Aztec Empire. A civil war ensued, and ended in a tripartite division of Tetzcoco, by which one third of the kingdom, with the capital, was awarded to Cacamatzin
into kin-based or other land holding groups within Nahua city-states or altepetls. In Spanish sources, calpulli are termed parcialidades or barrios. The
London: Penguin Books, ISBN 0140441239 Benton, Bradley (2017). The Lords of Tetzcoco: The Transformation of Indigenous Rule in Postconquest Central Mexico.
tlatoque of the pre-Columbian era altepetl of Tlatelolco. List of rulers of Tenochtitlan List of rulers of Tetzcoco Family tree of Aztec monarchs Aztec
Painting Manuscripts, Writing the Pre-Hispanic Past in Early Colonial Period Tetzcoco, Mexico. University of Texas Press. ISBN 978-0-292-72168-5.{{cite book}}:
14th to the 16th centuries. Aztec culture was organized into city-states (altepetl), some of which joined to form alliances, political confederations, or
commercial power. In 1272 he accepted the substitution of Coatlinchan by Tetzcoco in the Triple Alliance of that time, thus consolidating the achievements
los Otomíes Paper in Spanish by David Wright Carr Hicks, Frederic (1982) Tetzcoco in the Early 16th Century: The State, the City and the Calpolli. American
the eve of the Spanish invasion, one school of Nahua scribes, those of Tetzcoco, had developed a fully syllabic script which could represent spoken language
(378–869) Altepetl of Tetzcoco (AD 1298–1564) Purépecha Empire (AD 1300–1530) Altepetl of Tenochtitlan (AD 1325–1525, AD 1538–1565) Altepetl of Tlatelolco