never wore a short or leggings until he was like, 8.

    • @MiguelAlejandroVF
      @MiguelAlejandroVF Před 5 lety +35

      The Aztecs were truly a free society.

    • @jasminea11hh
      @jasminea11hh Před 5 lety +2

      Lmfaooo😭❤️

  • @bluewingsprite
    @bluewingsprite Před 5 lety +745

    As a Mexican, I thank you for this beautiful description of one of the cultures that came before

    • @dagoobertron
      @dagoobertron Před 5 lety +67

      wheres the ritual punishment of the chancla?

    • @sabercat5490
      @sabercat5490 Před 5 lety +11

      @@dagoobertron lmao

    • @therealone4113
      @therealone4113 Před 4 lety +2

      @Zoingo what the 3/4?

    • @bnbcraft6666
      @bnbcraft6666 Před 4 lety +6

      I have friend at my welding school whose almost 100% Native Mexican and how his grandparents live in a Native village in southern Mexico

    • @victorhernandeztriana5311
      @victorhernandeztriana5311 Před 4 lety +1

      Rob Roux I agree with everything but the Lebanese part. I’m from northern zacatecas and my dna is 60% Native 33% Europe and 7% African. I don’t believe there is significant Lebanese dna anywhere in Mexico.

  • @tepichimazate
    @tepichimazate Před 4 lety +909

    I'm so proud of being Mexican/Indigenous Aztec

    • @marthamacias4046
      @marthamacias4046 Před 3 lety +14

      Same

    • @dealwithittv9049
      @dealwithittv9049 Před 3 lety +11

      Same

    • @hellothere3610
      @hellothere3610 Před 3 lety +57

      @King Stego I wdym even tho they are mexican their proud of their aztec ancestry they didnt say being aztec was the best

    • @analien7582
      @analien7582 Před 3 lety +26

      King Stego I first they didn’t say Aztec was the best and second they never said that every Mexicano was Aztec,stop jumping to conclusions

    • @user-lu4xp7iv8c
      @user-lu4xp7iv8c Před 3 lety +15

      King Stego I they never said it was the best lmao they just said they’re proud of who they are

  • @tbe9790
    @tbe9790 Před 5 lety +242

    *another tooth falls into hole
    Mouse: "WHY DO YOU KEEP DOING THIS????"

    • @ValYourFav
      @ValYourFav Před 2 lety

      uh the tooth fairy mouse exists.

  • @dcaffeine1854
    @dcaffeine1854 Před 5 lety +528

    Just imagine Aztec school life in the form of an 80's highschool sports movie

    • @clarerodri8080
      @clarerodri8080 Před 5 lety +15

      DAC The Poissons Kuzcos Animated Series

    • @claudiostudios9002
      @claudiostudios9002 Před 3 lety +82

      Yo, where’s my friend Shirt?
      He got grounded, his funeral is tomorrow
      *laughs in the background*
      Anyway, let’s go fight against the other school

    • @danielmiller2357
      @danielmiller2357 Před 3 lety +32

      @@claudiostudios9002 that puts a surprising and morbid spin to the term, "grounded".

    • @doncarlin9081
      @doncarlin9081 Před 3 lety +7

      Actually not a bad idea 🤔

    • @Gr95dc
      @Gr95dc Před 2 lety +5

      a bloody movie

  • @motherofoblivion7497
    @motherofoblivion7497 Před 5 lety +872

    My step dad once told me that his grandma would physically punish him by hanging him to a tree by his feet and start a small fire to smoke him with peppers. Be glad that you can call child protective services in today's society

    • @jordandehart6905
      @jordandehart6905 Před 5 lety +145

      My dads childhood punishment was apparently to be locked inside the family truck for hours.
      Seriously, I'm so lucky I grew up in the 90s and not the 60s.

    • @motherofoblivion7497
      @motherofoblivion7497 Před 5 lety +7

      @@jordandehart6905 uuuuhhhh... how is being in a truck punishment?

    • @enriquegarcia2790
      @enriquegarcia2790 Před 5 lety +59

      I was whipped with electrical wires and my mom's metal studded slutty belt when my mom was at work and my dad was pissy drunk from his friends beating him in Madden NFL,he gave a gash cut on my arm one time and made me hold it together so it would stop bleeding. I was raised by a piece of shit and kids these days cry about there dad's "missing a ball game" or "he didn't show me affection", don't get me wrong, all that sounds nice and I get jealous and depressed when I see other guys who have grate dad's that have there shit together and I have to help my old bastard out every other month when his third wife drops off his third little mistake because he didn't learn his lesson first two times not to have kids. It seems unfair to me but I guess I should be thankful for the situation, I now know how to be a better parent if I have kids and it's almost impossible to kill me.

    • @catwhiskers4885
      @catwhiskers4885 Před 5 lety +123

      Mother Of Oblivion um being in a car on a hot day with little room to you doesn’t sound like punishment??

    • @motherofoblivion7497
      @motherofoblivion7497 Před 5 lety +35

      Not as bad as the dude who got whipped with an electric cable. My mom would always have a thin flexible branch handy and shed always keep it wet inside a bucket so that it wouldn't break. I still have some scars on my lower back, if i knew i could get away with shit by just being in a truck for a day I'd chose the latter XD

  • @julians7268
    @julians7268 Před 4 lety +688

    Isnt it interesting how both the Aztec and Roman civilizations saw a person's 15th birthday as important? I'm sure this extends to many other civilizations. Why is this particular age seen as special across vastly different civilizations. This, even among civilizations that had absolutely no interaction or knowledge of each other.

    • @anvayad6249
      @anvayad6249 Před 4 lety +33

      Funny this comment has 15 likes

    • @Lilliathi
      @Lilliathi Před 4 lety +180

      Making babies was important, and 15 is about the lowest age at which a girl can start making babies without killing herself.

    • @julians7268
      @julians7268 Před 4 lety +36

      @@Lilliathi - I guess that could be the case. Seems to me though that if a females ability to give birth were the determining factor here that these civilizations would have selected a younger age... Didn't many civilizations associate that time with the first menstruation? IDK.

    • @MegCazalet
      @MegCazalet Před 4 lety +89

      Julian S The average age when menarche occurs can vary a lot across history and cultures. It’s believed to be coming earlier now in modern developed countries than it has in the past, due to various biological and environmental factors. Currently we’re at around 13. I wouldn’t be surprised if 15 was closer to the average age across ancient cultures.

    • @Lilliathi
      @Lilliathi Před 4 lety +153

      @@MegCazalet
      There's a difference between having your first period and having a body that can birth a child without dying in the process, especially before modern medicine. It doesn't really matter if it was later.

  • @Luboman411
    @Luboman411 Před 4 lety +50

    My parents were both born in Guatemala. Their first names were calendar names derived from the Catholic calendar--each day has a saint in that calendar. Both my parents were named after their calendar saints--St. Filogonius for my dad, St. Odilon for my mom. I was not aware that this was a tradition that PRECEDED the Spanish conquest, that the Aztecs and the Maya both did calendar names. I'll be damned...

    • @plumebrise4801
      @plumebrise4801 Před 9 měsíci +1

      Yeah it was a tradition across christianity ,in France ,you were always naming your child with the name of the saint associated with the day he was born ,then the 3rd Republic made a law that forced everyone to do it (Even tho everyone was already naming their child with this method) and in 1905 with the law of separation between the church and the state ,it was not obligatory anymore (But people were still doing it until after WW2)
      Edit :
      It's also because of that ,that family name were recreated in Europe (They already existed in the Roman Empire ,but disappeared after) in the XI/XIIth century ,because of growing population ,there was only 365 name (Masculine or Feminine ,but each name had another version in case the child was not of the same sex as the saint) ,with only 730 names and growing population ,it would become harder and harder to recognize people by their name ,so they took family name .
      The family name can be multiple type of thing that the 1st ancestor had ,the name of his father ,his jobs ,a physical characteristic ,a title etc... My family name from my father side imply that my ancestor was working on stained glass in churches and cathedrales ,and my family name from my mother side imply that my other ancestor was a city/castle guard .
      One of the teacher I had in my life had a family name of "Longueépée" which means "Longsword" (Ancestor was probably a knight) ,a classmate had the family name "Chevalier" which would mean "Knight" (So his was ancestor was a knight) ,one of my friend had the family name "Doré" ,which mean "Golden" (So his ancestor was probably rich ,a noble or in the gold business) ,a classmate had the family name "Gris" which mean "Grey" (So his ancestor probably liked the colour grey or lived/worked in a grey building) ,the most common family name in France are (It's the number of French people born between 1891 and 2000 to have these family name) :
      1-Martin (250 013 persons have it ,it's a name ,the saint of the 11th of November ,Martin of Tours ,feminine version is Martine)
      2-Bernard (131 330 ,name ,the saint of the 20th of August ,Bernard of Clairvaux ,Feminine version is Bernadette)
      3-Thomas (118 331 ,name ,the saint of the 3rd of July ,Thomas the Apostle ,multiple feminine versions ,that nobody use anymore)
      4-Petit (115 217 ,physical characteristic ,it means "Small")
      5-Robert (112 998 ,name ,the saint of the 30th of April ,Robert of Molesmes ,feminine version is Roberta)
      6-Richard (109 354 ,social condition ,it means rich)
      7-Dubois (108 619 ,it mean that he live near the woods)
      8-Durand (108 374 ,physical characteristic ,it means "Endurance")
      9-Moreau (102 804 ,physical characteristic ,it mean that the person had brown hair)
      10-Laurent (97 015 ,name ,the saint of the 10th of August ,Saint-Lawrence ,feminine version is Laurence)
      11-Simon (96 397 ,name ,the saint of the 28th of October ,Simon the Zealot ,feminine version is Simone)
      12-Michel (93 493 ,name ,the saint of the 29th of September Archangel Michael ,feminine version is Michelle)
      13-Lefebvre (91 459 ,job ,blacksmith)
      14-Leroy (87 282 ,title ,mean King ,given to the people who would win in archery competition ,especially present in the north)
      15-David (76 085 ,name ,the saint of the 1st of March ,Saint David ,Davia is the feminine)
      16-Roux (75 365 ,physical characteristics ,it mean red hair)
      17-Morel (72 745 ,same as Moreau)
      18-Bertrand (72 683 ,name ,the saint of the 6th of September ,Bertrand de Garrigues ,Bertrande is the feminine)
      19-Fournier (71 996 ,Job ,baker)
      20-Girard (70 039 ,name ,the saint of the 3rd of October)
      There are more than 1,4 Millions family name in France ,and 300 000 peoples are the last and unique holders of their family name ,

  • @FreedomRuless
    @FreedomRuless Před 5 lety +817

    Lvl 1 commoner... Lvl 100 Elite Jaguar Warrior

  • @vinny9868
    @vinny9868 Před 5 lety +544

    "15 birthday was an important one" Ah yes. Let the quinceañera begin!

    • @isabelgonzalez862
      @isabelgonzalez862 Před 4 lety +1

      Vinny yess!

    • @amaliasilva7518
      @amaliasilva7518 Před 3 lety +1

      Que empiece el guateque 🥳🥳🥳🥳🥳🥳🥳🥳🥳🥳🥳🥳🥳🥳🥳🥳🥳🥳🥳🥳🥳🥳

    • @lude1350
      @lude1350 Před 2 lety

      Raini Rodriguez 😍😍

  • @rafaelpastorramos5997
    @rafaelpastorramos5997 Před 3 lety +52

    1:55
    A common example of this here is Mexico is the fact that you can still find some women named: Xochilt
    It literally means flower

    • @gabval81
      @gabval81 Před 3 lety +18

      Itzel, Ixchell, Citlali, Ilayali, Nayeli.

  • @bigbawlzlebowski8886
    @bigbawlzlebowski8886 Před 4 lety +173

    Growing up Aztec sounds like a reality show that should be on fox.

  • @MatrixMami
    @MatrixMami Před 5 lety +1211

    No shade but at 4:33 the women aren't weaving... They're grinding the corn to make tortillas :p

  • @sarcasm-aplenty
    @sarcasm-aplenty Před 5 lety +877

    Some old dude: **steps over a baby**
    Parent of baby:"Oí, oí, oí, don't step over the baby!"😤
    SOD:😨"Oh, sorry." **Takes a step backwards** **glances at bab-**
    Parent: "Hey, don't stare at my child!"😡
    SOD: 😓😵

    • @magtovi
      @magtovi Před 3 lety +61

      Believe it or not, that "staring superstition" is still a big thing in rural Mexico.

    • @ember1901
      @ember1901 Před 3 lety +5

      My mom is puerto rican and even she is superstitious when it comes to stepping over a baby while their playing on the floor she like "ay no no you can't do that stepping over the baby will stunt their growth now you must walk backwards over them but don't fall or anything you don't want literally hurt them"

    • @yoongi7854
      @yoongi7854 Před 2 lety +2

      lol staring at a baby gives mal ojo ive seen my mom help babies that have thag like she helped my sister and on me and on other babies and she says i would do it to my future children too

    • @gatogordo2197
      @gatogordo2197 Před 2 lety

      Many of my relatives still believe that you should not stare at a child.

    • @LangkeeLongkee
      @LangkeeLongkee Před 2 lety +1

      I'm South American and we still do the walking over the child thing haha. Also if you sweep someone's foot with a broom they won't they won't get married.

  • @skidadleghostidadle1726
    @skidadleghostidadle1726 Před 4 lety +185

    house of tears... some things just havent changed

  • @yourfavorite7518
    @yourfavorite7518 Před 9 měsíci +10

    Their learning system makes so much sense. Learning basic life skills in their early life. And the learning the other stuff later. It just makes a lot of sense.

  • @mohammadhijazi4498
    @mohammadhijazi4498 Před 5 lety +374

    Growing up in the Middle East we also had the belief that if you so over a child it'd stunt their growth and that you'd must stop back to undo it.
    It's weird that it's an Aztec thing too

    • @farticlesofconflatulation
      @farticlesofconflatulation Před 5 lety +48

      Middle East and Meso America have many strange similarities. Invention of complex mathematical concepts and building of pyramids for example.

    • @Arwyroe
      @Arwyroe Před 5 lety +23

      @@farticlesofconflatulation the middle east didn't build pyramids... Nubian and Egyptians did

    • @farticlesofconflatulation
      @farticlesofconflatulation Před 5 lety +18

      Arwyroe middle east as a cultural region not precisely constrained by geographic area.

    • @Arwyroe
      @Arwyroe Před 5 lety +17

      @@farticlesofconflatulation that's literally what I'm suggesting against... If by the middle East, Egypt wasn't Arabic at that time... The culture of pyramid building for funerals is endemic within that area and South of it only. It's not Arabic, nor middle Eastern as it shares these traits with neither that culture nor the region.

    • @farticlesofconflatulation
      @farticlesofconflatulation Před 5 lety +2

      Arwyroe we can argue semantics but where’s the fun in that?

  • @XillowLinoue
    @XillowLinoue Před 3 lety +44

    We have this "step over" habit also in Haitian culture. There is also that mindset of if someone pass a broom over your feet consciously or accidentally, you'll never get married.

  • @exceedinc
    @exceedinc Před 3 lety +67

    Some of these customs are still used in modern days for Mexica (not Aztec) children growing up. Many of our customs have been handed down, I recall my late grandmother speaking to me about our culture in Nahuatl. The culture is still very much alive.

    • @Jorora
      @Jorora Před rokem +2

      That’s awesome bro! I wish more of us Mexicans spoke Nahuatl but even these customs were passed on to those of us who only know Spanish. A lot of people in Guatemala still speak a bunch of Mayan dialects but we usually just have to settle for having a Spanish that has a lot of nahuatl sprinkled in

  • @slave7022
    @slave7022 Před 5 lety +135

    "School rivalries were a thing" lol, they still are.

  • @jonathangonzalez1271
    @jonathangonzalez1271 Před 5 lety +319

    Wow this was amazing! as a Mexican who is working on a fantasy novel with prehispanic elements you have done me a great favor with elements to spice the world

    • @pisces2569
      @pisces2569 Před 5 lety +5

      What’s it about?

    • @superash4u578
      @superash4u578 Před 5 lety +14

      Please let us know more when this book comes out! I'll read and review ❤️

    • @hat880
      @hat880 Před 5 lety +10

      Yes...would love to read it

    • @aaaav7694
      @aaaav7694 Před 5 lety +7

      You should read Aztec by Gary Jennings, a lot of info from an academic converted into an historic novel

    • @Jobe-13
      @Jobe-13 Před 5 lety

      Jonathan Gonzalez Cool!

  • @jacobfinch9563
    @jacobfinch9563 Před 4 lety +194

    The Aztec childhood seems very Greek, except less *ahem* "Eros" with the boys

    • @cherr6932
      @cherr6932 Před 4 lety +5

      You got me wheezing 😂😂😂😂😂👌🏼👌🏼👌🏼👌🏼

    • @BaconMaken
      @BaconMaken Před 3 lety +32

      I've seen people refer to them as the Spartans of Native Americans.

    • @youngking2503
      @youngking2503 Před 3 lety +3

      @@BaconMaken You should check out the Chickasaw. They're called the Spartans of the Mississippi

    • @JamesPeach
      @JamesPeach Před 3 lety +8

      @@BaconMaken
      The Aztec were like a mix between Spartan and Athenian.

    • @annarchy200
      @annarchy200 Před 2 lety

      Oh..... oh I just got that.... now I can't stop laughing.

  • @gabriellathewise
    @gabriellathewise Před 3 lety +42

    Mexicans still do calendar names and personal names, but our calendar name is the name of the saint who’s feast day was on our birth. And the calendar name isn’t on official forms, but family knows it.

  • @FreedomRuless
    @FreedomRuless Před 5 lety +242

    My desire for Mesoamerican content has been met once again 😩❤️

    • @danielpincu6030
      @danielpincu6030 Před 5 lety +4

      I hope he continues it. TedX had one but they stopped making it.

    • @FreedomRuless
      @FreedomRuless Před 5 lety +7

      Yeah I hope he branches off into the Maya, Inca, and Muisca

  • @_98s
    @_98s Před 5 lety +558

    Im really loving all these Aztec videos you’ve been making, you should make videos on other Mesoamerican people and North American natives

    • @angeliparraguirre7329
      @angeliparraguirre7329 Před 5 lety +24

      That good native heritage man, gotta keep teaching it it will disappear

    • @Jade-ep7qg
      @Jade-ep7qg Před 5 lety +11

      Aztecs are native Americans... where do you think Mexico is lol

    • @TheSparrowBatman
      @TheSparrowBatman Před 5 lety +2

      Jade Hale I think they meant North American Native Americans, unless they meant more native tribes of South America like the Incas or Mayans. *shrugs* That's my guess though.

    • @Jade-ep7qg
      @Jade-ep7qg Před 5 lety +14

      TheSparrowBatman Aztecs are North Americans. Mexico is in North America 😂😂 plus Aztec culture is found in other tribes from the US as well sooooo

    • @TheSparrowBatman
      @TheSparrowBatman Před 5 lety

      Jade Hale Okay, let me start again, since apparently I can't get past a brain fart today, other than Aztec tribes, like Navajo, Cheerokee, etc. in North America or Southern American tribes like Mayan and the Inca. But again, I'm not sure which ones they are referring too, so beats me.

  • @KazuDiabolis
    @KazuDiabolis Před 9 měsíci +7

    “Greeting the infant with a long speech warning of the sorrows and dangers of life” they were so real for this

  • @theariana1o1
    @theariana1o1 Před 4 lety +62

    Brother: lays on floor
    Me: steps over him
    Mom: HEY DON'T DO THAT HE WON'T GROW

  • @stahppls2293
    @stahppls2293 Před 5 lety +438

    So you're telling me, the itching powder from Kronk's new groove is historically accurate?

    • @noxaurum1
      @noxaurum1 Před 3 lety +59

      Kronk's New Groove is actually what the midwives had the babies watch to prepare them for the challenges of life

    • @Tokuijin
      @Tokuijin Před 3 lety +71

      Actually, that movie is in Peru. They were culturally similar in some ways but not by much

    • @toastychaos5219
      @toastychaos5219 Před 2 lety +25

      That movie is located on peru, aztecs and mayans are from mexico all the way up to central america, so no, it's not historically accurate

    • @caciqueloko6500
      @caciqueloko6500 Před 2 lety +2

      Kronk is Inca is not related with astecs or mayas

  • @tanostrelok2323
    @tanostrelok2323 Před 5 lety +96

    Aztecs were by far the most interesting civilization on the Americas, it's nice to see something to expand the picture we have of them.

    • @tanostrelok2323
      @tanostrelok2323 Před 5 lety +8

      @Cegesh They deserve some attention too, their mountain agriculture was awesome for their time. Considering they conquered a good chunk of land I'd expect them to have a solid military, although I don't know as much about it as I'd like.

    • @Reaper136Killer
      @Reaper136Killer Před 5 lety +1

      Tano Strelok mayans

    • @MVangelmx
      @MVangelmx Před 5 lety +1

      The Mayas were too

    • @Someone-mm5es
      @Someone-mm5es Před 4 lety +8

      @@theboyntonbuddies they weren't killing people because they were sadist, they thought the world would burn and end if they didnt. It's the same thing with christians killing witches and heretics.

    • @Falco561
      @Falco561 Před 4 lety

      Cegesh i think the aztecs and mayans are more interesting. Actually, everything that relates to mexico’s past civilizations such as the olmecs, toltecs, aztecs, mayans. Astronomy, vast agriculture, their structures that were built the size of present day mexico city, pyramids, their beliefs, mythology ect. Mexico and the many mesoamerican countries are great for this.

  • @macgherhardt1061
    @macgherhardt1061 Před 3 lety +60

    Thank you for this video! I'm 50% native Mexican and my ancestors include Zapotec, Chichimec, Huastec, and Aztec. You can really tell the character of the Mexican people has been constant for centuries, even after colonization. It was a very strong character that influenced whoever got in touch with it. It happens today, Mexico influences all of Latin America and Spain (not to mention the U.S.). I think that it happened 500 years ago, because the Spaniards then, wrote with great admiration of the Mexica culture, cities, language (of course they hated the human sacrifice and warlike skills), and I think that a lot of Mexican ways made their way back to Spain, and by extension, to other parts where the Spaniards went: South America, Africa, South Asia, Philippines, Guam. It is no wonder that the tomato, avocado, chocolate and chillies made their way throughout the world. This is only a guess, except for the food, everybody knows these originated in Mexico; but I think that the world's cultures today are a total mix, and there is no such thing as a "pure" culture.

  • @tommyt390
    @tommyt390 Před 5 lety +58

    "Acrid smoke of burning chili peppers" oml the original strict abusive parents 😂

  • @Spookspek
    @Spookspek Před 5 lety +613

    I wonder how their civilization would have developed if they had somehow managed to isolate themselves like Japan...

    • @seribelz
      @seribelz Před 5 lety +109

      more anime maybe

    • @diegojimenez6975
      @diegojimenez6975 Před 5 lety +49

      seribelz nah anime developed after ww2 cause economic depression

    • @MVangelmx
      @MVangelmx Před 5 lety +36

      They were getting there.

    • @aaaav7694
      @aaaav7694 Před 5 lety +44

      90% of the population would have still died after first contact with the old world so they are pretty much screwed anyway.

    • @Neverseenstars
      @Neverseenstars Před 5 lety +75

      @@aaaav7694 they are still here so that would not have happened. 30% of Mexicans are almost 100% Indigenous. That's millions of people still around.

  • @brycevo
    @brycevo Před 5 lety +342

    I really like this Growing Up Series

  • @kneegga4677
    @kneegga4677 Před 3 lety +20

    Boy, I was 23 when I finally started to go to the "mercado" alone, my ancestors must be disappointed

  • @USNavyVet_STG
    @USNavyVet_STG Před 3 lety +11

    3 minutes in, and I saw many parallels to my child hood.
    Some things never change.

  • @Cythil
    @Cythil Před 5 lety +119

    Always nice to see the daily life of cultures be explored more. There tend to be way to much focus on wars and great men in history. Why I am sure a lot of people feel that history is just memorizing dates. But history is so much more. And I feel we can often learn more from the daily lives of people in the past then we do for there battles.

    • @basilofgoodwishes4138
      @basilofgoodwishes4138 Před 5 lety

      History should be a narrative of Life and Virtue and Love, not sorely of Power and Battles which poisoned us in a lot of ways( look at you U.S and Russia).

  • @manuelramirez-qd2mz
    @manuelramirez-qd2mz Před 5 lety +303

    Women were also able to pursue careers other than the home or religious services. They were judges, craftswomen, lawyers, porters, traders, etc. Great video by the way.

    • @OverseerMoti
      @OverseerMoti Před 5 lety +45

      @Hoàng Nguyên Maybe it was exactly why, considering the social norms Spain had back then.

    • @aleale6277
      @aleale6277 Před 5 lety +15

      Never heard of it, source?

    • @jerry250ify
      @jerry250ify Před 5 lety +26

      @Hoàng Nguyên yeah, lets just ignore the thousands of people killed in human sacrifice every year.
      Fuck off you absolute mongs
      Conqistator Cortez, do it again!

    • @DarkwaveMistress
      @DarkwaveMistress Před 5 lety +90

      @@jerry250ify lol that's an exaggeration. All the city states of Mesoamerica together wouldn't have been able to provide thousands of sacrifices. That's just invader propaganda.

    • @manuelramirez-qd2mz
      @manuelramirez-qd2mz Před 5 lety +4

      One book for some sources is, "1491" by Charles C. Mann.

  • @Iluvrocket
    @Iluvrocket Před 10 měsíci +11

    I’m surprised at the many common values we share. After you talked about school rivalries, I immediately desired a shonen anime set in ancient Mesoamérica! 😂

  • @emmym9276
    @emmym9276 Před 2 lety +31

    The cultures of indigenous Mexicans are so interesting and full of rich history. It makes me proud knowing I'm descended from these people and sad that the Europeans tried to erase it all.

    • @AngelHernandez-zl5yr
      @AngelHernandez-zl5yr Před rokem

      @Michelle machismo?
      Lol mexicas forbidden their wives from basically every activity, they were only allowed to stay at home, cooking, make clothing and teach younger women to do so
      Maybe if they were lucky they could work as healers

    • @Desco51
      @Desco51 Před 10 měsíci +6

      Literaly no, spaniards tried to conserve as much of the culture as they could, probably half of the information of this video was taken from a spanish book explaining how they lived. Other exemples are the translation books of native languages and the encyclopedias written in native languages.

    • @seabass5082
      @seabass5082 Před 9 měsíci +3

      @@Desco51What? Gold, God, Glory. Spaniards came and took over the people and forced them to their religion. You are so wrong my guy

    • @Desco51
      @Desco51 Před 9 měsíci +2

      @@seabass5082 That is indeed false, the spaniards just made Catholicism atractive to the natives using the fact that most of the native population was freed from other imperialistic tribes (the Aztec empire being the most representative) and telling them that god gave them the strength to defeat its slavers. Most of the native population wanted to join cristianism by themselves, and for those who won't, they were allowed to have their own beliefs.
      By the way the phrase Gold, God, Glory is not spaniard at all and it doesn't make sense in Spanish (Oro, Dios, Gloria).

    • @seabass5082
      @seabass5082 Před 9 měsíci

      @@Desco51 Hmmm actually I was wrong. Some did convert by their own will and some were forced. And tbh I said it in english because I kinda assumed you speak english but you understood what I meant either way. soar.wichita.edu/bitstream/handle/10057/2112/LAJ%202007_70-83.pdf

  • @Redgoo2
    @Redgoo2 Před 5 lety +259

    Someone out there there's a family of mice with wonderfully white teeth

    • @GlowstoneWolf
      @GlowstoneWolf Před 5 lety +6

      those teeth are heirlooms now

    • @cflo1386
      @cflo1386 Před 5 lety +3

      Lmao

    • @Cloverfr
      @Cloverfr Před 4 lety +14

      Fun fact: In Latin America there is not tooth fairy, it is a mouse that recolects the teeth, and now I can see why is like that.

    • @elizavetadevyatko2396
      @elizavetadevyatko2396 Před 4 lety +1

      Cloverfr I’m from Russia and we have it too! I now see that it, somehow, came to us from Latin America

    • @Albert_Herring
      @Albert_Herring Před 4 lety

      @@Cloverfr Quit your bullshit!

  • @LandelRey
    @LandelRey Před 5 lety +83

    2:38 so that's where "mal de ojo" comes from

    • @amaliasilva7518
      @amaliasilva7518 Před 3 lety +7

      When I was born, mi Moma clinged a small red ribbon to my onesie, for preventing the mal de ojo.

  • @purplespeckledappleeater8738

    Whenever I hear of everyday life as an Aztek, they seemed pretty happy and the kind of upbringing described in this video sounded very similar to how I was raised.

  • @marthaalcala5034
    @marthaalcala5034 Před 4 lety +9

    This blew my mind. I was born in Zacatecas Mexico and was raised there for most my life. When I was little my older sibling would step over me and joke around saying I would grow anymore, at the time I thought it was a serious thing.

    • @siveheart1
      @siveheart1 Před 4 lety

      My maternal grandmother's family is originally from Zacatecas. It's amazing how small the world is at times.

  • @kassyyar97
    @kassyyar97 Před 5 lety +114

    Thank you so much! As a prehispanic history enthusiast I really am glad with the accuracy of the information you’ve given, it gave me so many flashbacks of what it was like to study Aztec history in my library
    Muchas gracias!

  • @spellwing777
    @spellwing777 Před 5 lety +66

    thank you for this series. It's INVALUABLE for anyone wanting to write a believable story that is based on historical societies. Showing the day-to-day events that a complex society is built on adds depth to writing I couldn't otherwise construct on my own.

  • @danielladuck3323
    @danielladuck3323 Před 2 lety +4

    Glad I can learn about my ancestors out of school, they focus way to much on the human sacrifices then anything else when teaching about them in class

  • @kingbura8364
    @kingbura8364 Před 4 lety +25

    The fear that stepping over a child would stunt their growth was also prevalent in my culture as well. I’m part of the Zulu people in South Africa btw...

  • @declanm6887
    @declanm6887 Před 5 lety +286

    Could you do a growing up video about children in medieval Europe? In cultures such as the Norse, the Anglo-Saxons and late medieval Christian societies, it would be interesting to see a video on growing up.

    • @itstriplem2069
      @itstriplem2069 Před 5 lety +4

      would be very interesting

    • @danielpincu6030
      @danielpincu6030 Před 5 lety +2

      Rome

    • @cometmoon4485
      @cometmoon4485 Před 5 lety +31

      ...Because there isn't enough discussion about Christian Europe in the world.

    • @animalobsessed1
      @animalobsessed1 Před 5 lety +59

      @@cometmoon4485 That's right. People only ever talk about them killing each other, as if that's the only thing they ever did.

    • @spelcheak
      @spelcheak Před 5 lety +15

      @@cometmoon4485 There isn't.

  • @connorgolden4
    @connorgolden4 Před 5 lety +142

    I love this channel.

  • @sanjagotikj673
    @sanjagotikj673 Před 4 lety +25

    So weird I was born in Europe and we have so many similar traditions,for example the one with stepping over a baby ,for us not just for a baby but for a child in general,then pulling the child’s ears to grow we do that when a child has a birthday people would pull the child’s ears and wish them a happy birthday and to grow big .This are old traditions so it blows my mind that they are connected all the way to the Aztecs to our country (North Macedonia,small country just north of Greece)

    • @davidgreen5994
      @davidgreen5994 Před 2 lety +1

      Yeah, I feel that it we would be really mind blown by how ancient are those superstitions if we could look way back... the only explanation why those exist on 3 continents and so many cultures, would be because they started way back, when mankind was just a handful of tribes, before we started to migrate and spread on all continents. . That would make them tens of thousand of years old, if not older.

  • @kurlyfryz
    @kurlyfryz Před 4 lety +68

    If there's ever an argument I have with someone about the legitimacy of school, I'll bring up the point that Aztecs called their school "House of tears"

  • @Krisenaa
    @Krisenaa Před 5 lety +141

    I'm actually surprised by how lenient their punishments were, and how late they started school and training. When I think of civilizations like these, I expect everything to be extremely harsh. Though society is probably harsher in practice than the idealized theory. You never know what's going on inside a family's four walls.

    • @LashknifeTalon
      @LashknifeTalon Před 5 lety +43

      I think it's actually quite fascinating that all the punishments were WORSE for the aristocrats than for the commoners; like in the mock battles. If you're a commoner, you get itchy powder rubbed all over you. If you're a noble, you get STABBED. Kind of drives home a "we expect great things from you in exchange for your power" lesson.
      ...kind of the opposite of how things are today in many societies.

    • @Krisenaa
      @Krisenaa Před 5 lety +6

      Yeah, it sounds really impressive, though, knowing human nature, I wouldn't be surprised if a lot of nobles somehow managed to pull threads to get away from it.

    • @jordandehart6905
      @jordandehart6905 Před 5 lety +10

      I know, right? I've been interested in the Aztec civilizations my entire life, and while I knew they had lots of sophisticated stuff (especially medical and architectural), I never knew the day-to-day society was like this. I guess I always pictured historical figures as larger than life characters, that sometimes I forget we've always been human. Fascinating stuff.

    • @teoxihuitl2007
      @teoxihuitl2007 Před 4 lety +2

      @@jordandehart6905 if you love Mexica culture why not visit Central mexico most of our Culture comes from them or you could also visit a Nahuatl villgae near Mexico city

    • @extrarradioghetto
      @extrarradioghetto Před 4 lety

      sure and the police and politicians are supposed to get harsher punishments too and we all know that is bullshit

  • @alexbenavidez4500
    @alexbenavidez4500 Před 5 lety +168

    "At 7 years old, boys finally put on a dang breechcloth"
    Lmao. What was wrong with the commando style? Probs a lot comfier in the hot climate

    • @queent1383
      @queent1383 Před 4 lety +21

      I expected them to start wearing pants once they hit puberty honestly

    • @IIDESPERAD0II
      @IIDESPERAD0II Před 4 lety +23

      High elevation. Not hot up here in Mexico City. Lows around 1 or 2 degrees.

    • @magtovi
      @magtovi Před 3 lety

      Ding ding ding.
      This!

    • @intiorozco5063
      @intiorozco5063 Před 3 lety +13

      It can be quite chilly in Mexico City. It's 2250 m high. That's why I always wonder if they had warmer clothing, since we always see pics of Aztecs wearing nothing more than loincloths and capes.

    • @hannaha8062
      @hannaha8062 Před 2 lety +2

      It’s not that hot dude, the mexicas were far from living in a dessert

  • @tammysully12news
    @tammysully12news Před 4 lety +4

    I am thoroughly enjoying this series! I cant wait to see what's next!

  • @LynnieLovey
    @LynnieLovey Před 4 lety +16

    I love this series so much!! Honestly some of the best content in CZcams. Thank you for all the time you put into these, it really shows.

  • @lcronovt
    @lcronovt Před 5 lety +20

    I’m Mexican and this is never taught on schools.
    Glad you are making this videos

    • @juanbermudez6489
      @juanbermudez6489 Před 5 lety +5

      I’m Mexican too and actually I was thought this at school. More attention please.
      Saludos :)

    • @fernandaanaya2551
      @fernandaanaya2551 Před 5 lety +5

      ¿Qué pedo? Si nos lo enseñan. A mi me lo mencionaron en la secundaria, y ya en la prepa me los explicaron con mas detalles (todo lo del video).
      Pero estoy de acuerdo en que deberían de explicar mas a fondo la vida de las culturas antiguas, personalmente creo que se enfoncan demasiado en la Mexica y olvidan a la cultura Maya.

    • @astramanification
      @astramanification Před 5 lety +2

      lcronovt Debiste de haber puesto más atención compa

    • @19ars92
      @19ars92 Před 5 lety +1

      eres chicano o pocho como te van a enseñar eso animal
      en gringolandia te enseñan sobre washington y Kennedy no sobre los tlatoanis y el Popol Vuh

    • @matzmilan7780
      @matzmilan7780 Před 5 lety

      Si lo enseñan, tanto en historia de México, como en historia universal.

  • @Etceterotic
    @Etceterotic Před 5 lety +38

    I clicked this video because I recognized Beverly’s art. Oh gosh, she’s so amazing!!!

  • @vojinvmilojkovic7622
    @vojinvmilojkovic7622 Před 5 lety

    I am hyped and curious to ask of you to do more of those on different cultures and nations from the past!
    genius,informative, interesting and abode else educational ♥

  • @teodoramarkova3510
    @teodoramarkova3510 Před 4 lety +2

    This video was a complete delight. So much details at times, wonderful artwork and the narrative was great also.

  • @kinglouiev9530
    @kinglouiev9530 Před 5 lety +113

    How they grow up in Fatimid Egypt? Tang China? Byzantine Empire? Feudal Japan? Al Andalus? Medieval Scandinavia? Tibetan Empire?

    • @GY-bd9bo
      @GY-bd9bo Před 5 lety +11

      The Aztecs did not ever venture into any of those places.

    • @nathankuszewski4579
      @nathankuszewski4579 Před 5 lety +2

      GY1415 nice one

    • @kinglouiev9530
      @kinglouiev9530 Před 5 lety +8

      GY1415 I know the Aztecs didn’t have the horse or the ship to travel to those places but I wanna see how people grew up in other cultures.

    • @Jobe-13
      @Jobe-13 Před 5 lety +2

      King Louie V Yeah. I’d love to see episodes of those too.

    • @Someone-mm5es
      @Someone-mm5es Před 4 lety +3

      @@GY-bd9bo Never heard of the The Sunset invasion? Clearly you are brainwashed

  • @Humberto4790
    @Humberto4790 Před 5 lety +44

    So this is why my mom was so accurate when throwing her chancla at me.

  • @eddvcr598
    @eddvcr598 Před 2 lety +5

    The illustrations of the babies and children are adorable ☺️

  • @MrJustintreat
    @MrJustintreat Před 3 lety

    Found your channel today, I haven't been able to stop watching. Thank you for the content.

  • @hyungyu2934
    @hyungyu2934 Před 5 lety +28

    I wish this came out while I was doing middle school history project a while back :/

  • @maffel9451
    @maffel9451 Před 5 lety +63

    Could you please do the same thing about north american tribes. I love their history and their ways but there's not much on it in the internet.

    • @oscarmeneurubio3330
      @oscarmeneurubio3330 Před 2 lety

      very easy, english got there kill around 99% of them, make buffalo extinction. Thats why you dont know much about it, because they accused Spain about what they did. So nowadays they look Spain as the bad guys and England and USA looks like cool. That was a more than 200 year brainwashing, to divide, hispanic people, to make hispanic american hate their real roots, so when they go to USA because their shitty economies, they think, it was spanish people fault

  • @ahunter9503
    @ahunter9503 Před 4 lety

    Thank you for uploading these x

  • @pronak4410
    @pronak4410 Před 2 lety +8

    The stretching ceremony is still a traditional 'medical' procedure here in Mexico. When my mom was pregnant, my middle little sister was "head up" and my neighbor, a sobadora (from the noun 'sobar'/to rub), basically turned her upside down, so she could "be birthed"(???) without issues.